THE PLOWBOY INTERVIEW EUELL GIBBONS
Euell Gibbons has probably turned more people on to
nature—certainly to wild foods — than
any other living writer. His first book about foraged fare,
STALKING THE WILD ASPARAGUS, was (and continues to be)
such a best seller that Gibbons has followed its success
with five more popular titles. Three—
STALKING THE HEALTHFUL HERBS, STALKING THE BLUE-EYED
SCALLOP and BEACHCOMBER'S HANDBOOK
—are wild foods manuals, a fourth— FEAST ON A DIABETIC DIET —
tells how to do just that and the fifth— STALKING THE GOOD LIFE —is an expansion of his ORGANIC GARDENING MAGAZINE
column, "The Organic Nature Lover".
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Euell's books are not based on idle theory. He's been
known to assemble dinners from free pickin's foraged in New
York City's Central Park . . . wild foods gathered in the
arid Southwest... the bounty washed onto a tropical beach .
. . potherbs blooming in a Chicago vacant lot. . . and the
wildings found during a "Down East" canoe excursion. All
were equally sumptious. Once, Gibbons even gathered 25
varieties of volunteer edibles within 100 feet of a
supermarket.
Now and then Euell teaches the techniques of wilderness
living to boys and girls at the Outward Bound schools in
Minnesota and Maine. A Quaker, he has also taught at Pendle
Hill, a Quaker center.
Euell Gibbons is well over six feet tall, has a Bob
Hope nose, plenty of wavy hair and the kind of sharp
features that caricaturists love. He's led a colorful life
as cowboy, farmer, hobo, alcoholic, carpenter,
Depression-days communist and beachcomber. Only recently
has he enjoyed financial security (STALKING THE
WILD ASPARAGUS was published in 1962).
Gibbons and his wife, Freda, now live outside a small
village in Pennsylvania-Dutch country on a piece
of property theycall "It Wonders Me". Hal Smith
conducted the followinginterview in the Gibbons
home.
PLOWBOY: I suppose everyone who meets you
asks the same question . . . how did you learn about
foraging?
GIBBONS: By practicing it as a hobby for
50 years. I was first introduced to wild foods by my mother
and maternal grandmother—both of whom were fairly
good foragers—and I immediately started trying to
learn everything I could about such edibles. I invented my
first wild food recipe by pounding together hickory nuts
and berries to make a candy bar when I was five years old.
PLOWBOY: Was that when you and your family
survived on foraged foods in New Mexico?
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