You Can Make Money Harvesting and Selling Botanicals
(Page 4 of 4)
September/October 1977
By the Mother Earth News editors
And remember that-as a rule-dried roots and barks don't depreciate in value. If you don't like the prices being offered for your roots and herbs this year, you can always stash the goods away until next year, when prices may be higher.
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PHOTO BY MARTIN FOX
Bloodroot in the wild . . . and bloodroot uprooted. Notice the sliced-open root's crimson color.
A SURVIVAL SKILL WORTH CULTIVATING
Whether you ever harvest and sell medicinal plants yourself or not, "botanical hunting" is something you should at least know about. It's one of those rare make-money-outdoors activities that requires no special knowledge or equipment (beyond what's readily available to the average person) to get started, but that can lead to a steady income-good times or bad, off-season or on-of from a few dollars a month to several hundred. (Botanical foraging is an especially good parttime moneymaking activity for those slack moments when there's little to do around the old homestead.) Botanical hunting: It's challenging, it's fun, and it's lucrative. What more could you ask for?
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