and root beer candy, I love root beer and had almost forgotten about the root beer flavored candy. Haven't seen in forever. thank you!!
@jackiesanders4898 ай бұрын
I,m 85 year old Ozark hillbilly and gtew up drinking sassadras tea in the spring to thin the blood after winter, at family reunions and clan camps the younger generation are still amazed that i can just return frok a walk and mae tea from roots for them. I also harvst some 50 different herbs and roots for my clans medical use.
@ChristopherJones168 ай бұрын
Why is it good for one to thin their blood, and why is this good to do in the Spring? Never heard of that before. Probably more of the good ol knowledge our great grandparents once knew lost to time.
@BarneyGumbl38 ай бұрын
@@ChristopherJones16Blood thinners are commonly prescribed to prevent heart attacks and stroke, the drug probably most commonly taken for this is aspirin. I don't know about the spring time, maybe it's just easier to dig up the ground to get at the roots after the winter freeze thaws
@jackiesanders4897 ай бұрын
@@ChristopherJones16 don't know but i made it 85 years with out ever having a cold or other medical problems, The VA has me on a BP pill now tho :(
@jackiesanders4897 ай бұрын
@@ChristopherJones16 Also us kids were given JELLO in the fall to thicken our blood to prepare for colder temps/
@jeffreyyoung41047 ай бұрын
I have been digging the roots of the sassafras trees, and drinking the tea for years now.
@debistokes69628 ай бұрын
When you steep the roots, put the plate or lid on the pot while the root releases its flavor. My covering your pot, the oils won't evaporate.
@almostoily75418 ай бұрын
Sassafras jelly is great on pork chops. Just thin the jelly with water and put on the chops when they are just about done. Over rice, it's so good! I have also used mayhaw jelly on chicken. Forager Dr. Mark Vorderbruggen ( Merriweather Foraging Texas) is a chemist by trade. I've taken classes from him. He doesn't have a problem with consuming sassafras. Also, the leaves will dry for file very quickly even without a dehydrator. BUT it takes a huge amount for a small amount of powdered file. I just blitz mine in a coffee grinder until it's the size as other dried spices instead of powdering it. I add it at the end of cooking gumbo.
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
I've learned a lot from Dr. Vorderbruggen. I took a walk with him once back when I lived in Texas. He's awesome.
@almostoily75418 ай бұрын
@@LegacyWildernessAcademy yes, he came and did a walk through of my property with me. I'm enjoying your videos very much 😊
@MaryBornforHealth3 ай бұрын
I live in Michigan and I have a stand of sassafras trees growing on my property. These trees are over 60 years old and I love them so much.
@HappyMayCope6 ай бұрын
Sassafras contains several compounds that have been studied for their potential heavy metal chelation properties. Some of the compounds in sassafras that are known for their chelating abilities include safrole, eugenol, and myristicin. These compounds have been shown to bind to heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, and mercury, helping to remove them from the body.
@LegacyWildernessAcademy6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for the info!!! I did not know that
@HappyMayCope6 ай бұрын
I wish I could actually get an email from you I have a comprehensive breakdown on each compound from the sassafras and what each compound can be used for and the case studies...I have many breakdowns not just for sassafras..I have notes on these compounds and anti cancer studies using them
@HappyMayCope6 ай бұрын
I healed my dog dying of parvo with extract I made using dmso and dried sassafras root to cleanse her gut and help with nausea. I just thought I would add that too
@jenniferbaucom97694 ай бұрын
Outstanding to know!
@DavidRodriguez-gl5pn3 ай бұрын
@@HappyMayCopeyou’re awesome! Don’t ever give up on new ideas!
@feraltweed7 ай бұрын
I was born in 53 and I made sassafras tea and also chewed on the roots as a kid. I remember when people started saying it was bad for you. I also remember when they said cranberries would kill you. That put a damper on thanksgiving. Turns out they were only bad for you if you ate more than five pounds a day for twenty years. Guess I’ll harvest some sassafras this year thanks for posting
@LegacyWildernessAcademy7 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@KrisanthiaMum2 ай бұрын
1961 here and my Alabama backwoods grandmother taught me how to use Sassafras. Was so happy to purchase our own land in 2008 after my husband retired after serving 23yrs of service in the military and found tons of it!!! Love me some Sassafras tea 🥰
@MichaelMonaghan-j5q21 күн бұрын
FDA is run by criminals.
@SusieDaw-ix6pv8 ай бұрын
Sasafras! My grandmother kept a bag of roots in her kitchen cabinet for tea! And file't is ground leaves for seafood seasoning!
@clevebaker83997 ай бұрын
In 1966 my grandma showed me and my brother how to gather sassafras roots, cat nip and ripe may apples. We made tea and drank some other tea’s from woods ! Those were heavenly times! Great job
@1coketogo5545 ай бұрын
My grandma was born in the early 1880's. When I was little she cured me of measles with sassafras. We lived in Oregon but she had a piece of bark that she used over and over. She would cook it until the water was light pink. Then she would give me a cup, or maybe 2 cups, a day. She hung a bunch of blankets on the windows and made me stay in a dark room. I wasn't allowed to leave and had to use a bucket. I was well in 3 days but she wouldn't let me go outside for a while. I didn't have any after effects. I wish I knew even 1/2 of all the things she knew. I always got poison oak real bad, my eyes would even swell shut. They tried tying a goat in that stuff and having me drink the milk but it didn't help. Finally my grandma boiled some in a pressure cooker and gave me a few drops all summer and I never got it again. I'm old now but I still miss her.
@jameshodgson37582 ай бұрын
I’m 77 years old. When I was a kid my dad and I would dig sassafras most springs. I’ve never seen roots like the ones in your video. Everything we dug had the tap root take off at a 90 degree angle to the stem or trunk and run horizontally. My dad would make them into walking canes using the root for the handle. We lived in western Pennsylvania, maybe they grow differently in the south.
@deborahcornell53048 ай бұрын
When I was a child, sassafras root was our candy. We would just chew on it. We did not actually eat the root, just chew on it. It was yummy.
@stacystepp79148 ай бұрын
Well how cool is that! I've been looking for a sassafras tree but haven't found one just yet:(
@alsaunders78058 ай бұрын
@@stacystepp7914Where do you live? It's pretty common here in lowcountry South Carolina. 🤔🤓🍻
@stacystepp79148 ай бұрын
@@alsaunders7805 I live in central Oklahoma. I believe they're in southern Oklahoma but I haven't found one yet:(
@thomastrain73117 ай бұрын
@alsaunders7805 yes it is. Te queen had sir W.R. bringing it back by the ton . They were using it to "cure" syphilis back then. Yes this is a historical fact
@bmiles41317 ай бұрын
@@stacystepp7914look in clearing near water. I have seen saplings with those leaves growing inches apart in muddy areas near lakes in TX.
@cmaranatha98908 ай бұрын
The price of sassafras root bark is high; I would love to find a tree that I could legally harvest. Your video is the first one I've watched that explains exactly how to harvest the root from both a mature and a young tree. It is nice to know that you can harvest root from a mature tree without killing that tree. I make root beer kefir using sarsaparilla bark plus other ingredients. It tastes and foams just like bought root beer, but it has the health benefits of kefir. Water kefir has two ferment periods; the 2nd period is to infuse it with flavor and increase its fizz. This is my recipe: for a 1/2 gallon glass jar (filled 3/4 full with 1st ferment), add 2 Tb sugar, *2 Tb molasses, 2 whole cloves, 1 tsp anise seed, 2-3 heaping Tb ginger root (peeled or not, and chopped), 1 Tb sarsaparilla root (I bought from Jovvily on Amazon - I am not associated with them), 2-3 drops wintergreen essential oil (the wintergreen is not optional - it greatly helps the flavor). Depending on the type of fermenting caps used, the jar may need to be burped several times a day. I have had it foam up and out of the jar while burping. Hence, I always had another empty jar ready for the overflow or opened it after first placing it in a pot. Lately, when I asked my husband to burp the kefir, he unscrewed the cover the slightest bit to allow the pressure to escape gradually - so no overflow. *Note: I typically add a @ 1/2 tsp of molasses to my 1st ferment for the sake of adding good minerals, so my 1st ferment already has a darker color. More molasses may be needed to make the 2nd ferment darker to make it look like "real" root beer, though I would rather adjust it only for the sake of flavor and not how it appears.
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info!
@Sam-dm4rj8 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@24TRUTH17 ай бұрын
If you are ever on the Eastern shore of MD, reach out, you can come dig up all the sassafras trees you want. We have them ALL over. They are one of my favorite trees. We have giant ones and babies literally everywhere.☺️❤️
@Skitdora20107 ай бұрын
Sassafras is hard to transplant, I planted sassafras for close to a decade before I got two to take root, they grow fast and mine are fruiting this year. The ones I got to take at last I bought off of Etsy. They are gorgeous in the fall. I discovered they survived one fall looking at the bright orange in the far tree line (I am on 59 acres) stuck out like a sore thumb. Found a nest of wild turkey eggs under it last year too. Wild life always were found to dig up my plantings. We planted 500 trees that year from the state department of environmental conservations tree nursery and I squeezed the sassafras in. Animals got full eating everything else.
@cmaranatha98907 ай бұрын
@@Skitdora2010 Are you saying they're difficult to transplant because animals eat the transplants, or do they not survive for another reason?
@mikerhodes35637 ай бұрын
IM from as far south is Louisiana as you go, DuLarge -Louisiana -My grandmother was what’s called a “treatuer “ and used sassafras among other items to treat wounds, infections ,colds etc. We lived among the Houmas Indians and were very familiar with them. Had lots of good friends. She was a catechism teacher for the Catholic Church and prayer was a big part of the healing process. We always put file in our gumbo . To me its not gumbo if there isn’t any sassafras ground up leaves. I make my own and make sure to use the tiny leave stems too.
@brokenarrow28358 ай бұрын
When I was a kid we always had a bottle of Zatarains Root Beer extract which was made of sassafras. We drank that instead of Kool-Aid. The stuff made now is nothing but chemicals...I still make my file'. As for the roots we always just peeled the bark off and brought it to a boil then simmered them.
@JanineMJoi7 ай бұрын
I've seen other vids on utube that boil a 1 inch piece of the whole root. you did not? How do you make the file? Just dry the leaves and powder?
@brokenarrow28357 ай бұрын
@@JanineMJoi I dry the leaves and grind it to a fine powder.I like to take the smaller roots and boil them.
@katedavy62727 ай бұрын
We have used sassafras root bark for pulling abscesses of all kinds. For teeth abscesses... Boil water, remove from heat. Put 2 generous teaspoons into an 8 ounce cup. Pour boiled water over this and cover for 10 minutes. Strain. Cool to taste. hold in mouth for as long as possible . Do not swallow! Spit out! Do this with whole cup. You will spit out the abscess.
@w.rustylane56507 ай бұрын
I'm 73 and have been drinking sassafras tea for all my life. My dad had a grove of sassafras trees but you couldn't drink too much as it can be used just like aspirin. Cheers from eastern TN
@Yaya-Siùsaidh8 ай бұрын
Yaaaasssss on the root beer video please!! A lot of sassafras grows here in the Deep South.
@larrymcgarage21527 ай бұрын
I live in Arkansas, I remember my grandfather making this tea whenever he didn’t feel well. He lived well into his 90s. I’m going to start looking for this plant. Thanks for the video. You got yourself another sub.👍
@reibersue48458 ай бұрын
You got yourself a new subscriber. I watched because I love root and have fond memories of Grandmom's homemade root beer from sasafras. It's on my list of things to find on my property.
@babaoreally82208 ай бұрын
It’s logical that if human subjects were given doses,proportional to rats,that the saffrol or its metabolites would appear in urinalysis,also.In my 50’s Appalachia childhood,my Grandma used to make this strong Sassafras extract and tea.There are dozens of these saplings on my property.I think I’m going to experiment a little with it this spring.Thank you for the tutorial.
@Tonetwisters8 ай бұрын
Sassafras. As a kid in Jacksonville, Florida, we would pull up the little ones and take our little hunting knives to the root and scrape off the bark and then chewed on 'em. And I'm still here. Oh yeh ... I'm 76.
@clarencegreen30717 ай бұрын
I drank a lot of sassafras tea in my early years. Loved it. Still do. However, I just turned 80 and I can report that sassafras is bad. Very bad. My hair fell out, my beard turned gray, and I've got wrinkles all over. Got memory issues as well. Fair warning!
@kylemarkloff44517 ай бұрын
@@clarencegreen3071 sir, the FDA says you are actually very sick... And I always trust the government
@thebigdog22957 ай бұрын
@clarencegreen3071 😅😂🤣 Well done, sir.
@vickigonya94327 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂@@clarencegreen3071
@vickigonya94327 ай бұрын
I love your videos ❤
@Cherishflowers68 ай бұрын
👍❤️ Yes , Let's see the root beer making
@rstepp48 ай бұрын
We'd love to see a video of you making carbonated rootbeer!
@gregbolls78157 ай бұрын
Grew up drinking sassadras tea every late fall. We used it to ward off the winter flue. The leaves once dried and ground was used in soupes and gumbo as a thickener.
@billgrandone35527 ай бұрын
You are bringing back a lot of memories of mine as a kid .I lived in the 50's when kids were verboten to have gum in school but most boys had pocket knives. If you took a root of sassafras and used your pocket knife to cut a number of thin discs that would fit in the coin pocket of your wallet you could slip one under your tongue and have that root beer taste of the sassafras without chewing or giving yourself away.
@gmonteith7 ай бұрын
My grandmother, who lived her whole life in Western Kentucky, made us grand kids sassafras tea at least once that I can remember. It seems like she boiled the roots but then had to remove the scum on top once or twice. I'm 67 now, so my memory might be fuzzy, but that's how I recall it -- I also remember that in the '60s we could get sassafras extract in a bottle at the store. Still, today, I'll pull off a leaf to chew on while hiking or camping.
@Shaw.778 ай бұрын
I just found this channel. Good job.
@roxannerobertson5548 ай бұрын
Love sassafras…dang…use to gather it in Ala. but can’t find it or grow it in central Texas…miss it dearly….😢
@chitownmountain8 ай бұрын
Yes I would love to see a natural soda made with this!
@roxannerobertson5548 ай бұрын
Been there , we use to drink homemade sassafras tea- like flat root beer😂…yummy….a shot of carbonation and boom….rootbeer soda….😉👍☺
@demandred19577 ай бұрын
I remember the tea made by my grandma back in the 70's. Still have gobs of them on my property.
@edwardroche24807 ай бұрын
I was working cutting up trees for firewood and I came across the sassafras tree and The Roots. I cut up some of them for firewood. When I burned them they gave off a wonderful root beer Aroma to the whole cabin. They smelled delicious and brought back memories in my childhood when you could buy a 4 oz bottle of root beer extract and make your own. The extract was made by hires or A&W
@BodhiCody-mh2ec5 ай бұрын
Thanks for making sure there's 1 less for the youth, Boomer.
@edwardroche24805 ай бұрын
@@BodhiCody-mh2ec don't think don't thank me cuz Warren County I'm on the phone right now what's up what
@drbill83528 ай бұрын
Great and fair presentation on a wonderful plant. This is one of a small handful of plants used in various root beers presenting that distinct smell and taste.
@michaelpriest6242Ай бұрын
You impressed me with your broad knowledge of sassafras. History from colonial to 1960's, botany, woodsmanship, culinary, medicinal... It causes me to wonder if you pursue history related to other topics. Also, thank you for such a helpful and thorough video lesson. You seem to have a teacher's heart.
@michaelpriest6242Ай бұрын
I just read the introduction to your online course on medicinal herbs. I knew you were a teacher at heart! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
@robertmontgomerybearwolf_s77158 ай бұрын
There are two types of sassafras roots. White root is or was normally used for tonics as well as medicine. The red root was more about removing toxins from body and make the best flavor and medicinal use.
@milosterwheeler25207 ай бұрын
I used to love drinking sassafras tea when I could still get the bark. hard to find these days.
@vladimirputindreadlockrast8127 ай бұрын
I've made root beer, tea, and candy from sassafras roots. Chewing on the leaves is refreshing. I thought they were a little citrusy, but good coolant for hot summer days..
@susanpaulson90105 ай бұрын
Really like these short concise and easy presentation to actually learn. New subscriber.
@jeas49805 ай бұрын
Pro tip: If you're in an area where you can get a pressure washer, they work great for moving dirt around roots. We had to lay an electric line on our property and I didn't want to move a gumball tree because of the valuable shade it provided the structure we were attempting to power. The pressure washer did a fabulous job leaving the roots in tact and removing the dirt for our trench. (We used sturdy conduit and ran it right under the tree). Since that success, we've been using it for everything from digging post holes to removing sod from our expanding garden.
@LegacyWildernessAcademy5 ай бұрын
Interesting idea, thank you for commening!
@Baptized_in_Fire.2 ай бұрын
Roots can grow through even concrete. Try again in 20 years lol
@DocBrewskie7 ай бұрын
When I was a kid we had sassafras all over the property. I’d go out with my Dad and dig up some around Easter and make tea. I miss that stuff.
@todayistomorrow90677 ай бұрын
We always harvest sassafras root. sometime Spring sometimes early Autumn .We make little 3 or 4 inch length bundles (2 or 3 roots split in Half. Tie them together with butcher string. Steep them in a tall tea pot of water for about 20 minutes on the stove. When done steeping just let the bundle dry on the stove top over night ,or until next use. We usually have the root bundle make about 3 full tea pots before they are no longer useful. The trick to making it GOOD TASTE like root beer is to add 4 or 5 drops of vanilla extract!. Add a teaspoon (or less) of sugar to each hot cup of tea along with the few drops of vanilla extract. I make SUN TEA by the gallon in a jar in the summer. Once steeped all day in the sun... I take out my bundles of roots and let dry for another day...I add my sugar to the whole gallon and add a teaspoon of vanilla extract to the whole gallon jar... I shake vigorously for about 3 minutes and stick it in the fridge where I will have cold homemade root beer for 5 or 6 days.
@jawakening20433 ай бұрын
Was pleasantly surprised. This guy is next level
@crazioma66487 ай бұрын
So so happy to have stumbled on your video! I'm an old hippie, as my daughter says, and dearly loved the advent of the home medicine, homemade foods resurgence of the 1960s and 70s when I was young. I'm even happier to find you young folk marrying real science and ecology/biology today. So much smarter. I have missed homemade root beer. Can't wait to see your recipe. Ooh, and bayberry candles and oil for Christmas, maybe. Thanks.
@cottagekeeper3 ай бұрын
This tree smells heavenly in the spring!
@Mithril1708188 ай бұрын
Used it. Know where to find it in multiple places. Great tree!
@lewis98885 ай бұрын
My grandma on my mother's side used to boil cubes of sassafras root, not just the bark of the root.
@Baptized_in_Fire.2 ай бұрын
She didn't want to peel it lol. The root bark has all the stuff you want. Can't blame her for not wanting to do extra work
@Outlawbuckettrucker2 ай бұрын
I dug quite a bit of sassafras in southern WV. An older lady down the holler from me would make us sassafras tea. So good.
@theobserver91317 ай бұрын
I'm definitely not a "foodie". I rarely go to much trouble to consume things just for the pleasure or flavor of things, but I really enjoyed this video! I love plants and animals and I love learning about them. You are extremely good at presenting and teaching! Pleasing style and no clickbait foolishness. Have you covered licorice root before? I have a lot of entertainer and musician friends who swear by it to sooth a sore throat and preserve their voice.
@theobserver91317 ай бұрын
They just chew on the root. No fuss.
@mainemermaid65962 ай бұрын
I believe it's an expectorant too, isn't it? I know that you can't consume too much..
@tatiana_phoenix8 ай бұрын
Thank you! Looking forward to finding these friends!
@hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic65425 ай бұрын
Yaay sassafras! I'm trying to cultivate it on my land since its very valuable to many people.
@jennifersvitko59977 ай бұрын
We had a sassafras tree near us (in SW PA). When I was a kid, we'd just get a stick and chew it. It was a nice wild treat.
@24TRUTH17 ай бұрын
One of my favorite trees ever! Sassafras tea, file' powder...made all of it! Its a BEAUTIFUL tree even if you don't use it for food/medicinal purposes. We have huge ones and they have the most amazing canopies...just love everything about them! Thanks for doing this video! Definitely deserve a follow!!👍❤️🌳
@Syl-Vee8 ай бұрын
I'm loving this. Thank you!
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
Awesome, thanks for watching!
@nunyabusiness76236 ай бұрын
Our land here in virginia is thick with these trees. Walking through the woods, it smells so good
@sweetbottumz77054 ай бұрын
love you guys thank you so much. so happy to see people like you still exist
@fayee89866 ай бұрын
Farmington race in Louisiana lift here all my life sassafras it's still plentiful words today I have them all over my property. And I'll be glad to share.
@philliplee11937 ай бұрын
I’m glad you informed me that the volatiles boil off for another reason too who’s is that I’d heard that hummingbirds don’t like mint, yet I had a bag of Ricola candy and wanted to have that melted in to my hummingbird feeder, for the flowery flavors and perhaps benefits. It was a hit with the hummingbirds!
@mainemermaid65962 ай бұрын
Please be sure you know how much sugar you're feeding them. (There's a ratio of sugar to water. It's online....or better yet, buy the Hummingbird food & follow the instructions on the box.) They're very delicate, and too much glucose (too strong a sugar water) can send them into shock and kl them. Thanks. ❤😢❤
@NGMountains3 ай бұрын
I'm a 56 year old man. I have a sassafras tree in my backyard. I have for years and years cut small pieces off my tree to chew raw. Sassafras is not dangerous at all. Anyone telling folks that it is, is a liar.
@thabigshow69Ай бұрын
We used to make sassafras tea in scouting and at summer camp
@thomasgargano88136 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge of making root beer,and tea.We have a lots of sassafras trees in our property so I will do my best to make root beer and root beer tea. Thank you again for sharing.👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺☮️☮️☮️☮️
@IronDruids4 ай бұрын
I'm excited! I had a feeling I see these often so I paused and went outside to check and I have sassafras everywhere.
@E_LithaBeth8 ай бұрын
I drank a lot of sassafras tea when I was a kid in the 50's. No problems just a lot of enjoyment! Plus it grew in the St. Louis area where I lived--so, that far north.
@Ittiz5 ай бұрын
I've used the 2nd year, hardened, but still green, stem bark to make a soda that tastes a lot like lemon lime soda If you use the fresh shoot bark it acts as a thickener like file, so using the 2nd year bark is important. On a side note I noticed that the root looses most of it's flavor when boiled. So, I used warm everclear to extract the flavor. Obviously leads to an alcoholic drink, but you can cut it down with other things because the extraction method is very effective. And oh, as a molecular biologist, I can say your explanation for the reason why Sassafras isn't a carcinogen concern very well. I looked at those papers as well and you're spot on. Rat livers != human livers.
@rebeccamartin23993 ай бұрын
My dad showed me this when I was young. Love it.
@RoyatAvalonFarms6 ай бұрын
Id definitely like to see you make root beer. I have done it before with mixed results. Id love to see your process. Thanks for the content you provide.
@annetterollins14234 ай бұрын
Sassafras grows very heavy in the woods behind my house and they will take over!! I did make some file's earlier this spring. Good stuff!
@DebraofSENC8 ай бұрын
Thank you for teaching us about Sassafras. I appreciate it. My brother used to make tea in the early 1970's.
@roberthaugen98716 ай бұрын
When visiting my sister and brother-in-law in Groton, CT. I would ride my mountain bike around Gungywamp every day. Gungywamp is where the ancient ruins of walls and buildings built by an unknown and presumed European people are. I'd ride through the ruins every day being extra careful to tread very lightly. The entire area was inundated with sassafras and I'd always stop and get a twig to chew on. Quite tasty and fairly long lasting.
@freedomdove5 ай бұрын
This is the first root I've seen that does best with infusion over decoction. Thanks for the info!
@TheEmosesnepho8 ай бұрын
I would like to hear additional information about making root beer. Great video!
@scarlettg61368 ай бұрын
I'm so gad you did this video. I wasn't sure how to identify the tree. Great info. Thank you ❤
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
Awesome! I hope you can find some this year!
@lynnehill6527 ай бұрын
Love the smell of fresh sassafras.
@marcpriest857 ай бұрын
Thanks for the solid information and reasonable explantion! More people need access to such information. Great job!
@LegacyWildernessAcademy7 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@mikekares-b8q7 ай бұрын
I moved from Cleveland Ohio to South Central Indiana I know have an abundance of Sassafras on my property .My son who has lived in the area for 25 yrs showed me all about it ,We made a Nice Ice Tea very good . Never seen sassafras in Cleveland .
@BrianM-440416 ай бұрын
I can show you a patch about a half hour east of Cleveland in Madison Ohio...it also grew in Bainbridge where I grew up about 45 min se of downtown. Tbh I've never seen most plants in Cleveland, it's a city lol
@mikekares-b8q6 ай бұрын
@@BrianM-44041 Well that just goes to show me , Even an Old Man like me can learn something new .My Cousin and my wife's Cousin have lived in Bainbridge for over 40 yrs .
@BrianM-440416 ай бұрын
@@mikekares-b8q lol yep. On Bainbridge Rd between Snyder and haskins roads we lived on 5 acres full of sassafras. It's also on chapel road in Madison just before dock Rd on the north side. I know dozens of other spots too. It tends to grow best on the edge of woods and in the shade.
@BrianM-440416 ай бұрын
@@mikekares-b8q I lived there in the 70s thru 90s now I'm in Geneva.
@dsoldier92275 ай бұрын
I have some ive dug, cleaned,dried and packaged from my own property available for sell . I also made some hickory syrup , some infused with cinnamon, vanilla,and sassafras, of all of them everyone liked the sassafrass infused the best 😊
@sharonnorris59847 ай бұрын
We dug sassafras roots in the fall when the sap is low and the flavor is best. Love sassafras tea
@daveday42518 ай бұрын
Enjoying your videos. They are Very helpful!!
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@beentheredonethat42576 ай бұрын
I can’t add any type of blood thinner due to health concerns. When I was a kid, there was a 15’ or so tall sassafras tree next to my house. I loved that tree. The smell was amazing. And while I’d occasionally break a small twig and chew it, the leaves were by far my favorite part. Not only did they taste amazing, they kept my mouth moist, letting me play that much longer. My mom would get onto me about it, saying it was bad for me, but, she said the same about girls. Hahahaha.
@MrMarkar19598 ай бұрын
GOD made will Always be Better than any FDA chemical cocktail
@ScallopHolden8 ай бұрын
What does that even mean?
@fayee89866 ай бұрын
8 Whitby healthier for you and it's natural and not made of chemicals
@opybrook77664 ай бұрын
Follow FDA and plan on a short life. Trust them NEVER!
@GPS.GhostPirateSloan2 ай бұрын
“Processed sugar & cereal manufactured by our bribers is good and steak and sassafras are bad, mmkkaaayyy??!” -Muh ((FDA))) The tiny hats have corrupted EVERY aspect of our FeministZoG goobmint. At this point, I just invert ANYTHING they say and assume that is the truth.
@bearwill4737Ай бұрын
@@opybrook7766, Petroleum is always a neurotoxin & carcinogenic, no matter what it is made into. Eating any of it is asinine. Their smart lab monkey's don't have the technology to remove these negative effects. But, FDA & CDC don't have a problem with people eating it, Pharma corruption for sure, Cancers are off the charts now, babies & adults.
@LC-bb6jd7 ай бұрын
I miss digging up a root and enjoying a wonderful glass of sass tea!! I would still be drinking the wonderful tea but I moved out of the mountains and away from the source.
@lovingit15388 ай бұрын
What probly happened was that it had serious healing properties so they flawed the study to stop prople from getting it. Great video .ty.
@Don.E.638 ай бұрын
That makes perfect sense.
@reibersue48458 ай бұрын
What I noticed as I'm researching herbal remedies. "There is a study" or "There was a case"..... and then the medical community completely blows every herbal treatment out of the water. The studies are bogus just as Matt pointed out because they deliberately isolate one thing and overdose rats. I could write a book on how animal studies do not predict what happens in humans and how flawed the studies are. The studies are designed and probably funded by the FDA and Big Pharm to remove alternative medicines from the market. Here is my recent experience, I developed a sinus infection that was moving into my ears. For years, I would get an antibiotic, then another and sometimes a third course to knock it out. This time I wanted to treat it with herbs and did some research, settling on oregano as my choice to start. I have dried oregano but also oregano essential oil. I did some quick research on ingesting the EO and all kinds of flags came up, "Don't ingest it, it damages the liver". So then I researched for warning on ingesting oregano plant. Guess what. No where could I find a warning that you should limit your oregano intake in dishes or salads etc. So I eventually used the EO. 1 drop in a teaspoon of honey from my fermented garlic. 3 times a day, which I did for a week to make sure it was gone. The next day I was 90% better. No aches, no feverish feeling, no fugue, just some sinus pressure which was gone by day 2.
@bamanature52588 ай бұрын
Study Rockefellers they're part of the blame
@nelliesfarm84738 ай бұрын
Exactly.. Would cut into big pharma profits
@almostoily75418 ай бұрын
They extracted only one compound and fed it to mice in large doses. I've read the dose was something like what a dose would be for a 300 lb person over years and years.
@swisstroll36 ай бұрын
I loved (well I guess I still love) the big sassafras in my yard. Then dozens of them started coming up on the other side of the yard. I remember sassafras sticks, sassafras tea, and root beer from my youth, and went online to find instructions and recipes. That is when I learned about the FDA ban.
@joemurray89027 ай бұрын
Root beer recipe - Yes please!
@truthseeker96888 ай бұрын
Good info and presentation. Thank you!
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@johncarter11508 ай бұрын
Sassafras has disappeared from the wild in my area of Northeast Georgia. Excellent content!
@cliffordbowman67778 ай бұрын
Like your free elections; go trump
@anadaneen708 ай бұрын
My mother used to scrape willow bark and boil it to drink. She claimed it was a pain, headache and joint stiffness killer!
@KGood288 ай бұрын
I live south of Athens, and we have several in my yard.
@thomastrain73117 ай бұрын
@@anadaneen70I've read that too. On one of the alaska TV shows thay were using it as a pain relief remedy
@anidnmeno7 ай бұрын
@@anadaneen70 yyessss, natural aspirin
@johnessmyer4665Ай бұрын
Thank you! So glad I found your channel
@LegacyWildernessAcademyАй бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@OIE823 ай бұрын
Matthew, thanks for another great video. Can you tell me what the name of that vine growing on the sassafras tree is at 2:40? And it would always be good to know where you are filming for context. Thanks.
@TraciesLocalLearnings8 ай бұрын
Thank you! what a great video. So well done 🌱👍
@Missangie8272 ай бұрын
Life can cause cancer -- I found some Sassafras in my fence row and made some file - It was so good -
@GPS.GhostPirateSloan2 ай бұрын
“Processed sugar & cereal manufactured by our bribers is good and steak and sassafras are bad, mmkkaaayyy??!” -Muh ((FDA))) The tiny hats have corrupted EVERY aspect of our FeministZoG goobmint. At this point, I just invert ANYTHING they say and assume that is the truth.
@bryankreinhart7 ай бұрын
I grew up making sassafras tea and jelly. Now, I am living in the Ouachita Mountains of Oklahoma and there are no sassafras trees here. I have one growing in a large pot and now, that it is three years old, it is time to transplant it into the ground. Would love to see the revival of the sassafras tree in this area as they've been gone for about a hundred years here.
@suepiper11498 ай бұрын
Just found your page. So informative. I’ll definitely pass this on to friends and family 😊
@LegacyWildernessAcademy8 ай бұрын
Thank you! Glad you found it helpful
@Wildfla4 ай бұрын
Qué bueno es ver a personas diciendo la verdad y no repitiendo todo lo que de lo demás dicen y sando el sentido común, buen video
@zadrumstool5 ай бұрын
Your videos are great friend. Thank you for the knowledge and all the hard work you have put in.
@LegacyWildernessAcademy5 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching, I appreciate the kind words!
@emilypatterson44798 ай бұрын
Extremely well done. I am impressed. Now I want to go find some sassafras 😏
@bradysullivan46725 ай бұрын
I feel like the best time to harvest the roots would be in the winter when all the sap and flavor is hiding in the roots. I'd be interested to see if this empowers the flavor any.
@juliacamp67908 ай бұрын
We have sassafras growing all down our driveway. Please make a video about how to make real root beer!
@renebrock41478 ай бұрын
I would love to see a video on making soda! Thanks.
@zhenxinbei7268 ай бұрын
Gather the roots responsibly, please. With the deforestation of natural resources, Sassafras trees are not as abundant as they once were. They are limited in areas where they grow. Gathering too many roots can kill the trees. Also digging them up, and transplanting them is difficult. They do not transplant well, unless the new environment is very similar. Bottom line, if you find one, enjoy it responsibly; if you find one in your yard, you are blessed!!!😊
@NaomiSims-w5g6 ай бұрын
Tastes just like root beer. Cows love to eat the leaves too. My granny taught me to harvest the young roots, peel them, & boil in water 15 mins for a spring tonic or a root beer drink. (Your way probably better) I never experienced any bitter taste, but I only used short, "new" root tips. We only drank it seasonally. I'm 75 & pretty healthy...didn't hurt me!
@CrossroadToCountry3 ай бұрын
Harvest Sassafras when its dormant before the sap starts to rise and all of the sugars from the tree will be in the root. The older the root with thicker bark (in my opinion) the better it tastes. What I've done for fixing it is to add the sassafrass to cold water and bring it to a boil for a minute or so, remove from heat, then cover and let sit in the hot water for 10 minutes. They did the same thing with Comfrey as they did with Sassafras and made it so it couldn't be used as effectively.
@kimespy90399 күн бұрын
Thank you for your videos. I have recently come across your videos and the way you explain it, I am not afraid to go and try to forage. I haven't started but will come spring