Elder Flowers - How To Identify Wild Elderberry Shrubs - with tips on harvesting and storing their flowerssteemCreated with Sketch.

in #nature7 years ago (edited)

If you can identify Elder bushes, you have got some good food ahead of you - from flowers and berries! When they flower, elder bushes stand out from far away. Find them now for the flowers - and mark them on your foraging map to pick berries, too, later in the summer!

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I recently posted on how to make some great Elder flower pancakes. Some people had questions about how to reliably identify elder bushes. So I hope this post helps! I also give tips on how to pick the best flowers. And I show how to get the flowers ready to use -- both fresh and dried. This post applies to the Common Elderberry of the eastern United States, the Blue Elder of the western US, and the Black Elderberry of Europe because that are so closely related that they were recently combined into the same species, Sambucus nigra.


How To Identify Elderberry Bushes

The Elder Bush

Black, Common, and Blue Elders are adaptable - they grow in a variety of open habitats. But they prefer moist areas with good drainage. And they get larger when the soil has plenty of nitrogren.

The Elder grows as a bush, usually with multiple stems. It can be a big bush! That guy rustling around, over on the right, is 6 foot, 3 inches tall! Both in the wild and in a cultivated landscape, an elderberry bush is dramatic!

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As they get older, the elderberry branches get woody and their bark has distinctive bumps. Elderberry branches are not solid wood. They have a spongy pith in the center.

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The flowerhead is attached to the end of a branch. Each leaf has 5-11 leaflets with jagged edges. Look how these leaves come out as a whorl on the branch.

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The Elder Flowers

The elderberry flowerhead is gorgeous. It's very flat. It does not have a conical shape - it's flat! Even though the biggest flowerheads may have multiple levels to them, each level is flat and it's not arranged in a cone shape -- that's a different plant!

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Here's how the flowerhead grows: the flowerstems branch out in a whorl, with each stem branching out again into another whorl, and so on.

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How To Harvest Elder Flowers

A close look at the flowerhead shows it is made of lots and lots of individual flowers.

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The flavor of the elderberry flowers does not come from the petals or nectar - it comes from the flowers' pollen! So it's important to harvest the flowerheads at the stage when the pollen is fresh, not before the flowerbuds open up and not after the pollen is gone.

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So if the flowerbuds haven't opened up yet, come back for them later. If the flowers have started turning brown, leave them alone. The best thing to do in that case is just harvest the part of the flowerhead that's at the right stage.

Be aware, that cutting off the flowerheads means there won't be any berries. So don't harvest all of them, if you want to come back for berries later in the summer!

Even though Elder shrubs can be tall, there usually are flowerhead even down low. If the bush is tall, it's easier to harvest the flowerheads as a team. One person bends the stem down, while the other person snips off the whole flowerhead or the parts that are at the right stage of maturity. I think kitchen scissors are the easiest tool for cutting the flowerheads off.

Even though elderberry flowers are little, it really doesn't take long to collect enough flowerheads to use for a bunch of different things.

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How to Store Elder Flowers

I like to use a lot of elder flowers fresh. But the green parts of elderberry plants are not good to eat, so I rub the flowers off the flowerhead. I do get a little bit of the green stems in there, but not enough to worry about. And for some uses, like deep-fried elderflowers, it's easiest to leave the stems on, and just not eat them.

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For long-term storage, I like to dry elder flowers. It's easy here in Oregon's Willamette Valley, because the summer air is dry. I put the flowerheads in a paper sack, loosely, and set it aside where the air circulates. The flowers stay more uniformly white that way. But I can often let them sit on a on open tray -- or in a bowl like this one here. Some of the flowers may turn brownish, but the flavors are just fine! Drying the flowers on a tray also gives any insects and spiders a chance to escape!

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When the flowerheads are dry, it's easier to rub off the flowers than when they are fresh. Then I put the dried flowers in a jar so I can use them later in the year for elder flower tea, which is really good!

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To see how to put all this into action, here's my YouTube video: How to Identify and Harvest Elderberry Flowers

I'll post soon about making tea with from dried and fresh elderberry flowers. Hit this hotlink to see How To Make Elder Flower Pancakes.

There have been some other nice posts about Elder bushes here on Steemit.

If you have posted a picture of an elderberry flower or bush, here on Steemit, please put that link in the comments below. That way, everyone can get a different view of these great plants - and we can appreciate your post!


Plant List

  • Elderberry: Sambucus nigra
  • Common Elderberry: Sambucus nigra subspp. candadensis
  • Blue Elder: Sambucus nigra subspp. cerulea
  • Black Elderberry: Sambucus nigra

What Do You Think?

I hope you get a chance to find some Elder bushes and enjoy their flowers, whether they are the black elderberry, the common elderberry, or the blue elder. It is so worth the effort! These three kinds of elderberry bushes are just out there growing on their own, anyway. The flowers just have to be harvested!

  • Do you use Elder flowers for anything?
  • Do you think you could identify an Elderberry Bush from this description?
  • Do you have any Elder bushes near you?
  • If you find any elder bushes near you, don't hesitate to write a post about it! Show us all! I would like to read about it!

I write about foraging because I believe that we can all have lives that are richer, more secure, more grounded, and more interesting by getting to know the plants and the land around us – in our yards, our parks, and our wilderness.

I would like Steemit to be the premier site for Foraging on the Internet! If you have any thoughts about foraging, or experiences to share, write a post and be sure to use the Foraging tag. And check out the @foraging-trail to see curated quality posts about foraging. Happy Foraging!



** Haphazard Homestead **

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*** foraging, gardening, nature, simple living close to the land ***

All content is 100% Haphazard Homestead!
My YouTube channel: Haphazard Homestead

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I'd be down to try some pancakes.

Those elder flower pancakes really are good! :D

Elder flowers and basil salt are my 2 neared love from steemit.

Elderberries rule. They get huge all along the west coast states and farther inland. I grew up with elderberries all over the property and now we have them all over our property in eastern Washington and the surrounding area.

Go for a drive and watch the sides of the road. At least here in the Inland Northwest, the Elderberry are everywhere along the roads and highways. I have harvested hundreds of pounds of Elderberries from the road easements. You HAVE to wash them to get road grime off them, but I get them for wine so not as big a problem for me. You can also find all the other berries and fruits, rose hips, and foraging foods foods from the road easements, just open your eyes and pay attention, the bounty is all around us. Parking can be a pain, so just be prepared for a possible hike along the road or highway to get to them.

And a pic of some of the Elderberry flowers in my garden.
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That's great that you see so many elderberry bushes around you! They are one that's noticeable at 60 miles/hour. Your harvest reflects how productive they can be, too. Great foraging! And it's nice you have them in your garden, too. They fit so well in a home landscape! Thanks for sharing all that! :D

Why am I not surprised that you have a foraging map? That has never even occurred to me. Then again, I'm a total rookie forager and still on the lookout for these beautiful flowers because I seriously want to try those pancakes!

Foraging maps, over the years, really add up to an entire grocery store! @flemingfarms wrote a nice post on using Google to help out in making foraging maps, too.

Hahaha of course he does! He is a totally foraging geek!
I sure do love his work. Very valuable and well done!

Hello @haphazard-hstead , with this post, i am sure to identify it should i find it in the Mauritian bushes!
Amazing post as usual! Those pancakes still in my mind!
Cheers
@progressivechef

Even in places where Elderberry shrubs are not native, people have planted them. They may be in your neighborhoods or parks. I'm surprised at how adaptable they are, all over the world.

I'll be on the look out for same! Really hope i find it somewhere in our forest here!
Thanks
@progressivechef

Thank you for this foraging post. Upvoted, followed, and resteemed.

Thanks, @preppers, for the resteem. I hope you get to enjoy some Elder flowers yourself! :D

Oh, I've seen those while out hiking! Wild Parsnip looks like that but yellow, right? I need to learn more plant identification for sure!

Wild parsnip don't get woody stems with bumps like the elderberry bushes. It is important to get the identification right, that's for sure!

Well from the news reports I've been hearing, that's for sure! That's good to know the difference...thanks!

Ah, elder flower tea, yum! What an amazing post! On my parent's property in SW Washington there were gigantic elder bushes the size of small trees that I used to play under! Who knew I could have been eating pancakes! lol!

Thank you so, so much for the thorough tutorial HH! Like most of your posts, I bookmarked it in my homesteading file😊

That's neat that you had a big elder bush to appreciate while you were a kid! You would have liked those elderflower pancakes, even a youngster. They are good!

Thank you for this very instructive and educational article. I'm going to bookmark it.

I used to read books by Euell Gibbons years ago. Being knowledgeable enough to live off of the land is an amazingly important skill!

😄😇😄

@creatr

Euell Gibbons books are still among the best out there. They show that wild food can be real food -- not just for survival, but for enjoying every day! Happy foraging!

Thanks very much! :D

Beautiful info! I especially appreciate the part about the timing of the flower collection...even though I can't bring myself to harvest the flowers because I don't want to sacrifice any berries, haha! Maybe worth mentioning that the leaves are serrated and to watch out for some slightly similar plants like Dogwood and Hercules Club?

There are so many flowers on most of the Elderberry bushes -- I hope you can at least have a cup of tea, lol. I did say that the leaflets have jagged edges. It's always interesting to hear what people think another plant looks like and could get confused with. Dogwoods don't have compound leaves, so there's no leaflets - and they don't have a soft pith in the center of their branches. And Hercules Club has so many thorns! I could see someone getting Elderberry bushes confused with Smooth Sumac (Rhus glabra), but only if there weren't any flowers or berries -- the important parts, lol! Anyway, I hope you can spare a few Elder berries, so you can enjoy their flowers! :D

ah good job my friend!

Thanks, @sardrt! There are enough flowers on these shrubs that maybe you would even eat them, lol! You are such a friend of the flowers! ; )

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