Difference between revisions of "User talk:NonZeroSum"

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== Falling Fruit ==
+
Theos’ Video Title: The Ideas of Ted Kaczynski (the Unabomber) & Preventing The Fascist Creep
 +
 +
Index
 +
1. Intros
 +
Theos’ Story
 +
Normandies’ Story
 +
2. Should We Add Disclaimers When Mentioning Kaczynski?
 +
3. Anti-Industrialists & Preventing The Fascist Creep
 +
A leftwing affinity group are moved over to eco-fascist terrorism by the Unabomber
 +
4. Kaczynskis’ Ideas
 +
Our evolution
 +
Jacques Ellul
 +
Can People Choose How Society Is Run When Machines Are Involved?
 +
Does modern life erode our freedoms?
 +
Is modern life unfulfilling?
 +
Has technology increased suffering?
 +
Would industrial society re-emerge?
 +
What level of violence is justified to achieve this anti-tech revolution?
  
{| class="sortable wikitable"
 
|-
 
! Country
 
! Area Order
 
! Area
 
! Northing
 
! City, Town or Village [or nearest]
 
! Wild Food
 
! Season Start
 
! Season Stop
 
! No Season?
 
! Access
 
! Description
 
! Grid Ref
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|13223
 
|Helston
 
|Salicornia
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|One of the few places on the North Cornwall coast you can find the delicious Marsh Samphire (Salicornia sp.). I think there are regulations about picking it though, so be aware of these.
 
|SW6717113223
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|32931
 
|Falmouth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The Tesco bins are kept up, definitely check them. (Last checked: April 2011)
 
|SW8067832931
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|33067
 
|Falmouth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Stones Bakery Bins in alleyway by the bakery - Filled with unsold bakery goods everyday.
 
|SW8069433067
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|34605
 
|Penryn
 
|Orchard
 
|August
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Apple Orchard on Penryn Campus, in the walled garden. Most fall and are left to rot. All open to the public and free to take!
 
|SW7699634605
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|33091
 
|Plymouth
 
|Pacific oyster
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|A few years ago, this area was featured on a Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall episode as a 'secret location' where oysters grew on the jetty, having escaped from the oyster farm upstream. They have to be reached by boat - unless you want to sneak past the port authorities overland with a crowbar...
 
|SX2989333091
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|44363
 
|Kingswear
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|at the top of hamgreen hill go towards the community orchard, pass the side of the orchard and theres a little path through some trees theres wild garlic in amongst the trees and in the hedgerow behind the bench over looking the river
 
|SX9212844363
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|51963
 
|Looe
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Abundant. Beach is actually called samphire beach.
 
|SX2497751963
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|52219
 
|Looe
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Likely to be in these bushes. I haven't seen them, but a friend has.
 
|SX2519552219
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|52219
 
|Looe
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Likely to be in these bushes. I haven't seen them, but a friend has.
 
|SX2519552219
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|53251
 
|Par
 
|Sea-buckthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sea Buckthorn on this beach
 
|SX0832853251
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53388
 
|Looe
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX2576453388
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|52083
 
|Kingsbridge
 
|Common hawthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Multiple oak, sloe, rowan and hawthorn trees across the site, mostly within the earthworks of the Iron Age Hillfort, but a large cluster next to the car park. A single crabapple tree within the medieval castle earthworks.
 
|SX7197052083
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53528
 
|Looe
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Walking along cliff path from dove rock to looe, coast side of path. 2 trees close together with a small well used cut through of hedge.
 
|SX2609953528
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|54296
 
|Par
 
|Wild garlic
 
|March
 
|June
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Spotted in March 2017 - abundance of wild garlic.
 
Accessible from the main road.
 
|SX0725854296
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53202
 
|Plymouth
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|This whole hillside is covered in blackthorn bushes.
 
|SX4862753202
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53304
 
|Plymouth
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX4609253304
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53252
 
|Plymouth
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Elder here and a couple more small ones around.
 
|SX4858953252
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53327
 
|Plymouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|This walk has several patches of brambles.
 
|SX4606253327
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53329
 
|Plymouth
 
|Rose
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Masses of roses of various types here.
 
|SX4613353329
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53337
 
|Plymouth
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Several trees here, currently behind a fence, but accessible.
 
|SX4601653337
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53373
 
|Plymouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX4609953373
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53373
 
|Plymouth
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|One elder here and more further along the path.
 
|SX4617953373
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|53505
 
|Plymouth
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX4636253505
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|54980
 
|Par
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|hazel trees
 
|SX0773954980
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|54213
 
|Torpoint
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Small plants but good quality, all along the bank of the promenade.
 
|SX3063954213
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|54222
 
|Torpoint
 
|Fennel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|100 yards from beginning of pathway. A singular plant.
 
|SX3060254222
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|54428
 
|Looe
 
|Wood sorrel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX2841754428
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|55162
 
|Par
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|hazel trees
 
|SX0810655162
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|55207
 
|Par
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|hazel trees
 
|SX0818255207
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|54712
 
|Torpoint
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|All along the pathway, growing in abundance.
 
|SX3019254712
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|54301
 
|Plymouth
 
|Apple
 
|June
 
|June
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|crab apple tree
 
|SX4691754301
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|54325
 
|Plymouth
 
|Apple
 
|June
 
|June
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|crab apple tree
 
|SX4681354325
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|54662
 
|Torpoint
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX4378354662
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|55146
 
|Torpoint
 
|Grape
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Grape vine of some sort. Overhanging garden wall, please respect that the owners may want to harvest outside their garden too.
 
|SX4409955146
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|56145
 
|Plymouth
 
|Community orchard
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|New community orchard. I saw Apple and quince, have been told there is also pear and cherry. Still saplings as of 2017.
 
|SX4584456145
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|56257
 
|Plymouth
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Elder is all along this hedge.
 
|SX4631156257
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|56257
 
|Plymouth
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Apple orchard. About 20 trees in a public park. Popular spot so yield can vary.
 
|SX5050456257
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|56458
 
|Plymouth
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Large rosemary bush in the park hedge.
 
|SX4531656458
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|56503
 
|Plymouth
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SX4541156503
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|56674
 
|Plymouth
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Apple tree on right just as you come off the road as you are looking down the path.
 
|SX5026356674
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|57814
 
|Plymouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SX4592357814
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|57814
 
|Plymouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|June
 
|June
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|Morbella cherry. Orchard 2 M25 rootstock
 
|SX4592357814
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|57829
 
|Plymouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|M25 Rootstock
 
|SX4600257829
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|57876
 
|Plymouth
 
|Community orchard
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|2 community orchards planted up on November 17 2014 containing local heritage varieties of Apples, Pears and Prunus species
 
|SX4597457876
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|57941
 
|Plymouth
 
|Three-cornered leek
 
|March
 
|April
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Three cornered garlic/leek in abundance on the bank opposite three old Texaco garage. Roadside verge above dog wee level.
 
|SX4486157941
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|58161
 
|Plymouth
 
|Hazel
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Kinterbury Creek on the footpath. The trees are on far side of the narrow creek but the hazels fall onto the path.
 
|SX4402758161
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|61085
 
|Newquay
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Seen a few years ago while on holiday. I'm not 100% sure of the exact spot but it was definitely near this bank of rocks.
 
|SW7938061085
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|59995
 
|Plymouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Footpath to the left of the South West Water treatment works. Lots of blackberries all down the path.
 
|SX4463859995
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|73132
 
|Tavistock
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Beautiful bush producing a good yeild
 
|SX4788373132
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|73207
 
|Tavistock
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Growing along path
 
|SX4749873207
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|72459
 
|NewtonAbbot
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco on Newton Road might provide some dumpster diving possibilities given one has a triangular key required sometimes for opening dumpsters. (Last checked: March 2012)
 
|SX8658572459
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|73619
 
|Tavistock
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Alongside cannel path
 
|SX4740173619
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|74130
 
|Tavistock
 
|Squash
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Tavistock community garden, squash and herbs
 
|SX4789074130
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|73412
 
|Teignmouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SX9457173412
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|73984
 
|NewtonAbbot
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op - near Old Rhydon - round the side of the shop. (Last checked: March 2012)
 
|SX8713373984
 
|-
 
|England
 
|17
 
|English Islands
 
|85349
 
|Sandown
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SZ6183685349
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|86529
 
|Exeter
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SX8139186529
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|89701
 
|Lymington
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4393708: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4393708</nowiki>
 
|SZ3165889701
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|89880
 
|Lymington
 
|Wild privet
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4393570: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4393570</nowiki>
 
|SZ3183589880
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|90646
 
|Lymington
 
|Carrot
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4393698: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4393698</nowiki>
 
|SZ3012690646
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|90856
 
|Dorchester
 
|Apple
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Small apples
 
|SY6822290856
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|90908
 
|Lymington
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Many different sea vegtables
 
|SZ3009190908
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|91006
 
|Dorchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Several walnut trees with small walnuts
 
|SY6863091006
 
|-
 
|England
 
|17
 
|English Islands
 
|91513
 
|Ryde
 
|Dandelion
 
|May
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SZ5966791513
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|91288
 
|Bournemouth
 
|Eucalyptus
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Location approx.
 
<nowiki>https://www.flickr.com/photos/alwyn_ladell/18918241612/in/album-72157654322966848</nowiki>
 
|SZ1159091288
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|91309
 
|Bournemouth
 
|Sea beet
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|approx location
 
january. just steamed some, tasty.
 
|SZ1305291309
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|91424
 
|Bournemouth
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SZ1296691424
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|91495
 
|Bournemouth
 
|Three-cornered leek
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Plenty growing all over. Around April my friend pointed it out and we stopped for a tasting...yum
 
|SZ1183991495
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|91572
 
|Bournemouth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op (address: Madeira Road, Bournemouth). Location of bins: Under shelter round the back of the shop front as part of a student building. This is a new development and the bins are locked (worrying sign!) but last checked they were locked with a chain and a dumpster could have been opened enough to get out some potatoes and stir fry mix (local diver has even managed to rip out the plastic bag they were in to make a belt and bag to carry the food in). (Last checked: November 2011)
 
|SZ0945391572
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|92570
 
|Bournemouth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op (address: Holdenhurst Road, Bournemouth). Location of bins: down a ramp, next to the car wash. This is a Co-op in a Texaco garage next to the main station in the town. It's easier to skip as the bins are open but some people working there can be very hard to co-operate with if you are planning to ask if it is OK to skip there. The two ways out make it ideal for a quick skip-and-dash though so can be skipped at any time of day! (Last checked: November 2011)
 
|SZ1063992570
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|92709
 
|Lymington
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Cycle or walk along the cycle path from Keyhaven to Lymington and find plenty of wild brambles.
 
|SZ3187492709
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|96785
 
|Eastbourne
 
|Burnet rose
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2693743</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Rosa spinosissima
 
Preferred Common Name: Burnet Rose
 
Scientific Name: Rosa spinosissima
 
|TV5412496785
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|94622
 
|Lymington
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|apple tree in front of the Fish
 
|SZ3245194622
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|94659
 
|Lymington
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|owner appears to put apples out on street for free
 
|SZ3232294659
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|94774
 
|Lymington
 
|Mugwort
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387176: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387176</nowiki>
 
|SZ3331194774
 
|-
 
|England
 
|6
 
|The North-West
 
|94751
 
|Poole
 
|Blackberry
 
|September
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Lots of blackberrys to pick from here
 
|SZ0199294751
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|95723
 
|Lymington
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|tasty apples in front of apartment behind Tesco
 
|SZ3247995723
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|98645
 
|Holsworthy
 
|Giant puffball
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Somewhere in these fields grows the glorious giant puffball...
 
|SX2605498645
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|96030
 
|Lymington
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SZ3278896030
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98407
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Elderflowers & Elderberries on a tree right in the corner of the gardens of Cumberland House Museum, often overhanging the gate to Southsea Greenhouse
 
Elderflowers in May and Elderberries in September
 
|SZ6565498407
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98708
 
|Southsea
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Sweet Chestnut trees in the little park, just north of Wimbledon Park
 
|SZ6507698708
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98720
 
|Southsea
 
|Chives
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Permitted by owner
 
|Help yourself herbs. Feel free to take what you need from the front yard, but please leave enough for others, and for the plant to survive.
 
|SZ6487098720
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98667
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387512: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387512</nowiki>
 
|SZ4583398667
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98683
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Sloes a billion!
 
|SZ4572798683
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98693
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|loadsa sloes
 
|SZ4570098693
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|98920
 
|Southsea
 
|Fennel
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|Help Yourself Herb garden outside the school gates to Southsea Infant School
 
|SZ6504198920
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99064
 
|Southsea
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|public, all around the Leisure park you can find them in big quantity
 
|SZ6794799064
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99059
 
|Southsea
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|More of a plum bush than tree, as the street planter is full of the plant and plums are hidden in the leaves.
 
|SZ6499599059
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99266
 
|Southsea
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SZ6439999266
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99313
 
|Southsea
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|public, away from the street
 
|SZ6757399313
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99292
 
|Southsea
 
|Crabapple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SZ6513699292
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99554
 
|Southsea
 
|Blackberry
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Blackberry bushes and a couple of apple trees can be accessed via the car park
 
|SZ6833799554
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99592
 
|Portsmouth
 
|European wild pear
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|On the corner of Stansted & Britannia. Massive tree with small wild pears.
 
|SZ6495599592
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99633
 
|Southsea
 
|Hazel
 
|September
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|6 or more hazel trees on the road (both sides). Really small hazelnuts to be picked on the ground.
 
|SZ6631499633
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|99411
 
|New Milton
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sweet Chestnuts. Nearest parking Wooton Bridge or Boundway.
 
|SZ2622999411
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100154
 
|Southsea
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|2 pears trees close to the Kite Unit. Two different varieties of small apple-like pears.
 
|SU6724200154
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100189
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The Co-op by Portsmouth Harbour Train Station has bins out the back, behind the shop. You can successfully dumpster dive there for the usual Co-op gack etc. (Last checked: November 2011)
 
|SU6309500189
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100203
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Elderberry
 
|June
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|Elderflower/berry bush
 
|SU6325800203
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100444
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|There is an Iceland in the centre of town by the main station that you can skip. Location of bins: on Willis Road, which is a back street. And if you have time, check out the other bins along here (especially the Pizza Hut bins if you don't mind cold pizza!) as it's a quiet street for most of the day and you never know what you might find in any of them! (Last checked: November 2011)
 
|SU6411100444
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100539
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|July
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Tree just as you exit the park area, ladden with Mirabelle plums in early to mid July.
 
|SU6470900539
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100464
 
|Southampton
 
|Evening primrose
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2697920</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Primrose
 
Preferred Common Name: Primrose
 
Scientific Name: Primula vulgaris
 
|SU4233600464
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100734
 
|Southsea
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Stroll across Milton Common and you can't help but find fruit in the mid to late summer.
 
Apple and pear trees are mixed in amoung the abundant blackberries, and you can even dig up Horseradish!
 
|SU6723600734
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100770
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|July
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Two trees outside the entrance to Kingston Prison, near the roundabout and St Mary's Road
 
|SU6604000770
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100787
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU6566200787
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100814
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|several apple trees along the waterside of Milton common.
 
|SU6763000814
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100802
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|July
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|A couple of trees along this boundary.
 
|SU6637900802
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100817
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Cherry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Around the park you'll find Blackberry bushes and plums as well as a cherry tree.
 
|SU6639300817
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100891
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU6635000891
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100896
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|A very abundant tree in 2017
 
|SU6634700896
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100909
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Cherry plum
 
|July
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Some young trees on both sides of the path
 
|SU6652100909
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100915
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|July
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Many trees among the bushes
 
|SU6644100915
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|100922
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Cherry plum
 
|July
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Some trees (2-3) along the path amongs bushes
 
|SU6634000922
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|101248
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Quite a few elder trees inside the goose fence enclosure.
 
|SU6687401248
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|103910
 
|Bude
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots and lots and lots of wild garlic, all along the canal in the forest, at its best around March.
 
|SS2129903910
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|103284
 
|Eastbourne
 
|Cherry plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Easy access
 
|TQ5851103284
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|102815
 
|Brighton
 
|Fish
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|bass fish
 
|TQ3444702815
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|101256
 
|Brockenhurst
 
|Hawthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Outside Wiverley Enclosure. From the car park, walk NW along the track, hawthorns are on your right hand side.
 
|SU2511101256
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|103702
 
|Polegate
 
|Cherry plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Roadside, easy access
 
|TQ5758303702
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|101721
 
|Lee-on-the-Solent
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5697001721
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|101903
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Pear
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Large pear tree
 
|SU6492101903
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|104801
 
|Bude
 
|Mint
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Wild mint grows in various spots down Bude canal.
 
|SS2110304801
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|102586
 
|Chichester
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Two hazel trees at each end of the small road (four total) and blackberries all along the hedge opposite the houses
 
|SU8852102586
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|102129
 
|Southampton
 
|Common mallow
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4438008: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4438008</nowiki>
 
|SU4881802129
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|103947
 
|Brighton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Just by the busstop is an apple tree.
 
|TQ3244703947
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|102484
 
|Brockenhurst
 
|Lemon balm
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2697934</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Lemon balm
 
Preferred Common Name: Lemon balm
 
Scientific Name: Melissa officinalis
 
|SU3950002484
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104018
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op: If you are facing the front, the bins is on the corner of the side street/back street to the right. Sometimes the bin is not out, but is generally good when it is. Address - 41-45 St James's St (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3164704018
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104030
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|This is a small Tesco Express which is located near Morrison’s. If you are facing the front, the bin is on the side street to the left. They throw out a lot of gak and other convenience foods. Can be skipped anytime, but the manager and workers will shout at you if you get caught. Also, the local students dump there household there as well so you might have to dig past this. Address - 25-26 St James's St (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3154204030
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104058
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Morrisons is a large supermarket, there bins are located in a separate area around the back in the car park. To get to the car park you need to go onto Edward Street and turn into the car park. Sometimes they leave there bins out early in the morning (6/7am) for trash collection, or you can climb into the compound (a bit risky) Address - 5-8 St James's St (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3142204058
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|105653
 
|Bude
 
|Parasol mushroom
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Found Parasol Mushrooms here in October, near the edge so be careful! Also, they don't agree with everyone so try a little before you gorge on them.
 
|SS2008205653
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|102589
 
|Ringwood
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Masses of blackberries along the footpath that leads from the drive of the Moorhill Hotel to the back of the cider farm.
 
|SU2116102589
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104275
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|There is a co-operative food store half way up North Street. Facing the shop from the street, turn left up north street then take the first right, the first right again, and the first right again into a delivery area at the back of the shops. The co-op bins are on the far side, slightly to the left, with the bin near the door being the main one for food. (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3103404275
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|105738
 
|Bude
 
|Bullace plum
 
|August
 
|October
 
|
 
|
 
|You'll find sloes, bullaces and damsons all up and down this region.
 
|SS2090805738
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104301
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Eat (sandwhich and salad shop) on Churchill Square just past the top of North Street. Facing the shopping centre, follow the building round to the right onto a side street. There will be bins on your left. These bins also can contain food from the nearby Pie Society and Cornish Pasty stores. Location on map approximate.
 
|TQ3064304301
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104317
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Eat is a sandwich and salad shop near the top of North Street. Facing the shop from the street, turn right and follow the road up, taking the first left onto a pedestrianised area then immediately left again into a large alleyway. At the bottom are the bins for Eat. Sometimes bags of food can be found just inside a metal cage door on the left side of the bottom of the alleyway behind the bins.
 
|TQ3083004317
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104319
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Pret a Manger: The bins are near the Eat ones in the same alleyway. The bin contents is often inconsistent. As well as the main bins, they also have a brown food waste bin which sometimes has un-filled bread rolls in it.
 
|TQ3082304319
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104421
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|This M and S opposite Churchill Square used to be good for skipping, but not so much any more. The bins are in the car park/delivery area around the back, access from the side street to the left as you face the store. Address – 195-200 Western Road, BN1 2BJ‎ (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3065404421
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104487
 
|Hove
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op: A medium sized store, bins are located around the back. Go up the side street to the right as you are facing the store, and then left into a car park/delivery area. Address – 130 Western Road (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ2999704487
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104547
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Infinity Foods is a wholefoods shop half way up North Road - not to be confused with North Street. Facing the shop on north road, turn left and take the first right. There is a small delivery area on your right, where there are brown bins usually containing lots of fruit, veg, and bread. There is also a larger blue bin which is almost always locked with a chain. (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3116904547
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104540
 
|Hove
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Taj is a organic fruit and veg shop. If you are facing the front, the bins are on the side street to the right - there are three/four of them. They are usually great for fruit and veg, but require digging through bins. Be warned, the black bags in these bins are usually full of bits of dead animal carcass. Also, the staff/owners really really hate dumpster divers – best to go when they are closed. Address - 98-99 Western Rd (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ2971804540
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104559
 
|Brighton
 
|Quince
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Very large tree with large fruit in a garden. The fruit are falling to the ground and being left to rot.
 
|TQ3023304559
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104601
 
|Brighton
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ3061304601
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104608
 
|Brighton
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ3057904608
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|103257
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lovely crunchy red eating apples.
 
Dangerous to pick though, high in the tree and right on the roadside, you will need a telescopic picker and people to watch for cars.
 
|SU5304203257
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|106095
 
|Bude
 
|Pavement mushroom
 
|July
 
|October
 
|
 
|
 
|Despite the unappealing name, the 'Pavement Mushroom' is essentially a Field Mushroom that grows in car parks and through pavements - these are in the Brendon Arms / Falcon car park.
 
|SS2068406095
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104631
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree
 
|TQ2930604631
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|106126
 
|Bude
 
|Sea beet
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Growing most of the year round on the edges of the Brendon/Falcon car park. And pretty much anwhere else in Bude you happen to go...
 
|SS2069006126
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104713
 
|Hove
 
|Common fig
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Fig tree
 
|TQ2987804713
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|106150
 
|Bude
 
|Slippery jack
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Very specific location marker, on the border between the petrol station road and Morrisons car park! I've only seen these once in Autumn, and most books don't really recommend them, but if you're going into the supermarket itself and buying very expensive 'dried porcini' mushrooms, a good proportion of what's in the bag will actually be this variety. MUST BE PEELED AND COOKED.
 
|SS2204806150
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104866
 
|Brighton
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|Pavilion Gardens. Bush overhangs the walkway fence.
 
|TQ3036904866
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104864
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Varying sizes of green/pink apples on a large tree in a car park to a health centre, some overhanging the boundary. Likely to require climbing on a wall and/or shaking branches.
 
|TQ3002504864
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|103888
 
|Chichester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Nice tree in churchyard
 
|SU8046203888
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104912
 
|Hove
 
|Common fig
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Fig tree hanging over pavement
 
|TQ2946504912
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|106419
 
|Bude
 
|Wild rocket
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Wild rocket grows around here, though I'd be hesitant about eating it as this is a popular area for dog walkers...
 
|SS2081806419
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104925
 
|Hove
 
|Olive
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Olive trees along street
 
|TQ2872204925
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104999
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Aldi: Bin is round the back of the store in a huge cage, sometimes locked with a chain and padlock and sometimes not. Used to be a really good bin but now more variable and often no food. (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3132604999
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104964
 
|Hove
 
|Holly
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ2979704964
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105020
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Iceland: Bin is round the back of the store, one along from the aldi. Best skipped thursday nights, and sometimes the bin isn't out at all on other days. (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3132005020
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104947
 
|Hove
 
|Common medlar
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|3 medlar trees right next to each other here.
 
|TQ2820304947
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105015
 
|Hove
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Walnut tree in St. Ann's Well Gardens
 
|TQ3014505015
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105041
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Small tree that had a lot of Bramley apples.
 
|TQ3012905041
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105024
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Lovely red crab apples, decent size.
 
|TQ2870005024
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105067
 
|Hove
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Iceland in Hove is on Blatchington Road, near a co-op. Round the back of the store is a cage with a bin inside. Usually the cage is just secured with a chain without a padlock, which can just be unwound, so it's probably a good idea to re-'secure' it with the chain in the same way afterwards to not encourage them to up the security.
 
|TQ2863305067
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105098
 
|Hove
 
|Fig
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Grows over the public loos
 
|TQ2880505098
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104474
 
|Bognor Regis
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op: Dumpsters are behind the store, through the gate that has been bent to allow people to squeeze through. (Last checked: July 2010)
 
|SU9580604474
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105276
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|New England House: This is a large building, and one unit makes bread. The bins are out the front, the bread is often still fresh and good quality.‎ (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3114805276
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105250
 
|Hove
 
|Quince
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|A nice quince tree overhanging the public walkway. You can climb on top of the wall next to it to get at some of the fruit, or shake the tree (but be careful not to crack the fruit). I've knocked on the residents' door to check about picking the fruit on the inside of the wall, with no luck.
 
|TQ2958205250
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105305
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Domino's: Opposite the New England House bread skip, on the other side of the road, is the Domino's pizza bin. Sometimes pizza's not collected, or make wrong, and thrown out here, sometimes still in boxes. They are open quite late, but the delivery drivers don't seem fussed by people checking the bins. (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3120805305
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|106788
 
|Bude
 
|Horse mushroom
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|You can find the occasional field mushroom in these fields, though it may well be the horse mushroom (Agaricus arvensis), equally edible and tasty. As with all mushrooms, make sure you know what you're looking for, as there will be random toadstools about too.
 
|SS2032006788
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105339
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|This Co-op used to be good, but recently they seem to be keeping there food inside the store until bin day. The bins are around the back, in cages, in the car park. It's best to check at night when they are shut and the car park is empty. Address - 119 London Rd (Last checked: August 2013)
 
|TQ3125305339
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105265
 
|Hove
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Couple of cobnut trees here
 
|TQ2827905265
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|106797
 
|Bude
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Not a specific location marker - if you know what you're looking for you'll see Rock Samphire all over the coastline in Bude, at its best in spring and early summer.
 
|SS2024306797
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105402
 
|Brighton
 
|Damson plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of bushes of damsons along this footpath, also worth looking round the back too.
 
|TQ3337605402
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104184
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Rock samphire
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Have spotted samphire growing along the sea wall previously.
 
|SU6798404184
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104148
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Brambles. From memory I think there were loads, but not 100% sure!
 
|SU5577404148
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105431
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Very tall apple tree in this park.
 
|TQ2789305431
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105477
 
|Hove
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco: Good for skipping. Facing the store, go round left to the back. There's usually a good amount of food in a grey bin, but they only throw it out later on (past 11pm) so best done at night.
 
|TQ2900405477
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105469
 
|Hove
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|In the little kids' playground, on the grassy mound.
 
|TQ2783905469
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105483
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Overhanging apple tree, not sure of variety but was juicy and sweet.
 
|TQ2777505483
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|104676
 
|Chichester
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Iceland operates two red dumpsters around the back of the store on South Street, which can be accessed by following an alleyway beside the restaurant Trents, and turning left. They are within some kind of lockable cage, but this does not appear to ever be locked. Understandably with Iceland's small selection of fresh produce, the quantity of food within the bins is often small, and very limited. (Last checked: April 2011)
 
|SU8606304676
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|107200
 
|Bude
 
|Watercress
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|There is a small stream here that runs into the sea, where watercress grows. However, as with most wildly growing watercress, I wouldn't recommend you eat it unless you've conducted detailed analysis of the water...
 
|SS2030207200
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105679
 
|Brighton
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|The bins are in a cage but a delivery truck has crushed it so it is possible to reach in. Probably best to go once closed.
 
|TQ2642305679
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|107289
 
|Bude
 
|Wild thyme
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|You can find wild thyme all through the summer on the cliffs above Crooklets and Summerleaze beaches.
 
|SS2006907289
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104607
 
|Fareham
 
|Water mint
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Grows abundantly on this footpath (but the path is often flooded and very wet).
 
|SU5415004607
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104632
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Couple apple trees - not eating apples, but useful for jelly, chutney, etc.
 
|SU5564904632
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104639
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of brambles up this lane
 
|SU5565304639
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|105060
 
|Chichester
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The Pasty shop on North street has its bins directly behind the shop, which can be accessed via an alleyway off Crane Street. Discarded pastries can be found in small bags. Location on map is uncertain. (Last checked: April 2011)
 
|SU8608605060
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104807
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5569004807
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|104850
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Doesn't fruit every year
 
|SU5528004850
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106174
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ2917906174
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106255
 
|Brighton
 
|Quince
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Quince tree overhanging the public walkway. Some years it's heaving and some years there's not many. Very tall so hard to reach. Lots more fruit inside the property, but doesn't seem to get picked unfortunately.
 
|TQ3142506255
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105045
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Hazel
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|good, only advantage, close to Portsmouth road
 
|SU6571805045
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106301
 
|Hove
 
|Pear
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Not sure what type of pear these were but very small and brownish skin.
 
|TQ2826606301
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105038
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5653805038
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106349
 
|Hove
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of elderberry bushes along the southern edge of the Nevill playing field.
 
|TQ2817506349
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105096
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5803405096
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105025
 
|Southampton
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|October
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Common land, hook park nature reserve, horse grazing. Several Chestnuts in this field.
 
|SU4995805025
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106156
 
|Lancing
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ1784306156
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105151
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of blackberries around here.
 
|SU5805105151
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106437
 
|Hove
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Bush alongside the fence on Nevill playing field.
 
|TQ2826706437
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106316
 
|Shoreham-by-Sea
 
|Horse-chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2204806316
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105193
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Brambles grow all down this footpath, but it is a popular footpath so they are well picked.
 
|SU5487405193
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105305
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberries all along Peak Lane, if memory serves me right.
 
|SU5564205305
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106360
 
|Lancing
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ1822706360
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105604
 
|Emsworth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op (address: 306 Main Road, Southbourne PO10 8JN). Bins are behind the store a little way down Church Road and on the left. (Last checked: July 2010)
 
|SU7696805604
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106378
 
|Lancing
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ1799406378
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106594
 
|Hove
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Lovely yellow plums hanging down outside the doctors.
 
|TQ2706806594
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106407
 
|Lancing
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Plenty of sloes around this lovely local nature reserve
 
|TQ1811906407
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106622
 
|Hove
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco: Good for skipping. It is small but usually has decent readily-edible foods. The bins are in a small compound to the right of the store – you need to (carefully – not making too much noise as people live above the shop) climb over the fence and the bin should be waiting there for you.
 
|TQ2723406622
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106624
 
|Hove
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Plum tree with big purple plums hanging over the driveway
 
|TQ2719906624
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105382
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On a busy road though...
 
|SU5439105382
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106472
 
|Lancing
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ1790606472
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106812
 
|Brighton
 
|Fig
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Very large, mature fig tree with a lot of overhang onto the street. I haven't been by for years but there used to be a lot of fallen fruit.
 
|TQ3017006812
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106894
 
|Hove
 
|Common medlar
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Medlar tree. Ask permisson before taking
 
|TQ2647306894
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105657
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Wild cherry tree in a garden but overhangs path. Very sour!
 
|SU5531305657
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106951
 
|Hove
 
|Common fig
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Fig tree. Ask permission before taking
 
|TQ2642806951
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105675
 
|Southampton
 
|Horseradish
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|A few large clumps of horseradish growing in this area
 
|SU5032005675
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105764
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Overhangs the pavement. Fruits every year.
 
|SU5778505764
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105990
 
|Emsworth
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|You can dumpster dive at local Tesco (address: 17 North Street, Emsworth, Havant PO10 7BY). How to get to the bins: just behind the store, up a ramp. Some impressions from one local diver: "I got spotted here by a friendly Tesco worker who politely smiled at my hoard of Jaffa Cakes and thankfully didn't point out my shambolic daytime opperation to her boss who was standing in front of her while I struggled to maneuver my bike down the ramp!" (Last checked: July 2010)
 
|SU7494605990
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105764
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|A few cherry/cherry-plum/plum trees in the grass between the MOD housing. Never tasted them, so don't know if they are good.
 
|SU5551505764
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105873
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5293905873
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106127
 
|Havant
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|One Stop. Address: 53 Emsworth Road, Havant PO9 2SB. How to get to the bins: entrance is just a little way up the one way street next to the store. (Last checked: July 2010)
 
|SU7270106127
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105912
 
|Fareham
 
|Wild garlic
 
|April
 
|May
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Nice little patch of wild garlic by stream
 
|SU5385405912
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107066
 
|Shoreham-by-Sea
 
|Bladder-senna
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4097335: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4097335</nowiki>
 
|TQ2127007066
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|105984
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Brambles along most of the cycle path side of Bath Lane park.
 
|SU5832905984
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|106650
 
|Arundel
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|[4x] Apple trees
 
|TQ0162806650
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107228
 
|Brighton
 
|Pear
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Right by the carpark entrance, was dripping with fruit when I saw it.
 
|TQ2497207228
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107303
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ2802207303
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106181
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Portsdown Hill,
 
|SU6623406181
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106035
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5292806035
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106056
 
|Fareham
 
|Walnut
 
|October
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Two large mature Walnut trees in the hedgerow between the pavement and field.
 
|SU5427006056
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106051
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5298206051
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106118
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|On the last house before you go down to the subway, there's an apple tree that falls down over the subway wall.
 
|SU5838506118
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108904
 
|Saint Leonards-on-sea
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Lots of wild garlic growing here
 
|TQ7985908904
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107467
 
|Brighton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|blackberries follow tree line....
 
|TQ3146507467
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106352
 
|Havant
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Waitrose. Address: 12 North Street, Havant PO9 1PR. How to get to the bins: climb over the wall from the side of the Agency at 4 Prince George's Street (best done at night!) and they are right by that wall! (Last checked: July 2010)
 
|SU7180906352
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106200
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5373806200
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106212
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5372306212
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106222
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|nice little tree in hedge
 
|SU5368106222
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106466
 
|Havant
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Iceland. Address: 16-18 Market Parade, Havant PO9 1QF‎. How to get to the bins: right round to the left of the store as you face it is a way in, and walk straight ahead. The dumpster is against the wall by the door in front of you. (Last checked: July 2010)
 
|SU7175106466
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106385
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|So many this autumn, very tasty sweet and sour.
 
|SU6466606385
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106265
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5302206265
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106273
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|two maybe more trees tucked away in the woods
 
|SU5293006273
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106278
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5302306278
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106305
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of plum trees around here (might be slightly further up towards roundabout) but on a busy road.
 
|SU5358606305
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108108
 
|Lewes
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|somehere along here amazing pear tasting apple tree
 
|TQ4704808108
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106314
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Small tree in blossom
 
|SU5305706314
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106321
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5287406321
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107662
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ2837407662
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106362
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5312106362
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106369
 
|Fareham
 
|Pear
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Nice big mature tree covered in blossom, also several old apple trees nearby.
 
|SU5288806369
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106384
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5314206384
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106387
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5285706387
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106400
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5349406400
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107541
 
|Shoreham-by-Sea
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of sloe bushes here
 
|TQ2116307541
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106407
 
|Fareham
 
|Wild garlic
 
|April
 
|May
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Ransoms / Wind Garlic
 
Toward end of path on the right amongst bluebells.
 
|SU5350406407
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106307
 
|Brockenhurst
 
|English holly
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2697756</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: European holly
 
Preferred Common Name: European holly
 
Scientific Name: Ilex aquifolium
 
|SU3984406307
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106439
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5318706439
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107808
 
|Brighton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lost of sloe trees
 
|TQ3050407808
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106566
 
|Portsmouth
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of crop last year. And other trees near by too. Not 100% sure on variety
 
|SU6350906566
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106407
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackberry
 
|September
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Common Land with many blackberries
 
|SU4825306407
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107832
 
|Brighton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of elderberry trees
 
|TQ3050607832
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106468
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5282406468
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106517
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5383406517
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106528
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SU5412806528
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106530
 
|Fareham
 
|Hazel
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5329506530
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106542
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Nice little tree with lots of fruit.
 
|SU5379706542
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106543
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5280406543
 
|-
 
|England
 
|16
 
|The South-West
 
|109345
 
|Bude
 
|Yellow chanterelle
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|I can't guarantee this, but I believe that somewhere in Stibb woods you can find Golden Chanterelle in late summer/early autumn.
 
|SS2220309345
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106577
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5314606577
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106591
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5382906591
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106602
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5344706602
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106609
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SU5339406609
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106610
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5344706610
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106611
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5337406611
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108068
 
|Brighton
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Big and mature tree
 
|TQ3385608068
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106641
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees in the grounds of Titchfield Abbey
 
|SU5423306641
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106680
 
|Fareham
 
|Pear
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|On private land
 
|SU5315906680
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106682
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5304806682
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|107913
 
|Brighton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Couple of mature apple trees on the footpath the skirts around the northern edge of the allotments.
 
|TQ2493407913
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106693
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5303306693
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106696
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5328106696
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106731
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5352206731
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106735
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5299306735
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106745
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5361206745
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106748
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5381706748
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106748
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5375306748
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106747
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5360006747
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106834
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackthorn
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5356506834
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106848
 
|Fareham
 
|Hazel
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5333106848
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106850
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5292006850
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108459
 
|Lewes
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bushes
 
|TQ3871708459
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106926
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5287306926
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|106976
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackthorn
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5358306976
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107038
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5280707038
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107051
 
|Fareham
 
|Walnut
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Nice big tree
 
|SU5403507051
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107118
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackthorn
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5362307118
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108309
 
|Lancing
 
|Poppy
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|A small population, I've seen far more a year or two ago. Might get a few seedheads
 
|TQ1670008309
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107285
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5340807285
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107302
 
|Fareham
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5341507302
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108643
 
|Brighton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackthorn all around edge of field
 
|TQ2929408643
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108652
 
|Brighton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|blackberries all round edge of field
 
|TQ2933408652
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108838
 
|Brighton
 
|Damson plum
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Opposite the footbridge over the A27
 
|TQ3533608838
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108670
 
|Hove
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree on Devil's Dyke Rd
 
|TQ2788708670
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108945
 
|Brighton
 
|Common hornbeam
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2746297</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Carpinus betulus
 
Preferred Common Name: Hornbeam
 
Scientific Name: Carpinus betulus
 
|TQ3404908945
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107414
 
|Southampton
 
|Common snowberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2697692</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Common snowberry
 
Preferred Common Name: Common snowberry
 
Scientific Name: Symphoricarpos albus
 
|SU4302207414
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107540
 
|Fareham
 
|Damson plum
 
|June
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Several damson trees, yellow and red. Healthy and fruit around June.
 
|SU5561207540
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107537
 
|Fareham
 
|Cherry plum
 
|July
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Loads of different colour plums.
 
3 or 4 trees just on and around the footpath.
 
very tasty!
 
|SU5342907537
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108896
 
|Brighton
 
|Wild garlic
 
|May
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2999208896
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|110476
 
|Hastings
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|There are a few large rosemary bushes here, to the left of the park, as you pass the tennis courts. Give it a very good wash, as the path is frequented by dogs!
 
|TQ8107010476
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|108029
 
|Chichester
 
|Campsite
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Can have open fire, Good toilets but no shower.
 
|SU8324308029
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107662
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5250407662
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109211
 
|Lewes
 
|Plum
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Not sure what type of plum but 3 trees dripping with fruit here.
 
|TQ3697109211
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|110579
 
|Hastings
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Tonnes of wild garlic around here. From the stairs that lead up to Harmer's Reservoirs, go left off the path/stairs into the trees and there's loads of plants.
 
|TQ8077510579
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107794
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SU5286707794
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109468
 
|Lewes
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bushes
 
|TQ3935209468
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109467
 
|Lewes
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple Trees
 
|TQ3928509467
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|110744
 
|Hastings
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|A few patches of wild garlic can be found in the park, near the miniature railway track. I would give the leaves a very good wash, there are lots of dogs around!
 
|TQ8068610744
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109506
 
|Lewes
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple Trees
 
|TQ3962909506
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107840
 
|Southampton
 
|Potato
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4393463: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4393463</nowiki>
 
|SU4252807840
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107991
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5274507991
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109412
 
|Brighton
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Very productive apple tree just by the pavement here.
 
|TQ3215709412
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108131
 
|Fareham
 
|Garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Lots of wild garlic on the verges in the spring
 
|SU6266308131
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|111000
 
|Hastings
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|An abundance of blackberries
 
|TQ8283211000
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109400
 
|Brighton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Loads of blackberry bushes along this path.
 
|TQ2924909400
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108088
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Apple Trees along the verges.
 
|SU5448608088
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|107883
 
|Lyndhurst
 
|Chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Chestnut Trees to find
 
|SU2677507883
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108111
 
|Southampton
 
|Pear
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Pear tree with fruit overhanging onto path
 
|SU5188708111
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108154
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5244608154
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108195
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5255108195
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108215
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|Big tree in border between two businesses.
 
|SU5234408215
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108236
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5256608236
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108287
 
|Fareham
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Plenty of blackberries in hedgerows along Springles Lane
 
|SU5440708287
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108234
 
|Southampton
 
|Common hornbeam
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387478: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387478</nowiki>
 
|SU4200308234
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108234
 
|Southampton
 
|Common hornbeam
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387478: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387478</nowiki>
 
|SU4200308234
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108334
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|Big tree with big apples (cookers) in Makro car park
 
|SU5254608334
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108355
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|SU5213208355
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108361
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Large tree with good fruit opposite office building
 
|SU5235808361
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108361
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Large tree with good fruit opposite office building
 
|SU5235808361
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108273
 
|Southampton
 
|Field maple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387477: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387477</nowiki>
 
|SU4191008273
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108378
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU5236308378
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108214
 
|Ringwood
 
|Common hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4395580: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4395580</nowiki>
 
|SU1523908214
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109794
 
|Brighton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree on Devil's Dyke Rd
 
|TQ2683909794
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108435
 
|Southampton
 
|Sycamore maple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4437847: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4437847</nowiki>
 
|SU4193808435
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109856
 
|Brighton
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Pear tree on Devil's Dyke Rd
 
|TQ2676509856
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|109866
 
|Brighton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree on Devil's Dyke Rd
 
|TQ2675309866
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108509
 
|Southampton
 
|Common sea-buckthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2697695</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Sea Buckthorn
 
Preferred Common Name: Sea Buckthorn
 
Scientific Name: Hippophae rhamnoides
 
|SU4196308509
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108660
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|December
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5276208660
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108587
 
|Southampton
 
|Common sea-buckthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387379: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387379</nowiki>
 
|SU4201608587
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108739
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SU5175108739
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108739
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|Visible from station platform
 
|SU5175108739
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|108692
 
|Southampton
 
|European rowan
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4387378: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4387378</nowiki>
 
|SU4213808692
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|110139
 
|Steyning
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Big, fat Bramley cooking apples, hanging over the back wall. Easily accessible from the pavement with lots of windfall apples on the ground.
 
|TQ2003810139
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|110311
 
|Steyning
 
|Blackthorn
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Little cluster of sloe bushes that form a hedgerow here.
 
|TQ2007410311
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|109553
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4942209553
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|109739
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4920809739
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|109760
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU5015109760
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|109770
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4920709770
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|111305
 
|Henfield
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Hazel tree just before the Shepard & Dog pub garden
 
|TQ2468911305
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|111323
 
|Henfield
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Hazel trees all along this stretch of road
 
|TQ2465011323
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|111538
 
|Henfield
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bushes in the hedgerow
 
|TQ2491411538
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|111542
 
|Henfield
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|For elder flower and berry
 
|TQ2491811542
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|111574
 
|Henfield
 
|Dewberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Dewberry bush
 
|TQ2493311574
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|110520
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4880610520
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111076
 
|Fareham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Apple trees in a garden, but windfalls onto the path!
 
|SU5570111076
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111043
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Tree is hanging over, so fruit within reach.
 
|SU4511111043
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111081
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|SU4795011081
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111128
 
|Southampton
 
|Walnut
 
|September
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Large mature tree. Good yield every year.
 
|SU4181811128
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|112304
 
|Steyning
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sloe bushes
 
|TQ1452812304
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|112551
 
|Steyning
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Hazel trees all around edge
 
|TQ1461212551
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|112555
 
|Steyning
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sloe all around edge
 
|TQ1468412555
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|112579
 
|Steyning
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberries all around edge
 
|TQ1464412579
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111620
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Numerous Apple trees along the fence next to the railway.
 
|SU4361411620
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111649
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Lots and lots of blackberries
 
|SU4377811649
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111818
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Numerous other Apple trees in amongst the trees, may be accessible.
 
|SU4379111818
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|111946
 
|Southampton
 
|Asian pear
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|The Mayor's Pears!
 
Nice little round pears, very tasty.
 
Small tree with fence enclosure, planted by the mayor. Peartree Green is well worth exploring further, it is a lovely place with great views over the Itchen valley.
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.co.uk/search?q=mayors</nowiki>
 
|SU4404311946
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112351
 
|Southampton
 
|Mulberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|One low hanging tree.
 
|SU4182412351
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112354
 
|Southampton
 
|Mulberry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4182512354
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112431
 
|Southampton
 
|Walnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Walnut tree in the park
 
|SU4180512431
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112500
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Several types of apple tree. All eaters.
 
|SU4172212500
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112556
 
|Southampton
 
|Pear
 
|October
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Big pear Tree with good crop.
 
|SU4577712556
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112511
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Around 20 trees up the bank and down the pathway
 
|SU4015512511
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112612
 
|Southampton
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Several small trees along the river.
 
|SU4133312612
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112761
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Couple of mature apple trees in hedge on verge, safe to pick, cookers I think.
 
|SU4825912761
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112761
 
|Southampton
 
|Grape
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Black grape. Several bunches yearly.
 
|SU3978912761
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112837
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Two nice little trees here and some biger ones further along the A35
 
|SU3599512837
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112850
 
|Southampton
 
|Walnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Two nice little trees here
 
|SU3600112850
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112854
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Three cherry trees along roadside and on public property.
 
|SU3603912854
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112895
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Small apple tree with great yield just by the walkway that goes to the apartment building.
 
|SU4041012895
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113040
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Couple of mature plum trees in the hedge
 
|SU4853113040
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113034
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of plum (damson?) trees all along Chesil beach (nature reserve).
 
Also good for blackberries.
 
|SU4409913034
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|112986
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of bushes run along the river.
 
|SU3591112986
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113119
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4845413119
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113148
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|SU4850613148
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113167
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4748913167
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113210
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|SU4856613210
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113179
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4387513179
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113225
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|SU4865213225
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113261
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4867913261
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113219
 
|Southampton
 
|Walnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SU4342213219
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113303
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|SU4881113303
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113418
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Tree cut down!
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.com/2012/03/another-apple-tree-needless-destroyed.html</nowiki>
 
This was my favourite apple tree. Delicious red apples that were easily picked. In 2010 we picked a couple of big bucketfulls here with friends:
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.com/2011/03/cider-inside-er-insides.html</nowiki>
 
In 2011 the tree was heavily pruned, so I was hoping for a good crop in 2012:
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.com/2011/03/spring-forward-fall-back-on-planning.html</nowiki>
 
Sadly, someone has cut the tree down and planted some holly. I have no idea who but these acts of vandalism should always be reported to the local council tree dept.
 
|SU4891613418
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113520
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4882713520
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113542
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4885113542
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113579
 
|Southampton
 
|Chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On roadsides and Telegraph woods too
 
|SU4708713579
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113548
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Several small apple trees around the edge of the community centre garden, bordering the road, behind the fence.
 
Sadly some seem to have been cut down, possibly to allow more sun to fall on the flats opposite.
 
|SU4307813548
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113547
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU3672513547
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113616
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In Community Centre grounds
 
|SU4308413616
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113623
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|SU4294313623
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113628
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Short shrubby tree
 
|SU4294713628
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|114589
 
|Pulborough
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|A house with a glut of apples sometimes leave some out for passers by with a small donation.
 
|TQ0737614589
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113712
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4144513712
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113737
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4137013737
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113808
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4935813808
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113774
 
|Southampton
 
|Black mulberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|SU4388113774
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113812
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|tree is in fenced off building plot overhangs street. Unverified for last two years.
 
|SU4394213812
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113866
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4921313866
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113799
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|June
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|All along the Eastern Side of the fence can be found 2 apple trees and 2 cherry plum trees
 
|SU4121013799
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113896
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4920213896
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113897
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|All along both sides of the road here
 
|SU4915513897
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113946
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4943813946
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|113933
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4174813933
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114034
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Crab apple trees
 
|SU4875314034
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114052
 
|Southampton
 
|Wild garlic
 
|April
 
|May
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Wild Garlic flowering along the bank next to the pavement.
 
|SU4431814052
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114053
 
|Southampton
 
|European pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lovely mature pear tree cut down on verge of Cobden Bridge!:
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.com/2012/01/no-more-pear-pirates.html</nowiki>
 
|SU4386014053
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114089
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|By the house boat next to the bridge
 
|SU4370014089
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114061
 
|Southampton
 
|Walnut
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Walnut, Common
 
|SU4018814061
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114064
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4018814064
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114209
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|SU4955414209
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|115096
 
|Pulborough
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Elder Trees
 
|TQ0762115096
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114247
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Several Apple Trees around here, couple of eaters and a couple of cookers
 
|SU4953914247
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114246
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree
 
|SU4937914246
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114250
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4829214250
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114251
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4820914251
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|115145
 
|Pulborough
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sloe Bushes
 
|TQ0761215145
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114285
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree
 
|SU4922314285
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114196
 
|Southampton
 
|White deadnettle
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2698346</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: White deadnettle
 
Preferred Common Name: White deadnettle
 
Scientific Name: Lamium album
 
|SU3618214196
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114296
 
|Southampton
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4804214296
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|115191
 
|Pulborough
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bushes all around field.
 
|TQ0760315191
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114392
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Plum trees
 
|SU4918514392
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114378
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4459714378
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114449
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple tree
 
|SU4918914449
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114407
 
|Southampton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4357114407
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114515
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Cherry trees all along Thomas Lewis Waty in the verges.
 
Possibly dangerous picking though.
 
|SU4335414515
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114562
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4639514562
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114565
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4638114565
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114539
 
|Southampton
 
|Meadowsweet
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Follows the river for about 200 yards +
 
|SU3690514539
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114690
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In Riverside Park near swings
 
|SU4371014690
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114685
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4264114685
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114732
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4343814732
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114763
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4199514763
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114770
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|possible sloes!
 
|SU4224814770
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114791
 
|Southampton
 
|Common hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Overhanging the pavement
 
|SU4293114791
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114813
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4390614813
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114811
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Mature apple tree felled on edge of the little common!
 
|SU4204814811
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114874
 
|Southampton
 
|European pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Pear tree cut down on land believed to be set aside as allotment space! Stump could grow again if left and tended properly:
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.com/2012/03/more-pear-tree-destruction.html</nowiki>
 
|SU4318314874
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114935
 
|Southampton
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|An apple tree and a plum tree entangled with a blackberry bush, sounds like a recipe!
 
|SU4939114935
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|114976
 
|Southampton
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|By the pavement, a large bush.
 
|SU4338014976
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115017
 
|Southampton
 
|Lemon
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|A small Lemon Tree
 
|SU4250715017
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115076
 
|Southampton
 
|American elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Quite high up.
 
|SU4378315076
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115119
 
|Southampton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4432715119
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115114
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4357015114
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115155
 
|Southampton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4438815155
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115015
 
|Fordingbridge
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|There is a nice apple tree that leans over a a fence. You can see it from Salisbury Road. The apples will be ready in August / September. These apples would be good for apple sauce.
 
|SU1508515015
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115201
 
|Southampton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4446215201
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115191
 
|Southampton
 
|Common medlar
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|There is a Medlar tree right outside my office - never seen anyone pick them!
 
Southampton's own "Urbane" Forager made Medlar Wine from them last year ;-)
 
|SU4230015191
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115202
 
|Southampton
 
|European plum
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Wonder a little way along the footpath going down the valley and look up to see a stunning plum tree.
 
|SU4304515202
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115380
 
|Southampton
 
|Wild garlic
 
|April
 
|May
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|vast quantities of ransoms growing down the banks of the path toward the valley.
 
|SU4492615380
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115430
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Mansbridge Community Orchard. Apples pears sloes blackberries etc etc.
 
|SU4451815430
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115442
 
|Southampton
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4467615442
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115443
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4455815443
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115447
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4442915447
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115472
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Mansbridge Community Orchard.
 
Lots of apple trees on the common ground by the fen.
 
We hold an apple day here each year.
 
Plenty for everyone.
 
A beautiful green space!
 
|SU4463215472
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115527
 
|Southampton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sloes
 
|SU4454915527
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115560
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4500815560
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115562
 
|Southampton
 
|Wild lettuce
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Single plant by a tree opposite the traffic lights
 
|SU4247015562
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115585
 
|Southampton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4508615585
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115629
 
|Southampton
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4455315629
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115706
 
|Southampton
 
|Common bird's-foot trefoil
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2698258</nowiki>
 
Identification Guess: Common Bird's-foot-trefoil
 
Preferred Common Name: Common Bird's-foot-trefoil
 
Scientific Name: Lotus corniculatus
 
|SU3428315706
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115720
 
|Southampton
 
|European ash
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4438080: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4438080</nowiki>
 
|SU3424315720
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|115729
 
|Southampton
 
|Guelder-rose
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4437735: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4437735</nowiki>
 
|SU3445315729
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|116002
 
|Southampton
 
|Greengage plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Yellow plum tree with excellent tasting fruit in 2010.
 
|SU3942116002
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|116130
 
|Southampton
 
|Cleavers
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4075399: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4075399</nowiki>
 
|SU4599116130
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|123121
 
|Calais
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Used to be able to fill vans worth of food. They started to keep the bins inside, but was a few years ago, so might be leaving them out again.
 
|TR7154323121
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|123059
 
|Calais
 
|Dumpster (non-edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Posh baguettes with lots of great fillings, cake and in the other bin lots of oddities like a tiny potted cactus.
 
|TR6880923059
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|123248
 
|Calais
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Place Crèvecoeur: A good place to get food during the market, which close between noon and 1pm on Saturdays. It´s good to be there slightly before and ask vendors for food they throw away. It´s good to know French, otherwise bring a dictionary or come with a person who knows French. However a useful phrase can be 'Vous allez les jeter?'
 
|TR7118823248
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|123369
 
|Calais
 
|Indian mallow
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Ceci est un test
 
|TR7314423369
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|116937
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Small tree on roundabout, probably no fruit yet
 
|SU4435416937
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117018
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4448317018
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117058
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4481617058
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117072
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4427217072
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117107
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4486117107
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117306
 
|Southampton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4203817306
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117692
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4422317692
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117769
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4525917769
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|119400
 
|Burgess Hill
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Just near St George's Park Retirement Village, few trees along the road.
 
|TQ3358319400
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117872
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4423317872
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117885
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4532717885
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117915
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4433217915
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117920
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4434717920
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117921
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4431317921
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|124805
 
|Calais
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR7058624805
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117965
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4537517965
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|124836
 
|Calais
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|Place d'Armes: A good place to get food during the market, which close between noon and 1pm on Saturdays. It´s good to be there slightly before and ask vendors for food they throw away. It´s good to know French, otherwise bring a dictionary or come with a person who knows French. However a useful phrase can be 'Allez-vous jeter ces fruits / légumes ?' ('Are you going to throw away these fruits / vegetables?').
 
|TR7046024836
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118057
 
|Southampton
 
|Garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Just as you get into the woodland there is wild garlic growing in the spring/early summer.
 
|SU5170918057
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|117997
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU4421117997
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118034
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4541618034
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118035
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Lots around playing field edges and on pavements by road
 
|SU4419318035
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118101
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4545618101
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118092
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4416818092
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118120
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Avenue Park.
 
Very good for blackberries - look out for bullocks and occasional adders.
 
|SU4385418120
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118136
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4403018136
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118152
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4548518152
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118141
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4398018141
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118183
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4384318183
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118192
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4429818192
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118195
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4381318195
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118221
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4379618221
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118237
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4552618237
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118231
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4375518231
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118347
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4556418347
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118342
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4361418342
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118404
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In the verge beside the road
 
|SU4343318404
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118479
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Bramley Apple
 
|SU4418618479
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118475
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Beautyberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|By The side of the path
 
|SU4333018475
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118523
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|SU4425518523
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118581
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|December
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|The apple tree overhangs the bus stop
 
|SU4941518581
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118584
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Above the bus shelter (of the number 2 bluestar bus heading towards southampton) there is a overgrowing apple tree
 
I saw this in october but now sure when apples are in season!
 
|SU4939618584
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118545
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4427318545
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118555
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4427418555
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118550
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Mature apple tree cut down. Ordered by owners of the nearby business offices.
 
<nowiki>http://theurbaneforager.blogspot.com/2011/09/picknik-aborted-due-to-fruiticide.html</nowiki>
 
|SU4326918550
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118873
 
|Southampton
 
|Chives
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Wild chives grow on the verges around this area
 
|SU5456618873
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|118983
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4438818983
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119124
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4383419124
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119156
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4573719156
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119174
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees - Flemming Park reds. Lovely eating apples with pinkish flesh. Do not keep too well past one month.
 
|SU4437919174
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119171
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4385919171
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119190
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4386819190
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119215
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4388119215
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119253
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4391419253
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119356
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Chestnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Along hardings lane, there's a little path that leads to a field. Along that path there's loads of chestnut trees
 
|SU4892619356
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119378
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Right next to the bus stop there's a lot overhanging - I saw this in august
 
|SU4907319378
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119367
 
|Eastleigh
 
|European pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4434119367
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|119888
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|by side of school fence
 
|SU4410419888
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120048
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Nothing here
 
|SU4310020048
 
|-
 
|International
 
|1
 
|Internationalist
 
|127359
 
|Calais
 
|Sea-buckthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR7448527359
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120322
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4423920322
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120767
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4355820767
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|121402
 
|Wellington
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Hazelnut alongside Piley Lane near Cothay Manor
 
|ST0871521402
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120901
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4483420901
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120916
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4481320916
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120921
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4484620921
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120948
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4486220948
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120952
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4482120952
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|120958
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4485620958
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|121300
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4288621300
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|121773
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4538121773
 
|-
 
|England
 
|9
 
|Upper East Coast
 
|121739
 
|Romsey
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Old orchard, now a public park.
 
|SU3589021739
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|122259
 
|Taunton
 
|Burdock
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2240222259
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|122246
 
|Taunton
 
|European plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Greengages and cherry plum
 
|ST2342722246
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|122015
 
|Eastleigh
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4529122015
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|122132
 
|Winchester
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4528922132
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|122140
 
|Winchester
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4525622140
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|122142
 
|Winchester
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4524622142
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|122207
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In Verge
 
|SU4523822207
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|122208
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4524022208
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|122672
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2358022672
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|122870
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2210722870
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123077
 
|Taunton
 
|Alexanders
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|in spring
 
|ST1950923077
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123068
 
|Taunton
 
|Alexanders
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|in spring
 
|ST2126923068
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123112
 
|Taunton
 
|Garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Wild garlic along river bank
 
|ST2238323112
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123335
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees on the edge of the cycle path
 
|ST2061623335
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123377
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2409023377
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123442
 
|Taunton
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2423723442
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123582
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sloe bushes on the edge of the MoD sports ground
 
|ST2318723582
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123655
 
|Taunton
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On the edge of the old MoD sports ground
 
|ST2306623655
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123722
 
|Taunton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Elder along the path between school and Galmington Stream.
 
|ST2148523722
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123731
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Large bush of brambles along the path between the row of houses
 
|ST2112223731
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123896
 
|Taunton
 
|Almond
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On the corner of Amor Place.
 
|ST2176223896
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123944
 
|Taunton
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Hazelnut alongside the road
 
|ST2137823944
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123952
 
|Taunton
 
|Mulberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|At the top end of Vivary Park
 
|ST2295423952
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123967
 
|Taunton
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2298723967
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123950
 
|Taunton
 
|Linden
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lime trees
 
|ST2420423950
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|123969
 
|Taunton
 
|Bay laurel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|12 Holway Hill
 
|ST2395623969
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124006
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2255024006
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124076
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Bush of brumbles along the cycle path between hospital and Galmington Stream.
 
|ST2164224076
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124080
 
|Taunton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Elder along the cyclepath between hospital and Galmington Stream.
 
|ST2165524080
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124129
 
|Taunton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2255524129
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124163
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Cooking apple
 
|ST2268624163
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124176
 
|Taunton
 
|Black mulberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|To the left of the main path from the High Street
 
|ST2273024176
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124347
 
|Taunton
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sweet chesnut in County Hall grounds alongside the oak trees between County Hall and the Courts
 
|ST2239424347
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124359
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|where the footpath from the High Street meets the entrance out of Orchard by Hatchers near the car park
 
|ST2277724359
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124422
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Yellow cherry plum in the corner of Tangier car park by the cut through to St. John's Road
 
|ST2231624422
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124428
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Cherry trees on St. John's Road beside the Magistrates' Court
 
|ST2226924428
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124474
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Red cherry plum by the pedestrian bridge from Tangier car park into Tower Lane (towards the bus station)
 
|ST2237824474
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124565
 
|Taunton
 
|Bay laurel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|on the edge of the bridge from the mueum into Goodland Gardens
 
|ST2313624565
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124592
 
|Taunton
 
|Common fig
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Fig tree overhanging the path between Goodlands Gardens and Winchester Arms
 
|ST2256924592
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124627
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Huge apple tree (probably cooking apples)
 
|ST2173724627
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124641
 
|Taunton
 
|Garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Wild garlic along the stream between Tesco and the Charity Commission
 
|ST2217124641
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124666
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2421024666
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124697
 
|Taunton
 
|Linden
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Yellow cherry plum tree in Goodland Gardens
 
|ST2257524697
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124723
 
|Taunton
 
|Mulberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|in Cannon Street car park
 
|ST2294824723
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124809
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Yellow cherry plum tree in Victoria Park
 
|ST2340024809
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124793
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2521124793
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124813
 
|Taunton
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|2 x Bushes
 
|ST2512424813
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124820
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2475324820
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124900
 
|Taunton
 
|Comfrey
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2200924900
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124863
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2450524863
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124865
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2496324865
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124964
 
|Taunton
 
|Black mustard
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2185524964
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124919
 
|Taunton
 
|Raspberry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|ST2496424919
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|124982
 
|Taunton
 
|Common tansy
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2199624982
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125131
 
|Taunton
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Many different plants and trees ....hazlenuts
 
|ST2048025131
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125090
 
|Taunton
 
|Plum
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2488725090
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125091
 
|Taunton
 
|Plum
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2485425091
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125108
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Green apples (Granny Smith)
 
|ST2528025108
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125143
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Beautiful blushing red apples
 
|ST2374725143
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125159
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Opposite the entrance to Wickes
 
|ST2357925159
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125142
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2534325142
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125206
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Numerous cherry trees
 
|ST2366525206
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125270
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2407925270
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125296
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2409125296
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125328
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Many apple trees that have been planted by TDBC in Childrens Wood.... there are some trees that are mature now and we should have a great crop
 
|ST2352325328
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|124978
 
|Winchester
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|beside Car Park at bottom of Shawford Down.
 
Nice mature tree with plenty of young fruit on it.
 
|SU4717024978
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125336
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Red apple
 
|ST2352225336
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125347
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2394025347
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125351
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2395825351
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125382
 
|Taunton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In the spring elderflowers and later on elderberries. The flowers are great to make elderflower champagne and cordial. The berries can be made into wine.
 
|ST2351725382
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125440
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2366325440
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125467
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Hazlenuts, apples, crab apples and rosehips growing along footpath
 
|ST2293525467
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125466
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2412425466
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125513
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apples growing along the footpath between Malvern Terrace and Obridge
 
|ST2307225513
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125514
 
|Taunton
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Hazelnuts all along this footpath running from the railway station, passed Malvern Terrace and on to Obridge Lane.
 
|ST2305625514
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125541
 
|Taunton
 
|Orchard
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Frieze Hill community orchard
 
|ST2145525541
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125549
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2153125549
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125538
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2268425538
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125528
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2394525528
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|126931
 
|Uckfield
 
|Tree swing
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|in the woods
 
|TQ4148426931
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125604
 
|Taunton
 
|Rose
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|All along the fence by the railway by the riverside walk
 
|ST2396525604
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125617
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2399225617
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|127005
 
|Uckfield
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|in the woods
 
|TQ4151727005
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125639
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|All along the fence by the railway by the riverside walk
 
|ST2406625639
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125683
 
|Taunton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lovely yellow plums overhanging the street right next to St Andrew's Church
 
|ST2263825683
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125786
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST1935725786
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125715
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2441325715
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125729
 
|Taunton
 
|Black cherry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2367725729
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|127101
 
|Uckfield
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ4154127101
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125747
 
|Taunton
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2362225747
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125732
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2463025732
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125738
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST2473625738
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125815
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|All along the road are eating apples
 
|ST2213725815
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|125862
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2001425862
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|125677
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Walnut trees on The Pilgrim's Path.
 
Original route straight through from Mare lane opposite.
 
New proposed route doglegs around field with trees in to the left opposite cottages.
 
|SU5021925677
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126060
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|This is on private land so please ask permission of the house next door.
 
|ST2259726060
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126047
 
|Taunton
 
|Almond
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|as you enter the playing fields
 
|ST2382226047
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126131
 
|Taunton
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Cherry trees
 
|ST2404526131
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126228
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2173326228
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126199
 
|Taunton
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Plums (wild?)
 
|ST2415426199
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126282
 
|Taunton
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2399426282
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126478
 
|Taunton
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apple trees
 
|ST2025126478
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|126805
 
|Taunton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|ST2204226805
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|128143
 
|Haywards Heath
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ3836328143
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127417
 
|Winchester
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4620427417
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127572
 
|Winchester
 
|Juniper
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|I have found Junipers on three different Iron Age hill forts, curious!
 
|SU4821527572
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127751
 
|Winchester
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|We found this whilst hunting for walnut trees
 
|SU4845027751
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127757
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|There are several nice Walnut trees on and around St. Catherine's Hill and on the nearby Pilgrims Path.
 
I have no idea why but I have found Walnut trees and Junipers on several different hill forts.
 
|SU4838127757
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127785
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4846727785
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127798
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4843627798
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127882
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4837027882
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127938
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Several good sized trees on the hill fort.
 
|SU4841327938
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|127944
 
|Winchester
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU4841027944
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|129045
 
|Taunton
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Elderflowers grow well here in "Happy Valley" (as my mother calls it).
 
|ST2326029045
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|129499
 
|Winchester
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Iceland have bins which is around the back of the store where you can find fruit, bread, cheese etc. (Last checked: August 2012)
 
|SU4836229499
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|131129
 
|Haywards Heath
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|A few big chestnut trees around here. Lots on the floor in season if you get there before the squirrels! Also spotted an empty snake egg there so be aware.
 
|TQ3348831129
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|129443
 
|Salisbury
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|A tree giving good-sized eating apples. A crab apple tree is located a few metres to the northeast.
 
|SU1333929443
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|131188
 
|Haywards Heath
 
|Pine
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Pine cones, all different types
 
|TQ3372131188
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|131312
 
|Haywards Heath
 
|Blueberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blueberries in amongst the Alpine section
 
|TQ3405731312
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|129634
 
|Salisbury
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU1316829634
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|134050
 
|Hythe
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|June
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR1366634050
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|129663
 
|Salisbury
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU1323929663
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|129701
 
|Salisbury
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Very slim tree, not a typical Apple shape
 
|SU1331829701
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|129787
 
|Salisbury
 
|Crabapple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Large tree between the paths, bearing small fruit
 
|SU1267229787
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|129846
 
|Salisbury
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Thin old tree to north side of path, yielding lots of small fruit
 
|SU1252229846
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|130005
 
|Salisbury
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Bushes growing on either side of the footpath
 
|SU1334730005
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|134563
 
|Hythe
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1610534563
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|134676
 
|Hythe
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1635734676
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|134677
 
|Hythe
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1635334677
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|134700
 
|Hythe
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|June
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1649034700
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|134962
 
|Hythe
 
|Sumac
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1824334962
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|132505
 
|Forest Row
 
|Tree swing
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ4332332505
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|135569
 
|Folkestone
 
|Sumac
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR2205435569
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|131331
 
|Salisbury
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Alongside the path between the river and Cowslip Farm
 
|SU1335731331
 
|-
 
|England
 
|7
 
|Lower Pennines
 
|131889
 
|Alton
 
|Blue weed
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4438140: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4438140</nowiki>
 
|SU7395131889
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|131417
 
|Salisbury
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Sloes
 
|SU1334331417
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|131417
 
|Salisbury
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Sloes
 
|SU1334331417
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|132148
 
|Bridgwater
 
|Garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In spring these woods are so pungent with the smell of wild garlic. Make a great soup with wild garlic and nettles. Wow!
 
|ST2296032148
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|131935
 
|Winchester
 
|Damson plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Low hanging fruit!
 
|SU5109131935
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|136547
 
|Folkestone
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR2115836547
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|132492
 
|Bridgwater
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|A very large hedge of brumbles on the bottom end of the field of cows along the walking path at Fyne Court that leads through the woods along the Dell stream.
 
|ST2211032492
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|132266
 
|Winchester
 
|Hop
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Not sure on the variety.
 
Fairly small cones
 
|SU5158232266
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|136479
 
|Hythe
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1479136479
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|136797
 
|Folkestone
 
|Damson plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR2015936797
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|133966
 
|Taunton
 
|Whortleberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Whortleberries growing in abundance on Lydeard Hill
 
|ST1812233966
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|138370
 
|Folkestone
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Sloe and BlackBerry bushes by the cliff edge
 
|TR2518338370
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|138253
 
|Folkestone
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR2232938253
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|138330
 
|Folkestone
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR2224338330
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|138339
 
|Folkestone
 
|Lingonberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Various lingonberry trees around the Battle of Britain memorial
 
|TR2213438339
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|136638
 
|Crawley
 
|European plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2892336638
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|141666
 
|Dover
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Costcutter (address: Pencester Road, Dover). Bins are round the back. Recently started being locked due to frequent mess made by dumpster divers :-( (Last checked: November 2011)
 
|TR3184841666
 
|-
 
|England
 
|7
 
|Lower Pennines
 
|137498
 
|Alton
 
|Common horse-chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|3rd or 4th tree along from the grey friar/Cassandra's cup car park, just beyond the play park, bountiful horse chestnut tree.
 
|SU7083837498
 
|-
 
|England
 
|7
 
|Lower Pennines
 
|138744
 
|Alton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|10 to 15 metre long stretch of blackberry bush with good yield, just follow the cut grass path to the left as you enter the field and you'll find it on your left covering the wire fence. Beautiful.
 
|SU7231938744
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|138573
 
|Glastonbury
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|walnut tree overhanging pavement.
 
|ST5032738573
 
|-
 
|England
 
|7
 
|Lower Pennines
 
|139403
 
|Alton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Kings pond is surrounded by blackberry bushes, excellent yield and lots of great quality juicy fruits 🤙🤙
 
|SU7220139403
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|139747
 
|Bridgwater
 
|Whortleberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Whortleberries by the thousand in summer under the oak trees of Holford Combe.
 
|ST1536339747
 
|-
 
|England
 
|7
 
|Lower Pennines
 
|139767
 
|Alton
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Up behind the northanger close playground, the field beyond the first field, the perimeter is essentially all blackberry bush! Seems to be most ripe in late August early September but still some yield from kid August.
 
|SU7170239767
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|146908
 
|Tonbridge
 
|Blackthorn
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ6014646908
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|146346
 
|Farnham
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|September
 
|December
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Sweet Chestnut on path into the Chantrys, public accessible
 
|SU8313746346
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|146498
 
|Farnham
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|A few blackberry bushes along path, not accessible by car
 
|SU8353946498
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|146895
 
|Farnham
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Blackberry bushes all along the path off Crondall Lane, large amount available
 
|SU8304946895
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|149633
 
|Maidstone
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ8570149633
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|148219
 
|Frome
 
|Free fridge
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|Frome Town Council is supporting the launch of the UK’s first community fridge. It will be managed by Edventure Frome. Based at the Loop de Loop building near the library (a unique micro café and museum space in redundant urinals), the fridge will be open daily from 8am – 8pm to enable anyone to share food they won’t be able to use, and for anyone to help themselves to food that would otherwise be wasted. Open 800-1600
 
-> there is also a bakery pantry and jacket closet. all are free and community fed.
 
|ST7772548219
 
|-
 
|England
 
|15
 
|South-Central
 
|151188
 
|Hook
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|BlackBerry bush by the side of the road
 
|SU7439051188
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|151907
 
|Guildford
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Blackberries all along the edge of the field
 
|SU9852251907
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|154182
 
|Caterham
 
|Wild garlic
 
|March
 
|May
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Large swathes of Ramsons can be found in these woods. Make sure to correctly distinguish between Allium and the poisonous Liliy of the Valley before consumption.
 
|TQ3445254182
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|158119
 
|Canterbury
 
|Common fig
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR1481958119
 
|-
 
|England
 
|3
 
|North Yorkshire
 
|158059
 
|Sittingbourne
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Loads by school
 
|TQ9031858059
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|159537
 
|Canterbury
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR1504059537
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|159789
 
|Canterbury
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR1550759789
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|159812
 
|Canterbury
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TR1545959812
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|159824
 
|Canterbury
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1543359824
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|159937
 
|Canterbury
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Yellow crab apples
 
|TR1533959937
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|160111
 
|Canterbury
 
|Rose
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of rose-hips along this hedgerow
 
|TR1527060111
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|160359
 
|Canterbury
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TR1539860359
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|159859
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Blackthorn
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|ST7982759859
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|160112
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Along canal towpath
 
|ST7978560112
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|160452
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Sweet cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|there are two cherry large, mature trees on the hill south of the parking lot. they were past when i visited today - not a single cherry on the tree. visit late june and keep a good eye on them!
 
|ST8237060452
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|160845
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Fig
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|nov 2017 fruit still hanging from tree, most of leaves have fallen.
 
|ST8256660845
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|160849
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Rose
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|small public park. several species of rose hips. mind the folks sleeping rough in the bushes at back.
 
|ST8257260849
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|161310
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Hop
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|unharvested hanging over the wall of someone's garden. along public way. late november2017 beyond harvest, but some were still clinging to vine. there's a fig tree to the left, but none fall to the street.
 
|ST8343761310
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|161425
 
|Bradford-on-Avon
 
|Dog rose
 
|August
 
|December
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|hedgerow of roses along this fence to an allotment. fruits are a bit beyond ripe mid-december 2019, but still plenty left to harvest for tea, etc.
 
|ST8326261425
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|161625
 
|Bath
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Good crop of blackberries found in this area (and surrounding hedges) Accessed via footpaths from Sulis Manor Road Area or along Wansdyke Path.
 
|ST7428261625
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|164007
 
|Esher
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|Plum tree that is full and ripe, and apples that have to ripen some more (late September 2013)
 
|TQ1475364007
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|164676
 
|South Croydon
 
|Walnut
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ3306364676
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|168529
 
|Broadstairs
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|On a grass verge at the road side.
 
|TR3864168529
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|166010
 
|Chatham
 
|Black hawthorn
 
|July
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|just on the magpie hall rd, there is woodlands which is full of apple, pear, cherry trees, and elderberry trees, and black hawthorn. there is many different fungus growing through out so it is a amazing place to forage. ive just remember there are many sloe trees too. Enjoy!
 
|TQ7619866010
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|164650
 
|Epsom
 
|Walnut
 
|June
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Walnut tree, lots of fruit. Early June if you want to make pickled walnuts, September for mature nuts
 
|TQ2261964650
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|164852
 
|Worcester Park
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Blackberry bush, looks like it has escaped from a neighboring garden. Large, sweet berries.
 
|TQ2266564852
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|164875
 
|Worcester Park
 
|Damson plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of small plums.
 
|TQ2266664875
 
|-
 
|England
 
|10
 
|Lower East Coast
 
|165160
 
|Wallington
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Not sure if eating or cooking as haven't sampled it yet.
 
|TQ2870265160
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|165160
 
|Carshalton
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ2766965160
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|165163
 
|Carshalton
 
|Mulberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ2765365163
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|165184
 
|Carshalton
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ2774565184
 
|-
 
|England
 
|9
 
|Upper East Coast
 
|165381
 
|Sutton
 
|Apple
 
|October
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|These belong to the flats, in whose grounds they stand. They do not seem to be picked however, or gathered from the ground and I have been enjoying them for two weeks. 4.10.2010
 
|TQ2573265381
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|164615
 
|Bath
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The big Marks & Spencers has accessible skips. Go right round the back (it's a big store, and the back is quite hard to find) and you'll see the big gates. Go into the one on the right, in the far corner are the skips which are full of random stuff usually. Simon found a three-piece suit in there. (Last checked: November 2010)
 
|ST7509464615
 
|-
 
|England
 
|9
 
|Upper East Coast
 
|166333
 
|Croydon
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|One good place in Croydon is the Co-op at the roundabout where St. James Road becomes Lower Addiscombe Road and is joined by Cherry Orchard Road. It's best to go at night though because you have to climb over the gate which holds the bins round the back. It is however a really easy climb. (Last checked: December 2011)
 
|TQ3325766333
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|170088
 
|Margate
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TR3656470088
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|164700
 
|Bath
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The Co-Operative supermarkets seem to be good for dumpster diving in general in Bath. Simon regularly dives at the Co-ops in Avon Street (the skips are in a car park behind the supermarket) and the one in Twerton, where the skips are by the football stadium. (Last checked: November 2010)
 
|ST7483364700
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|164741
 
|Bath
 
|Free store
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Bath has a freeshop that meets on the second Saturday of every month, outside the Pump Rooms, which has many items to take away. (Last checked: November 2010)
 
|ST7504564741
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|165506
 
|Bath
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The Co-Operative supermarkets seem to be good for dumpster diving in general in Bath. Simon regularly dives at the Co-ops in Avon Street (the skips are in a car park behind the supermarket) and the one in Twerton, where the skips are by the football stadium. (Last checked: November 2010)
 
|ST7470265506
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|166917
 
|Surbiton
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2042866917
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|165959
 
|Bath
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|ST7612665959
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|167712
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ3337067712
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|167296
 
|Chertsey
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Big apple tree, lots you can reach without a ladder. compost heap at the base so wear covered shoes. Possibly belongs to the owner of the horses nearby, but accessible from footpath. Usually small and slightly sour fruit.
 
|TQ0439467296
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|167422
 
|Chertsey
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of sloes on the motorway bridge all the way along.
 
|TQ0442167422
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|167499
 
|Chertsey
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ0444967499
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|167873
 
|New Malden
 
|Currant
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|11 young fruit trees planted in December 2018- The Orchard Project
 
Apple, pear, plum, currant
 
|TQ2010767873
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|168177
 
|New Malden
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|
 
|TQ2021468177
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|168191
 
|New Malden
 
|Grape
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ2015968191
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|168431
 
|Kingston upon Thames
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ1831368431
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|168478
 
|New Malden
 
|Pear
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|A very healthy and mature looking pear tree.
 
|TQ2019068478
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|168815
 
|Thornton Heath
 
|Cherry
 
|July
 
|July
 
|
 
|
 
|Somewhere near the Parcemore Tavern is a Cherry Tree. It fruits in July
 
|TQ3223668815
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|168751
 
|Mitcham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|There are up to 10 apple trees here, probably planted by the first inhabitants of the terraced housing here, on a bank next to the road. A good mix of cookers and eaters, mostly small. Very interesting varieties.
 
|TQ2823268751
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|168272
 
|Chertsey
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Yellow plums on the path behind the golf club, on the side of the golf club. Quantity varies from year to year. Mostly low and reachable without a ladder.
 
|TQ0483368272
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|168740
 
|Chertsey
 
|Blackberry
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|lots of blackberry bushes in this area
 
|TQ0414368740
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|168746
 
|Chertsey
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Birds get it quick, on the bank of the river, so you might need to climb a little. There's never been heaps of fruit on it. Does occasionally get cut back.
 
|TQ0427868746
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|169102
 
|Chertsey
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Lots of big ones on this bush, quite consistent. All along this road you will find plenty.
 
|TQ0479869102
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|168307
 
|Bristol
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|ST6033568307
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170171
 
|Mitcham
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|June
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2789970171
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170156
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Pear tree, over hanging street in ground of Christchuch - never seems to be picked
 
|TQ2679870156
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|169298
 
|Bracknell
 
|Plum
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|SU8456869298
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|168811
 
|Bristol
 
|European pear
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Private
 
|B&Q throw away huge crates of plants almost daily, as well as many other home & garden products.
 
If you've got a community group, school, care home or charity in need of DIY supplies or plants please go in with a letter from your charity and ask to be put on their community reuse list. This scheme DOES exist, and is company-wide, although employees may not be aware. Please spread the word.
 
<nowiki>https://www.diy.com/one-planet-home/waste/community-reuse/</nowiki>
 
|ST5845668811
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170486
 
|London
 
|Nettle
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|By the bus terminal entrance to the park, turn left along the border and walk along the perimeter. The wild herb forms a border along the outskirts. Availability: Spring-Summer
 
|TQ3418170486
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|169529
 
|Ascot
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU8932169529
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|168920
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackthorn
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Plants are both sides of main road.
 
|ST6507468920
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|168984
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|tree is by river and visible from the road
 
|ST6584668984
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|169636
 
|Bracknell
 
|Three-cornered leek
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU8485769636
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170683
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ3120170683
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|169525
 
|Reading
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU6991569525
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170752
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|quite a few black berry along the edge
 
|TQ3110670752
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170799
 
|London
 
|Cherry plum
 
|August
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Nice yellow plums, perfect for jam and chutney. may need to shake the tree
 
|TQ3116870799
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170999
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of brambles and berries in late August which continue along the northwest
 
|TQ3394370999
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|170874
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Yellow red plum shaped crabs almost sweet enough to eat. On Rush Common, public land.
 
|TQ2891670874
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170263
 
|Bracknell
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|SU8517270263
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171422
 
|London
 
|Mulberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|A big tree in the back garden of the Golden Lion. Landlord happy with idea of community harvesting of fruit
 
|TQ3578171422
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171137
 
|London
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Several, heavily-laden red and yellow (cherry?) plum trees (August 4th 2010) hanging over fence of the Waste Transfer Station in Smuggler's way. I made Nigella Lawson's 'Chinese Plum Sauce' from them.
 
|TQ2365571137
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170430
 
|Bracknell
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU8596570430
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171468
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Many apples fall on the pavement, or on a flat roof south of the tree. Possibly a broom would help to gather the ones on the roof. Climbing the fence seems treacherous...
 
|TQ3102571468
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171416
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bushes and elderflower
 
|TQ2864171416
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171435
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Elderflower bushes
 
|TQ2878571435
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171656
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Apple tree in private garden but overhanging pavement. Corner of Ashlake Road and Gleneldon Road.
 
|TQ3022271656
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170549
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU7174670549
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171743
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|St. Leonards Apples - Leaning out of the churchyard onto the very busy Streatham high st. (Is lead poisoning a risk?) This nice tasting apple tree is quite high and drops apples onto the pavement!
 
|TQ3002071743
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171707
 
|London
 
|Fig
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|fig on the river bank
 
|TQ2596771707
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|171519
 
|Teddington
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|TQ1688271519
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170931
 
|Bracknell
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU8712270931
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170969
 
|Bracknell
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU8707870969
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170969
 
|Bracknell
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|SU8706670969
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|170978
 
|Bracknell
 
|Community orchard
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU8707270978
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|170554
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|on road up hill, at top, & along to the right at top (Clay Lane)
 
|ST6776270554
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|170577
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|At top of hill go straight on this is public footpath through driveway to farmhouse. Blackthorn (sloe) bushes are just inside the boundary wall, on right hand side. There are a few more on the way up the hill and to the right along Clay Lane.
 
|ST6794470577
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172128
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Eating apple tree on Common
 
|TQ2858072128
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|173168
 
|Gravesend
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op: 14-18 Perry St, Northfleet, Gravesend DA11 8QU. Just to the side down the passage way, the gate to the left is usually left open during the day.
 
|TQ6358873168
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|173187
 
|Gravesend
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco: Just to the side down May Avenue (frequently used by pedestrians), then round to the left taking the first gate you find on your left in front of the grey door. The bins are blue. Watch out for deliveries and Tesco staff on fag breaks!
 
|TQ6363773187
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|170724
 
|Bristol
 
|Common ivy
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4412651: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4412651</nowiki>
 
|ST6044570724
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|171570
 
|Egham
 
|Granny Smith apple
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ0072571570
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172268
 
|London
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|A couple of small cherry trees
 
|TQ2898872268
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172460
 
|London
 
|Hop
 
|August
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|A bountiful hop and grape vine (both tasty) grows over the fence entering the 'courtside' car park.
 
|TQ3510172460
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|173379
 
|Gravesend
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Londis: Take the alley way two stores down to the left as you face the Londis, this will lead you straight to the bacon baps, and other wonders to be found here!
 
|TQ6394773379
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172565
 
|London
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|An abundance of wild garlic grows all over the forest during it's season
 
|TQ3450572565
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172452
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|TQ2989972452
 
|-
 
|England
 
|3
 
|North Yorkshire
 
|172147
 
|Richmond
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|There are numerous apple trees in this field with small green apples, some trees are easier to access than others.
 
|TQ1645872147
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172470
 
|London
 
|Tomato
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Oct 2008 - tomato plant (Gardeners Delight) growing in pavement!
 
|TQ2899772470
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172525
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2988972525
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172518
 
|London
 
|Almond
 
|
 
|October
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Almond tree overhanging pavement - plenty of ripe fruit in Oct 2008
 
|TQ2893472518
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171064
 
|Bristol
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Newly planted orchard in a green area on a hill with different fruit trees
 
|ST5850871064
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172764
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|September
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|A tall pear tree behind the block of flats (accesible via sunderland road) - lots of large pears going un-picked and falling. bring a picker
 
|TQ3586972764
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172587
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Two eating apple trees in front garden of shared house. During 2008 received permission from one of flat owners to pick fruit whenever we want. Need to arrange this again - by putting letter through door
 
|TQ2894272587
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171182
 
|Bristol
 
|Fig
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Fig tree in garden overhanging alleyway.
 
|ST5866471182
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171498
 
|Reading
 
|Raspberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Typed of Berries, Raspberry
 
|SU6613071498
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171507
 
|Reading
 
|Raspberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Type of berries such as Raspberries
 
|SU6643371507
 
|-
 
|England
 
|3
 
|North Yorkshire
 
|172459
 
|Richmond
 
|Common fig
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Orchard at German School -
 
Apples: IDA RED. ASHMEADS KERNEL. LAXTON SUPERB, COX'S ORANGE PIPPIN. BLENHEIM ORANGE. CRISPIN. LAXTON EPICURE, SPARTAN. LORD LAMBOURNE. BRAMLEY BUSH. RIBSTON PIPPIN. GRENADIER. APPLE LIMELIGHT. BRAMLEY.
 
Pears: WILLIAM
 
Plums: GOLDEN GAGE
 
Fig: BROWN TURKEY
 
|TQ1789372459
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171352
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Blackberry bushes right next to footpath close to park exit.
 
|ST5873171352
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171356
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Nearly planted apple trees in a green area
 
|ST5873371356
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171408
 
|Bristol
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Big hazeltree over bike path next to the wood building
 
|ST5870471408
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171408
 
|Bristol
 
|Hazel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Big hazeltree over bike path next to the wood building
 
|ST5870471408
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171760
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Dwarf variety apple. Fruit seen on tree.
 
|SU7264671760
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171692
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|SU6755171692
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171821
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7435071821
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171768
 
|Reading
 
|Chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7052571768
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|172967
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|At least two pear trees dropping fruit throughout september 2010. They are in the central green area at the back of the palace road housing estate. You can see the area from the entrance to the grocery store here.
 
|TQ3110872967
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171456
 
|Bristol
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Big elderbush at the outer edge of the park next to some blackberry bushes.
 
Elderberries are not suitable for raw consumption, but the flowers and the berry can be used to make Sirup.
 
|ST5872771456
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171464
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bush surrounding a big tree in the park
 
|ST5869971464
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171479
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry bush at the edge of the park off Whitehorse lane
 
|ST5872971479
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171489
 
|Bristol
 
|Strawberry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Various berrys planted at teh Community Orchard by Totterdown Sprouting as part of TRESA
 
|ST6030571489
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171884
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7437071884
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171505
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Old apple tree at Park Street Community Orchard
 
|ST6029671505
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171511
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Blackberry bush just after the Patco building
 
|ST5996471511
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|174029
 
|Gravesend
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|BP: Slightly out of the Centre to the east but still a good central spot for bread and other usual service station finds. Two red Biffa bins are in a small fenced off area on the Peacock Street side of the garage. It can be climbed into from a small wall behind it.
 
|TQ6511474029
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171544
 
|Bristol
 
|Raspberry
 
|July
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|In the bushes surrounding the square
 
|ST5989271544
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171546
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Three apple trees on Zone A.
 
Planted by Totterdown Residents association (www.tresa.org.uk) in July 2012.
 
Still new so not had much harvest to date (Aug 2013).
 
|ST6004571546
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171551
 
|Bristol
 
|Pear
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Pear tree planted by Lord Mayor during Totterdown Garden Festival on 7th July 2013. Very young so not producing yet (as of Aug 2013).
 
|ST5988671551
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171553
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Berrys mixed among the foliage on Zone N.
 
|ST5987771553
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|174039
 
|Gravesend
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Aldi: Junction of London Road and Thames Way (DA12 0LY). Unlocked cage structure contains two blue and yellow bins round the back where deliveries are made.
 
|TQ6374174039
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171570
 
|Bristol
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST5984271570
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171587
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Small apple tree in a raised bed in a community square
 
|ST5860171587
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171588
 
|Bristol
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Rosemary bush in a raised bed in a community square
 
|ST5860271588
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171591
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Small apple tree in a raised bed in a community square
 
|ST5860371591
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171591
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Small apple tree in a raised bed in a community square
 
|ST5860371591
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171898
 
|Reading
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Few pears Sept 2012.
 
|SU6959271898
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173091
 
|London
 
|Plum
 
|July
 
|August
 
|
 
|
 
|Plenty of small but juicy yellow plums. From end of July. Bring something to reach higher because at arms length they've all been eaten.
 
|TQ3027573091
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173070
 
|London
 
|European plum
 
|August
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Damson tree overhanging road from garden. Fruits early August
 
|TQ2935073070
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171592
 
|Bristol
 
|Cherry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Trees outside of Tescos
 
|ST5986871592
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173072
 
|London
 
|Almond
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Overhanging from garden - did not fruit this year but has other years
 
|TQ2920473072
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173086
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Large elderflower/berry tree overhanging
 
|TQ2932773086
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172026
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Quite a few Sweet chestnuts. Good luck harvesting though, they're surrounded by other trees and undergrowth so I think you'd have to really want them to get them.
 
|SU7526572026
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|171975
 
|Reading
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Feb 2013, planting of new orchard by Transition Town Reading and Friend of Waterloo Meadows: apples, pears, plums, cherry plums, sea buckthorn, sloe, crab apple, juneberry
 
|SU7140971975
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172109
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7599872109
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171703
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|4 x apple trees opposite Boca Bar
 
|ST6066471703
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173195
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Small crab apple on pavement - fruit unpicked
 
|TQ2921473195
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173185
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Huge pear tree in a back garden - have never found which house it belongs to
 
|TQ2885373185
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172135
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7598372135
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172167
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7591972167
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|171769
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Black berry bushes on the grassy bank leading to the railway bridge (other side of the road to the Park).
 
|ST5949171769
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172173
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7595872173
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173248
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Small crab apple on pavement - laden with yellow fruit
 
|TQ2918973248
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172188
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7586772188
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172204
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7605972204
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172160
 
|Reading
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Probably private grounds of hospital, but used by public.
 
|SU7024972160
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172276
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7608772276
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172313
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7607172313
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172343
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Apples, quite a few!
 
|SU7732372343
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172328
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7602572328
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173452
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Found some crab apples falling onto the pavement from trees in the Estate on Tulse Hill opposite the newest residential buildings that replaced the school that was closed.
 
|TQ3098873452
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172369
 
|Reading
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7735672369
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172394
 
|Reading
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7741072394
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173483
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Large red apples too high to pick
 
|TQ2947573483
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173496
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Large red apples but too high to pick
 
|TQ2950773496
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172378
 
|Reading
 
|Wild garlic
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7329772378
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172332
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Two sweet chestnut trees.
 
|SU6918572332
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172036
 
|Bristol
 
|Pear
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|ST5829872036
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173514
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Large red apples but too high to pick
 
|TQ2956673514
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173568
 
|London
 
|European plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Remains of a productive damson cut down by Lambeth because it was dead. It had no leaves on it. It was February. But the stump sends out a spray of small branches which fruit unhappily. Anyone know how we can help it? Contact 07958 635181 take a graft and pop it on a dwarfing or semi dwarfing rootstock (colt or pixie i think) for a small new tree to plant or just try taking softwood cuttings late spring. Use hormone rooting powder and vermiculite. You will get a full size tree from this eventually... if you're lucky...
 
|TQ3064473568
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173646
 
|London
 
|Hawthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Delicious yellow chicken of the woods bracket mushroom on an ageing hawthorn by the path through the middle of Holmewood Gardens. Fruits spring and autumn usually.
 
|TQ3063873646
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173689
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Pear tree, quite big pears, unpicked, regular fruiter. Ask at the house.
 
|TQ3120273689
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173280
 
|Feltham
 
|Fennel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4080008: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4080008</nowiki>
 
|TQ1193873280
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173965
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In mid-late May there are elderflower shrubs which make delicious drinksElderflowers bushes down at the Farley Road entrance to Mountsfield Park in Catford.
 
|TQ3826473965
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172685
 
|Reading
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|One sweet chestnut tree.
 
|SU7626772685
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|174658
 
|Swanscombe
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op in Swanscombe village is also good if you can get there, but be careful skipping in the day as they don't seem to like people visiting the bins there at the moment. (Last checked: November 2011)
 
|TQ6061674658
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174033
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|May
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In mid-late May there are elderflower shrubs which make delicious drinks. Use the Stainton Rd entrance, Hither Green. Bushes located next to the football fields.
 
|TQ3855874033
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173806
 
|London
 
|Cherry plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Purple plum tree, possibly *Prunus cerasifer "nigra"*
 
|TQ2952173806
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173846
 
|London
 
|Mirabelle plum
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Large Mirabelle plum tree in the Agnes Riley gardens. The tree is at the edge of the football pitch. Excellent yield and quality. Nice people in the park happy to talk about jam recipes :).
 
|TQ2948473846
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172739
 
|Reading
 
|Walnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Rippening in autumn.
 
|SU7332872739
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173862
 
|London
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Purple plum tree, possibly *Prunus cerasifer "nigra"*
 
|TQ2953673862
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173488
 
|Feltham
 
|Carrot
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|iNaturalist location 4080010: <nowiki>http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/4080010</nowiki>
 
|TQ1196673488
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173909
 
|London
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Purple plum tree, possibly *Prunus cerasifer "nigra"*
 
|TQ2955373909
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172442
 
|Bristol
 
|Water
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|REFILL.ORG bottle filling point in the underpass of the train station.
 
|ST5979272442
 
|-
 
|England
 
|14
 
|The South-East
 
|174537
 
|Dartford
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|The Sainsburys in the town-centre is the best place to check (go up the ramp used for the car park). (Last checked: December 2010)
 
|TQ5148974537
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172778
 
|Reading
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Feb 2013, planting by Transition Town Reading and The Conservation Volunteers of apples, pears, crab apples, sloes and cherry plums. Adding to the Mansions House's old pear orchard.
 
|SU6867872778
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174237
 
|London
 
|Cow parsley
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Cow Parsley and Goose Grass grow alongside Hither Green Station and the embankment area. Pick through the fence.
 
|TQ3905474237
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172497
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|At the top of the hill in St Anne s Wood. Amazing, huge blackberries
 
|ST6227772497
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|172948
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7758672948
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|173970
 
|London
 
|Fig
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|A couple of overhanging fig trees from two back gardens.
 
|TQ2722573970
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172553
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Starbucks Coffee Co: Anytime. Attention, there is a CCTV nearby.
 
|ST5963572553
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174082
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Crab apple trees, John Downie, rosy fruit that falls early. Several trees on right hand side of Tulse Hill as you go up just inside Tulse Hill Estate.
 
|TQ3118974082
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173006
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7763073006
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174139
 
|London
 
|Grape
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Added by owner
 
|Italian fig tree, in my garden, heavy fruiting. Now that the starlings know about it, it is difficult to take the fruit before they do as there are zillions of them. Any fruit in the street is always picked way before it is ripe by people passing by. Also they pick the big leaves off my vine to make Greek dolma. If you want a fig cutting get in touch.
 
|TQ3068974139
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174371
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|A big row of blackberry bushes along the southern side of the hither green rail station. Ripe in mid July.
 
I'm not an expert, but I've picked from these bushes with no averse effects!
 
|TQ3904174371
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173092
 
|Reading
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7778773092
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173093
 
|Reading
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7772973093
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173048
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|One cooking apple tree, one eating apple tree.
 
|SU7249373048
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174447
 
|London
 
|Garlic mustard
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Alongside the embankment railway line; collect through the fence. Opposite the new-built block of flats. Spring-Summer
 
|TQ3891774447
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172707
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Between the Feeder Road and the water
 
|ST6137072707
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174250
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Fruit doesn't stay long on the tree.
 
|TQ3101574250
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172718
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Many blackberry bushes along the tow path next to the River Avon
 
|ST6165472718
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172726
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST6129672726
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172750
 
|Bristol
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Located in Netham Park
 
|ST6140372750
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172813
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco Express: Anytime but nothing on Sunday / Monday apparently.
 
|ST5842472813
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172800
 
|Bristol
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|2 Elderberry shrubs located in Netham Park
 
|ST6149572800
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172849
 
|Bristol
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|3 Sweet Chestnut Trees located in Netham Park
 
|ST6156172849
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172889
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco Express: Found something there one time on a rainy Monday morning at 11am. Have checked a few times since but always in the afternoon or at night and have never found anything since.
 
|ST5864072889
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173251
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7336773251
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174395
 
|London
 
|European plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|There is a Damson tree here in Windmill Gardens, next to the gate into the children's play area. This tree is actually used by some local residents and enjoyed by the kids so please don't scrump it!
 
|TQ3047374395
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172915
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Pizza Hut Restaurant: You have to go up the street toward Colston street / Pipe Lane where you will find a gate usually open anytime but there are sometimes workers in the back smoking. Tried once at night and it was locked so don't go too late.
 
|ST5853872915
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173279
 
|Reading
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Lots of blackberries in the area of cemetery.
 
|SU7341673279
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|172967
 
|Bristol
 
|Damson plum
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST5793172967
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174468
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|These grow over the fence at the back of the car park - escaping from the Windmill Alottments - would need a tall ladder.
 
|TQ3025774468
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174545
 
|London
 
|European plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Yellow bullace plum, big tree, in front garden with many branches overhanging and dropping windfall fruit in the road.
 
|TQ3150574545
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174694
 
|London
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Overhanging the north bound platform of Crofton Park Station.
 
|TQ3654974694
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173042
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (non-edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Bristol Ice Rink: If you ever need ice there is a big pile here! Continue until the end of Culver St.
 
|ST5835573042
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174702
 
|London
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Co-op on Brockley Road. (Last checked: September 2010)
 
|TQ3648874702
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173044
 
|Bristol
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|September
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|3 Sweet Chestnut trees located in Netham Park
 
|ST6153873044
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174733
 
|London
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Access from the platform or find a way past the fences to grab lots of tasty sweet chesnuts!
 
|TQ3652774733
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173086
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Reg the Veg: Lotsa veggies. Sometimes the shopkeeper just leaves them outside in a box or if not there are paper bags with stuff in the bins. During the day works great … 3pm or so is ok since there is a pub just there so at night it's very crowded.
 
|ST5715773086
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174590
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Elderflower tree over hanging pavement
 
|TQ3057174590
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174234
 
|Twickenham
 
|Cox apple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|The cox apple and opal plum trees are saplings as of July 2015, but the damson tree will be producing fruit from this autumn and subsequent autumns.
 
|TQ1576374234
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173106
 
|Bristol
 
|Pear
 
|September
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Beautiful pear tree
 
|ST5801373106
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173097
 
|Bristol
 
|Cherry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST5925873097
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173098
 
|Bristol
 
|Cherry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST5924073098
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174608
 
|London
 
|Hawthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On pavement outside school yard. School yard also has a hawthorn tree inside which bears a lot of haws. Permission to collect would have to be obtained.
 
|TQ3066074608
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173111
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST5796973111
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174501
 
|London
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|public park, great amount of cherry trees in this area
 
|TQ2567874501
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174628
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On pavement
 
|TQ3044574628
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174622
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Lovely crisp sweet sour green apples. Tree grows inside railings of a gated residential block (in old school) but drops low hanging fruit onto ground and pavement.
 
|TQ3016774622
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174632
 
|London
 
|Bay laurel
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|This rented house has a bay HEDGE, You'd need ask permission but they must have a million bay leaves
 
|TQ3049874632
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174608
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|October
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Medium size pear tree. Fruit looks ready but not dropping 4 Oct. 2010
 
|TQ2918074608
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174604
 
|London
 
|Mulberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|TQ2878874604
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174647
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On pavement
 
|TQ3041174647
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173191
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|
 
|ST5649573191
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174839
 
|London
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Londis on Brockley Road. (Last checked: September 2010)
 
|TQ3651774839
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174690
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Elberflower over hanging pavement
 
|TQ3039974690
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174678
 
|London
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|October
 
|November
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Three medium sized trees. rather small chestnuts, but definitely usable.
 
|TQ2885074678
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173258
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Waitrose: Go to the left of the Waitrose down the hill and access the skips by turning right into their loading bay, the skips are inside their shutters and there's sometimes a particularly ball-bustin security guard. Shutter closes aroud 11/12pm.
 
|ST5782473258
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173274
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Sainsbury's: To get to their skips, go round the back by turning left off Queens Street up University Road and then your first left onto Elmdale Road - the skips are inside their shutters but they're usually open during the day.
 
|ST5799473274
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173579
 
|Reading
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Between Walnut Way and St Michael's Rd, Tilehurst.
 
|SU6672173579
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174991
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|There are oodles and oodles of blackberries in Brockley and Ladywell Cemeteries from mid-summer onwards.
 
|TQ3689574991
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173356
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Marks & Spencer: Yes, they do use blue paint and squash food sometimes and it's not good to go during day (due to the busy shopping centre area), but! it's a very good skip for salads and there are no people around midnight.
 
|ST5903473356
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173404
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Starbucks Coffee Co: Anytime.
 
|ST5910873404
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173841
 
|Reading
 
|Growing space
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|I'm not sure who owns this piece of land. It gets strimmed twice a year between nettles growing waist height. I've often passed by here and thought what a great site it would be for some pigs and/or goats to graze.
 
|SU7313673841
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175170
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|There are a few apple trees amongst this patch near the south of Hilly Fields, close to the standing stones and Eastern Road. Eating quality can be quite variable (but all apples should be good for cooking with!)
 
|TQ3735275170
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173522
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Lots of blackberry bushes around close to the footpath
 
|ST5652773522
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173505
 
|Bristol
 
|Free market
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Unity Free Food Market - every other Saturday 2:45-4:30pm at Borderlands Charity, The Assisi Centre, Lawfords Gate, Bristol BS5 0RE.
 
Mostly fruit and veg but sometimes other things.
 
More info and check opening days/times: <nowiki>https://www.facebook.com/unityfreefoodmarket/</nowiki>
 
|ST5995473505
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|174964
 
|London
 
|Cherry plum
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Fruit quite high up so you may need to jump or get on somebody's shoulders
 
|TQ2838074964
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173820
 
|Reading
 
|Plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|83 Recreation Rd Tilehurst. Pulic/private - wasteland owned by council?
 
|SU6708273820
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173865
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Some (fairly scabby) apples late Sept 12.
 
|SU6799773865
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173940
 
|Reading
 
|Black elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7309173940
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173948
 
|Reading
 
|Blackthorn
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Blackberry and sloe brambles.
 
|SU7346973948
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175039
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|In between the road and the football changing rooms
 
|TQ2819475039
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173573
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco Metro: Anytime delivery around 1pm.
 
|ST6162573573
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173614
 
|Bristol
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private
 
|Apple Tree, in someones driveway but plenty of apples in season.
 
|ST5745373614
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173617
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Tesco: Only tried it once but it had some things… especially bread but other stuff too. Anytime i think would work but I went around 8pm.
 
|ST5887673617
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173597
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Aldi: Late at night is best. It's possible to get in by the top if you pull the gate a bit. I prefer to climb by the back as it make less noise as someone living next door has been calling the cops. There is food everyday.
 
|ST6169973597
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173950
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|September
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Loads of apples late Sept 2012 on public land. Tentatively identified as Charles Ross.
 
|SU6833073950
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174004
 
|Reading
 
|Crabapple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Thames Water Car Park with loads of trees.
 
|SU7169874004
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175150
 
|London
 
|Cherry
 
|June
 
|July
 
|
 
|
 
|At least 2, but I haven't looked for more. Plenty of small juicy cherries easy to reach at the end of June.
 
|TQ2899075150
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175483
 
|London
 
|Dumpster (non-edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Urban foraging needn't just be about collecting foodstuffs! An almost unlimited amount of plywood gets piled up here every day on Lewisham High Street, as market traders get rid of unwanted fruit boxes. They're ideal for burning (or for anything else you can think of!) and traders and street cleaners seem quite pleased for people to take them.
 
|TQ3831075483
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173762
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Iceland Foods Ltd: Only during the day. They will get the bin out when the store opens at 9am. It's definitly the best time to do it as all the rest of the day there will be a really really annoying security guard.
 
|ST6079273762
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175458
 
|London
 
|Cherry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|A few of the cherry trees along this path in Hilly Fields give fruit. They're quite sour, but good enough for jams and such.
 
|TQ3704875458
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175329
 
|London
 
|Eucalyptus
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Very nice smelling eucalyptus
 
|TQ3091875329
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175432
 
|London
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Bins in front of Tesco Express on East Dulwich Road are brilliant for pastries (Last checked: March 2012)
 
|TQ3428475432
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173891
 
|Bristol
 
|Mint
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Part of the urban landscape community gardening project. Plenty and a variety to harvest.
 
|ST5888573891
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|173913
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Quite a few blackberries to be foraged along this road, up quite high away from fumes on walls on the N side of the road. Also spotted a good crop on the S Side of Belgrave Road nearby.
 
|ST5841073913
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175618
 
|London
 
|Mulberry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|
 
|
 
|Dripping with fruit late July/early August. It's massive and it goes to waste every year. Bring a ladder!
 
|TQ3793275618
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175623
 
|London
 
|Watercress
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Public
 
|Since Cornmill Gardens (just opposite Lewisham station) was redeveloped, masses of watercress can be found growing along the banks of the river Ravensbourne. Look around the shallow edges in front of the decking.
 
Don't forget to wash your watercress - the river still isn't as clean as it could be!
 
If you take a few strands you can get them to root in a bucket or something like that, at home. Just keep it filled with water, throw a couple of handfulls of soil, sand or gravel in the bottom and you can harvest fresh watercress anytime.
 
The gardens are also a great source of fresh Lavender!(please be mindful of the small risk of liver flukes in foraged watercress- good advice to grow a bit on your own at home.)
 
|TQ3805175623
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174716
 
|Windsor
 
|Blackberry
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|
 
|SU9896774716
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175580
 
|London
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Whilst out walking Nunhead Cemetery in Summer and Autumn, don't forget to collect the abundant brambles and apples that can be found!
 
|TQ3546075580
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|173794
 
|Chippenham
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|Delicious apples in the courtyard of this great local pub. Top half of tree was full in November still.
 
|ST9194073794
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174403
 
|Reading
 
|Blackberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|SU7784774403
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174316
 
|Reading
 
|Apple
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Tastes a bit like a Granny Smith.
 
|SU7038774316
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174347
 
|Reading
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Several elderberry bushes and trees by the footpath.
 
|SU7217374347
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|174035
 
|Bristol
 
|Wild garlic
 
|February
 
|April
 
|FALSE
 
|
 
|In and around Paradise Bottom
 
|ST5547074035
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174351
 
|Reading
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Several elderberry bushes and trees by the footpath.
 
|SU7217574351
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175721
 
|London
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Costcutter on Brockley Road. (Last checked: September 2010)
 
|TQ3652175721
 
|-
 
|England
 
|12
 
|Lower Central
 
|174491
 
|Reading
 
|Damson plum
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Damson trees in a private garden but a great deal of the fruit falls onto the grass verge.
 
|SU7248574491
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|174257
 
|Bristol
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|
 
|ST5682074257
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|174249
 
|Bristol
 
|Rosemary
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Rosemary bush in a small community garden path just off the bike path
 
|ST6019074249
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|174250
 
|Bristol
 
|Chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Big chestnut tree above the bike path
 
|ST6018274250
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|174282
 
|Bristol
 
|Dumpster (edible)
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|
 
|Star Cash Carry: Best late a night as it's right on the street. Lots of vegetables.
 
|ST6089874282
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175551
 
|London
 
|Pear
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Private
 
|Ormonde Road, private garden. Spotter: Helen Streek
 
|TQ2004475551
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175601
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|Apple tree branches over public ground to the north of the alleyway part of Lodge Avenue. At the end of August there are fallen apples and more on the tree branches, which are low-hanging. You can reach Lodge Avenue from Queens Road but it's hard to see which path is public, so easier to reach it from the other end.
 
|TQ2101075601
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|176041
 
|London
 
|Cherry
 
|July
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|public park.. 'severely' maintained. access fine, but many food plants cut back hard before fruit and nuts are ripe.
 
|TQ3578976041
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175964
 
|London
 
|Elderberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|In the fenced wild area of the park, toward the train tracks is a huge bush of blackberries and elderberries. Been picking them today!
 
|TQ3261575964
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175789
 
|London
 
|Plum
 
|June
 
|
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Two plum trees with small fruit. Too high to reach. They are on the footpath. There's also a couple overhanging a house just round the corner on Sulivan Road.
 
|TQ2556075789
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|176072
 
|London
 
|Barberry
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|Here be apples, yellow and red plums, damsons/late plums of purple, cherries, goji, cobnuts and filberts, barberries and mahonia.
 
|TQ3581276072
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175865
 
|London
 
|Apricot
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|2 young trees, possibly apricot. No fruit possibly for a few years. Seen 2010. At the Far right back of the park.
 
|TQ2743775865
 
|-
 
|England
 
|13
 
|Lower Severn
 
|174447
 
|Bristol
 
|Crabapple
 
|August
 
|October
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Old crab apple tree by the path through Cotham Gardens. Very large red fruit
 
|ST5855074447
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|176485
 
|Bexleyheath
 
|Sweet chestnut
 
|
 
|
 
|TRUE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of Sweet Chestnut trees
 
|TQ4994676485
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|175572
 
|Hounslow
 
|Blackberry
 
|July
 
|August
 
|FALSE
 
|Public
 
|Lots of bushes with good yield but somewhat inaccessible due to fencing and height
 
|TQ1457775572
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|176131
 
|London
 
|Apple
 
|August
 
|September
 
|FALSE
 
|Private but overhanging
 
|This tree is in a private garden but ripe fruit falls to the ground every year, so anyone with a fruit picker would be able to get a few.
 
|TQ3705776131
 
|-
 
|England
 
|11
 
|London
 
|176101
 
|London
 
|Common chickweed
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|On 20th November 2012, a group of foragers with Grow Wild found the following edible green plants growing behind St Catherine's church: Nettles and dead-nettles, mallow, cleavers (goosegrass), dandelion, plantain, mint and chickweed. The same edible plants can be found growing amongst grass and along pathways all around Telegraph Hill and the wider area.
 
|TQ3589376101
 
|}
 
  
.
+
1. Intros
 +
Theos’ Story
 +
Theo: I’d consider myself a pragmatic left-anarchist, who advocates dual power campaigns and direct action up to the point of property sabotage under representative democracies in non-revolutionary periods.
 +
 +
Normandies’ Story
 +
Theo: From reading around, I understand you’re an ex-marxist luddite with pre-industrial communist principles when it comes to caring for those in one's own community.
 +
 
 +
2. Should We Add Disclaimers When Mentioning Kaczynski?
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Theo: When discussing Kaczynski & his ideas, do you think it’s important to add disclaimers that some of his ideas and actions were wrong & how critical do you think those disclaimers need to be?
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Normandie: Yes, I use them myself all the time when talking about Kaczysnki so that people don’t get the wrong idea. I had not properly read the mission of your podcast at the time of my initial comments on the reddit post and came off with the surface level idea that it would be a standard recounting of Kaczysnki’s life. Disclaimers should certainly be used, except of course in the case of discussions in a group that regularly talks about techno-skeptic philosophy and already knows the disclaimers as a given. Normalization of violence is not healthy or righteous, even for people forced into deadly wars.
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Theo: Right, so my position is you just shouldn’t platform people who have done evil without disclaimers or unless you are debating them and know you can draw more of their fans over to your side. Yes, critique the ideas as if anyone could have said them, but even if the ideas are perfectly good, make sure there is a critique of the evil actions he’s done and evil groups inspired by him, encase people go on from that to learn about him and sympathise with him and his legacy. I’d say the same of Bakunin, Foucault, Simone De Bouvier, etc.
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Normandie: I fully recognize that there is certainly negative conflation; however, the core of his ideology, which is the inevitable terminal dangers of industrialism, holds up whether or not he murdered people. This is an important distinction, the argumentative robustness of the philosophy regarding the nature of industrialism stays strong regardless of disagreements about what should be done about it, i.e. the nature of a revolution against the industrial system, which is a separate issue to be debated apart from his ideas about industrialism itself.
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Theo: I think it’s important to acknowledge there can be negative conflations even if he was right, for example someone’s motivation for putting the effort into putting out good political theory could be to cover over or make recompense for things they’ve done in the past. So if I was to not critique their past, someone could have good feelings about their political theory, find out about their past, then come up with justifications for why it wasn’t so bad because they like their theory.
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But regardless, I do think he in part absolutely developed a tailor-made ideology as a shield for unethical murderous desires. As he himself acknowledged the desire to kill psychologists and anyone else he hated was a major turning point in his life, another big change in his ideology also coincided with personal life changes in that after he was imprisoned, he set out a concrete plan for revolution and hoped he could be used as a symbol for it, which reflects how he could no longer take personal revenge and the most meaning he could conceive for himself was being this theorist for how others could work together to bring about a revolution.
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As to the moment his ideology changed towards violence, he started to have sexual fantasies of becoming a woman I think because he didn’t know how to have relationships with women, so he wanted to explore desires for women which he hadn't had the space to learn to understand (I don’t think it was out of any felt-emergence that he was a woman).
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So he made an appointment to go see the university psychologist and at the last minute decided he didn’t want to talk about having a sex change.
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He writes in his diary that this is when the first desire to kill happened:
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“I felt disgusted about what my uncontrolled sexual cravings had almost led me to do. And I felt humiliated, and I violently hated the psychiatrist. Just then there came a major turning point in my life. Like a Phoenix, I burst from the ashes of my despair to a glorious new hope. . . So, I said to myself, why not really kill that psychiatrist and anyone else whom I hate. . . I will kill, but I will make at least some effort to avoid detection, so that I can kill again.”
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So the psychology experiments for the CIA and this humiliating experience with the psychologist, turned into hateful resentment for a society that he felt had made him confused and depressed.
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Then a desire to carefully plan his murders and pick targets he thought some people would intellectually admire him for picking, as in his eyes the evilest people deserving of fighting a guerrilla war against. Could be seen as a way of getting the validation he didn’t get from friends as a child on his own terms, for being special and intelligent enough to have discovered all these connections and go after the worst offenders. Rebelling against social alienation and mediocrity/ fear of the harder task of finding meaning with others, that there’s no special meaning given to your life for just being you.
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Normandie: Kaczysnki likely committed his violent actions under the influence of developmental trauma. Addressing whether or not the ideology is ‘tailor made’ for murderous desires, I would say that any truly revolutionary ideology is ripe for abuse in its execution, and has been abused by many people, including most political revolutionaries in the past 2 centuries. If the philosophy of anti-industrialism is true, and I believe it is, then there are two options: to attempt revolution against this system, or to do nothing and chug ever on to the terminal end. I know many people who agree with Kaczysni and Ellul’s core philosophy, but would rather do nothing, and I used to be in this camp as well. However, if something is to be done about it, and this something is more than likely going to include violence (as all actual revolutions seem to have included), then of course there are going to be people who attempt to abuse the mask of the ideology to accomplish devious personal goals. This does not mean that the answer is to do nothing and lead the ecology of the Earth to not survive.
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I don't think you can blame Kaczynski for the 'fascist creep' any more than you can blame Marx for the horrors of Mao. Fascists and authoritarians of that nature would be so with or without the flare of technoskepticism inspired by Kaczynski. There is a resurgence of authoritarianism happening all over the place in many ideologies.
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Theo: I do blame Marx in part for the horrors of Mao. Marx knew he was writing a strategy promoting the most opportunistically violent class war revolutions possible. He thought the problem with the French revolution was that they didn't chop off enough heads, so very little sense of needing to inspire people to be invested in the new society, just terrorizing people as being of primary importance.
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Kaczynskis' actions and theory directly inspired some people to join both the green and insurrectionary left-anarchist movement, plus far-right terror groups who wouldn't otherwise have done so. And in the case of ITS turned them from far-left green anarchists property saboteurs to far-right terrorists.
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Normandie: There are, in my strong opinion, certain changes in the world that cannot come about by protracted reform. Some things can only be accomplished by revolution. If there is something of this nature that cannot be accomplished by reform, and is dire, then you can’t blame the person who pointed it out for the mishandlings of those responding to it. If that were the case, no revolution against any evil or disastrous system could happen because there will be some people who try to accomplish devious things.
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Even if I were to grant that the core philosophy was valid and revolution was justified, there are countless examples I can point to of Kaczynski advocating evil strategy and evil character vices, which we can get into later when we talk about What level of violence is justified to achieve this anti-tech revolution? But two examples that come to mind are the advocating the killing of biotech scientists as symbols to simply send a message and his justifying his bombing spree as the natural response to anger he felt, so including bombs in which he tried to take down airplanes where his motivation was the anger he felt at planes flying over his cabin.
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So as long as we can acknowledge beyond the core philosophy, his actions and other ideas have been directly responsible for encouraging others to do evil, I’ll take that as important common ground. I would still contend the core philosophy is bad too and thus not worth the revolution you desire also, but I’m happy to go over all his ideas in detail one at a time to present my counter-arguments.
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3. Anti-Industrialists & Preventing The Fascist Creep
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Theo: There are far-left primitivists who think primitive life will be one of peace and few work-hours, then centrist-primitivists who are just anti-social egoists, then I’d say to the degree you understand primitive life is one of indifference for the disabled, etc. And you still desire it, then I’d say you’re on the anti-egalitarian right-wing of politics at least in that one aspect.
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It is confused by the fact I view anti-industrial society as an irrational political foundation for achieving your desires, but to the extent there are these irrational rabbit holes people can fall down anywhere on the political spectrum, they can act as a worrying kind of wormhole which fast tracks people to diametrically opposite political positions.
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So how this can happen on the far-left is if you’re struggling with the contradictions of having say a personal trauma which leads you to anti-industrialist politics  + far-leftism which isn’t inherently against people finding value in highly technical work. So you might be worried that you could be overthrowing the current government, but will still be socially alienated from a demeaning factory work job, that is just slightly more democratic. And then from that point, find more common cause with anarcho-capitalists for just desiring to hoard what they can and kill anyone who comes onto their property, or fascists who want to hoard all the wealth for white people say.
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[I used primitivist to mean anyone desiring to regress to before the industrial revolution, but I’ve changed my language to reflect yours to try and avoid getting bogged down in semantics.]
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Normandie: Indeed there are many, especially on the ‘left’, who believe a mythological version of primitive life. However, there are also many who hold an incorrectly savage view of primitive life. There is evidence of tribes who took care of their disabled members for many years after their disability (citation coming). The idea that primitivism means indifference for the disabled is just not the case. There was also much less disability due to gradual natural selective pressures. Many conditions that were incredibly rare before civilization have widely proliferated in the population. I’ve written more on this in my article, Civilization is Unhealthy.  These things can be debated, but primitivism isn’t a hill I’ll die on. I’ll defend the things I believe about it and everyone has different views on it given their value systems. As I said, I am anti-industrialist first and foremost.
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I don’t think it is useful or practical to retroactively cast on to hunter-gatherers the modern political compass, which is largely predicated upon industrial mass-production. We have ideas about ‘usual’ characteristics of people on the left and the right that many think can be applied to tribes, and this may be intuitive to a degree, but I still don’t think it is accurate to describe tribes who were both largely egalitarian and market-based traders. If I believe in egalitarian communalism, but I believe that life on Earth will be destroyed, or humans domesticated and controlled to such a degree as to make them hardly human anymore, if the industrial system remains, it doesn’t make me a right winger. The choice in the anti-industrialist philosophy is to save life on Earth from annihilation, or to let life on Earth go extinct because disabled people such as those in an iron lung would be unable to survive without the industrial system. If you believe that all life dying is better than some people dying, I can understand and respect that position. In fact, I used to prefer that all people die when I was a committed misanthrope. Nonetheless, I completely believe in taking care of disabled people. If there is a disabled person in my commune, we are taking care of them. This position of wanting the survival of life on Earth and having to make hard choices doesn’t make me a right winger. You may think it is ‘socially conservative’ somehow, but I strongly disagree.
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As a disclaimer, I’m not a primitivist as a political ideology. I don’t call myself a primitivist. While I do think that humans would have a more secure existence psychologically as hunter gatherers, I don’t believe you can make all of human society primitive. You just can’t rationally control the development of a society like that. No amount of ideology will keep people from growing food if the alternative is to starve. The only way this could happen is if a meteor hit the Earth and all people except the hunter-gatherers in the Amazon and on North Sentinel Island died, which I don’t want. Primarily, I am anti-industrialist, I believe that industrialism will inevitably lead to disaster and possibly the destruction of all complex life forms if allowed to continue. People can do whatever they’d like after collapse comes. I’m not a political activist, in fact political philosophy is something that is not much of a priority right now except for how my commune will function. I don’t see anarcho-primitivism as a ‘rational political foundation’ either, because I don’t think its meant to be one outside of a small group - a tribe. I also don’t think most primitivists are driven to primitivism because of ‘trauma’ other than the lived experience of industrial distress that most everyone experiences to one degree or another.
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Regarding what you just said: ‘So you might be worried that you could be overthrowing the current government, but will still be socially alienated from a demeaning factory work job, that is just slightly more democratic. And then from that point, find more common cause with anarcho-capitalists for just desiring to hoard what they can and kill anyone who comes onto their property, or fascists who want to hoard all the wealth for white people say.’, I’m not quite sure how you reach that conclusion about primitivists having ‘more in common’ with this or that right-wing group. Firstly, anarcho-capitalists are delusional if they think their system is anarchism because industrial economy has a tendency toward consolidation and centralization for technical development as an inherent characteristic due to selective pressures for competition, so of course its not anarchism, the state is just replaced by the corporation. How anprims have anything meaningfully in common with fascists, I’ve no idea how you’ve reached that conclusion.
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Ted is explicitly anti-authoritarian and against using the state as a means to destroy the industrial system. 'This is not to be a political revolution, our goal is overthrow not government but the economic and technological basis of the present society'.
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Theo: Responding to your last point and working backwards, I would say regardless of if someone is against using the state to overthrow advanced technology, I don’t think that makes it any better, it's still authoritarian to stop people from having the choice of accessing advanced medicine through worker-owned industries.
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With regards to people shifting from left to right after becoming anti-industrialists, I don’t think I’m projecting political identities onto tribespeople who don’t know any other life, I’m specifically talking about people in the here and now changing their political sympathies towards fascism or anarcho-capitalism because they desire to just be hermits in the forest with their white family and exploiting their sons and friends through trade, but just not organizing in any way with factory production lines or punching a clock.
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From what you’ve just said I perceive your political foundation to still be that of the left, with your desire for egalitarian communalism, but I just reiterate that I think this to be an anti-historical and anti-science position whose effect in the real world would more closely align with right wing people in their indifference for segments of the population simply for who they are by nature.
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Normandie: Back to what I previously said, I don’t want to control how anyone lives their life. I don’t even believe in a state in my political philosophy, I’m an anarchist. However, I’m not willing to let that principle cause me to sit back and allow the industrial system to destroy life, or all freedoms of life that make it worth living, because it would take away some medicine that is treating mostly conditions that are largely caused by industrialism in the first place.
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A leftwing affinity group are moved over to eco-fascist terrorism by the Unabomber
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Theo: Individualists Tending to the Wild (In Spanish: Individualistas Tendiendo a lo Salvaje, ITS) is a self-defined eco-extremist group that emerged in Mexico in 2011, whose members were originally part of the green & insurrectionary left-anarchist milieus who likely grew up on earth first monkey-wrenching manuals from the 80s. Upon reading the unabomber's manifesto they stopped committing arsons aimed at sabotaging evil companies and instead started to desire to have the wider effect of terrorizing people through fear of injury or death on the simple principle of being against technology and wanting to regress to hunter-gatherer societies:
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Here are old members of the FAI / CCF in Mexico acknowledging former collaboration:
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“Although ITS were one of the few clusters with which we did not directly coordinate when undertaking joint actions, we were in solidarity with them, in the same way that some of the comrades that made up our affinity groups obtained monetary resources for them to solve specific difficulties when requested. That has been (and is) the basis of practical co-ordination between the new anarchic insurrectionalism and eco-anarchism.”
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And here is an answer members of ITS gave in an text interview in 2014 showing they were leftists and not simply post-left-&-right:
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Individualists tending towards the wild formed at the beginning of 2011, and was motivated by the reasoning acquired during a slow process of getting to know, questioning, and the rejection of all that encompasses leftism and the civilized, and accordingly, employing all the above, we deemed it necessary to carry out the direct attack against the Technoindustrial System. We think that the struggle against this is not only a stance of wanting to abandon Civilization, regressing to Nature, or in refuting the system’s values, without also attacking it.
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They call themselves nihilists in that they don’t want to be beholden to pursuing any concrete narratives, like the goal of destroying all advanced technological systems, but instead hope to inspire others to a simple psychology of anger and resentment at the conformity they were forced to grow up with.
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Interestingly Ted in prison has critiqued the sometimes random attacks of ITS and argued to the extent they are organising with others should be working to bring about a primitivist revolution in going after riskier targets like electricity grid stations. But it’s almost as if ITS feel being able to do random attacks is what’s owed to them by being free and that to listen to Ted now would be helping serve his needs as a theorist from prison, to the detriment of their own desires.
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They are also now firmly on the far-right, quoting from the now banned facebook page of the eco-fascist publication Atassa:
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All anti-civ thought and fascism have the same founding premise and modus operandi. These are that a large chunk of the human population holds down a selected group that could potentially function successfully if these other groups were not around. The solution is thus to cull the land of those people, either the scapegoat of all societal ills (fascism) or the vast majority of people who could not function without the support of techno-industrial society (anarcho-primitivism / anti-civ green anarchy). Both ideologies can be reluctant or coy about the mehtodology they use or its results ("an ethno-state does not lead directly to genocide", "the destruction of the power grid is not intended to directly kill billions of people"). However, the ethical decision of both is the same: do what needs to be done to allow those who can be free to be free, and damn the consequences. Eco-extremism does not shy away from this.
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For context here is a communique of who Atassa are from ITS themselves:
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The northern lands of the American continent are being won over by the tendency that moves away from political humanism and spits mockingly on hyper-moral civilized values.
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It was obvious that the rabid followers of humanism would protest against the incorrect words and the "atrocious" acts of ITS in Mexico, Argentina, Chile and Brazil. Scared, they would whisper, "I hope ITS doesn't come to the U.S." and that's what happened. ITS hasn't come to the U.S., but (here is the "but") little by little the most emblematic theorists of eco-extremism were arriving, who created publishing projects and put into circulation websites that reproduced the discourse against human progressivism.
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The first sign we have to support this is the publication of Atassa magazine, the first issue of which was a tremendous blow for the humanist slanderers, demonstrating the arrival of eco-extremism to the U.S. The second issue will be a true earthquake for those same defamers of the tendency.
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Normandie: Let me first clarify that I am not anti-civ, but I recognize that many people who are in the wider diaspora of groups that are anti-civ commonly flirt with or idolize Kaczynski in some way. These people have either not read Kaczysnki’s magnum opus (ATR), or have and disregard the most important parts of it to instead pursue their own delusions about politics.
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I had not heard of ITS before this discussion. If we are staying on the topic of Kaczysnki’s philosophy, he has clearly stated (especially in Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How) that anti-tech revolutionaries must avoid working with extreme-environmentalists ,such as ITS, and anarcho-primitivists. The only goal for Kaczysnki is to destroy the technological system, and anyone who has any other priorities (especially political ambitions like fascism) should not be worked with. I am repulsed by fascist and I, along with anyone who takes anti-tech revolutionary activity seriously and practically, avoid working with these people and actively try to keep them out of our circles. It seems that the initial move away from leftism by ITS was reading Industrial Society and Its Future, but that they have moved towards ecofascism in defiance of Kaczysnki’s philosophy. Like I said earlier, any revolutionary concept is going to have people like this who use the banner for evil ends. Kaczysnki is not some religious figure to be followed by those of us who are anti-industrialist, but he has contributed valuable work to anyone hoping to do anything about the terminal dangers of industrialism, and admits that discretion and adaptation is going to be necessary for revolutionaries going forward. Anyone who took hedence to his outlining of what does and doesn’t make a revolutionary movement successful would not work with these people, so it is my opinion that the move to fascism is due primarily to their own poor qualities as people.
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Addressing this statement, ‘All anti-civ thought and fascism have the same founding premise and modus operandi. These are that a large chunk of the human population holds down a selected group that could potentially function successfully if these other groups were not around. The solution is thus to cull the land of those people, either the scapegoat of all societal ills (fascism) or the vast majority of people who could not function without the support of techno-industrial society (anarcho-primitivism / anti-civ green anarchy)’,
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Anti-industrialism is not an anti-civ ideology. Of course, people who are anti-civ are inherently against industrialism because you can’t have industrialism without civilization. However, the only goal of the anti-tech movement (as it concerns Kacyznki’s philosophy) is the end of industrialism, and nothing else. Anyone with other goals for the movement is to be absolutely avoided at all costs, as Kaczysnki himself has said. Anti-civ is a political philosophy, anti-industrialism is not. Destroying the industrial system is one concrete goal that does not concern how a society is governed. Anti-civ is a delusion that the trajectory of human society can be rationally controlled, which Kaczysnki dedicates the first chapter of ATR to show that it cannot be. You cannot force all of humanity to not live sedentary lives. Anti-industrialism does not pin the blame of the current state of the world on any group of people. Jacques Ellul spent his masterpiece detailing how the industrial system is an inorganic and encompassing force with one goal, technical development and infection of all aspects, and that humans are a middle-man between the system and its ends (a middleman that will one day not be as technically efficient as an alternative, thus being replaced). Anti-industrialism has nothing to do with groups of people.
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The excerpt may have a point of anti-civ and fascist commonalities, but like I just detailed, this is very much not the case for those who follow Kaczysnki’s revolutionary philosophy.
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4. Kaczynskis’ Ideas
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Our evolution
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Theo: I’m sceptical that just because we did something for a long time in our evolution that it means it would provide us the most meaning in life to keep doing it, it may be less stressful in the same way that challenging yourself to read complicated philosophy might be frustrating at times, but I still view passion for technical fields as producing more important happy flourishing for most people, regardless of suffering.
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Evolution is a process of tinkering, finding whatever new mutated DNA will do the job of solving a problem. Our closest relatives chimpanzees and bonobos both have radically different social structures, which can’t clearly be explained by a long evolution of settling on a rigid psychology which is the most advantageous for each, but instead by theory of mind and how their brains have developed the capabilities to chose to form different social structures to manage social problems specific to their biological capabilities and their environment.
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So the evolution of our biological capabilities created values, the ability for things to matter to us. But, what values we choose is up to us and it’s mostly going to be a case of grappling with why our parents and neighbours structured the environment in such a way for our development, whether we learn to agree with that choice or develop on their or someone else's ideas to change things for the next generation.
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Normandie: The position regarding the way we evolved to be fulfilled is not an argument that there ought be a rigid psychology or way of doing things. It is that creatures evolve very gradually over a long period of time. Human beings have been essentially thrust into the industrial age, which is so much different in all aspects of life that it does have an impact on people. While everyone certainly has differences in what they seek in life and the archetypes they become, there are general things which are crucial to human well-being. Some of these are basic, such as regular exercise (the importance of which cannot be overstated), healthy sleep, exposure to nature, a healthy diet, etc. Just with the sedentary lifestyle of the modern man, most people are lacking in a major factor for our psychological health. However, one of the most crucial aspects of fulfillment is nearly totally deprived from us industrial civilians, that being the ability to go through what Kaczysnki called ‘The Power Process’. In short, people need to have goals whose attainment require effort, and they need to have reasonable success in attaining at least some of these goals, and some portion of the population has to have autonomy in the selection and attainment of their goals. Of course most people have goals whose attainment requires effort, but the basic necessities of life are so easily attained by going through the motions to get and work a job, that these serve little to no fulfillment of the power process. The means to secure our physical necessities are so alienated from what we have evolved to do that they leave one empty, even when these are attained, and people have little to no autonomy in these goals. They work the orders of their boss handed down from above. Even freelancers and business owners are beholden to the demands of their economic niche. So, people select surrogate activities to try and emulate the power process, which are ‘artificial’ goals that one sets for themselves in an attempt to emulate the power process. Surrogate activities are not inherently bad, and they do offer some amount of filling for the hole left by the absence of the power process, but the problem is when surrogate activities alone try to completely replace the power process.
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Some have little to no distressing symptoms of modernity, and this is mostly because there is a segment of the population which adapts easier to these industrial conditions. Industrialized nations have an incredibly high rate of suicide, depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, copious mood disorders and ‘personality disorders’, etc. Within those nations, just being in an urban area doubles the rate of schizophrenia. Some people are better at adapting to the industrial world than others, but for those who aren’t and exhibit natural symptoms of incongruity between the way we evolved to live and the way we live today, the diagnosed get separated, labeled, processed, and dealt with by being pharmacologically neutralized with  drugs like antidepressants, which are a chemical lobotomy.  On top of that, we are provided with a myriad of distractions to placate us, entertainment media, drugs, consumerism, etc, that many are able to pacify their distress their entire lives without being significantly disrupted by psychological distress in their functions in the industrial economy.
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I do not claim that technical skills cannot be fun and enjoyable because many of them are. However, given what I just outlined regarding the power process and the fact that technical skills necessitate the techo-industrial system which I believe has inevitable terminal dangers, I don’t think that the fun of some of these technical skills are worth the disastrous fatal effects of industrialism for the ecology of the Earth, human freedom, or human existence, not to mention the overwhelming negative effects of industrialism on people’s mental and physical health.
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Jacques Ellul
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Theo: Except for the not voting and pacifism, I have no issue with Ellul, he was a Christian left-anarchist who desired to create a:
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“...Proudhonian socialism...by transforming the press, the media, and the economic structures...by means of a federative cooperative approach..." an Anarchist society based on federation and the Mutualist economics of Proudhon.
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I even agree with his take on technology I think, in that he thinks:
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The solution is to simply view technique as objects that can be useful to us and recognize it for what it is, just another thing among many others, instead of believing in technique for its own sake or that of society. If we do this we "...destroy the basis for the power technique has over humanity."
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I would like people to use technology sparingly in their personal life through the concept of minimum viable use and community tool sheds to have a much lower impact on the environment.
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I don’t think efficiency should be the goal and I think we should advocate eco-centrist philosophy and policies which starts with the foundation of in order to even know where it is ethical to draw a line in the sand on where and what amount of territory can be taken up by human development, we need to look to where environmental processes can and cannot support sentient life and to what degree.
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Normandie: I think that Ellul’s work, The Technological Society, is an incredibly important work for understanding a lot about the techno-industrial system. However, I disagree with his conclusions about what must be done and find his idea that we can take some parts of industrialism and leave the rest to be naive. This is where Kaczysnki comes in, who has written about why this is not the case in a robust way in Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How.
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Can People Choose How Society Is Run When Machines Are Involved?
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Theo: Kaczynski has a view of history where when society changes, and the side-effects are unknown, we rationalize that we desired those side effects in the first place and planned for them through a desire for efficiency or the pursuit of knowledge, but that we begin to reflect systems of machines, rather than them being simple tools of our own desires.
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I agree that there can be a kind of manufactured consent situation going on, in the same way a kid can through social pressure be coerced into buying the latest iphone.
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But I disagree that we need to return to the middle or stone ages levels of technology to solve this problem. I would always want to put time and effort into building assembly lines for life changing items like penicillin and seeing glasses.
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We don’t need to conceive of society as a network of rational social contracts either, for using technology to make sense. From ‘The Politics of Postanarchism by Saul Newman’:
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However, can we assume that the possibilities of human freedom lie rooted in the natural order, as a secret waiting to be discovered, as a flower waiting to blossom, to use Bookchin’s metaphor? Can we assume that there is a rational unfolding of possibilities, driven by a certain historical and social logic? This would seem to fall into the trap of essentialism, whereby there is a rational essence or being at the foundation of society whose truth we must perceive. There is an implicit positivism here, in which political and social phenomena are seen as conditioned by natural principles and scientifically observable conditions. Here I think one should reject this view of a social order founded on deep rational principles. In the words of Stirner, ‘The essence of the world, so attractive and splendid, is for him who looks to the bottom of it – emptiness.’ In other words, rather than there being a rational objectivity at the foundation of society, an immanent wholeness embodying the potential for human freedom, there is a certain void or emptiness, one that produces radical contingency and indeterminacy rather than scientific objectivity. This idea has been elaborated by Laclau and Mouffe, who eschew the idea of society as a rationally intelligible totality, and instead see it as a field of antagonisms which function as its discursive limit. In other words, what gives society its definitional limit at the same time subverts it as a coherent, whole identity. Therefore, they argue, ‘Society never manages fully to be society, because everything in it is penetrated by its limits, which prevent it from constituting itself as an objective reality.’ Antagonism should not be thought of here in the sense of the Hobbesian state of nature, as a war of everyman against everyman, but rather as a kind of rupturing or displacement of social identities that prevents the closure of society as a coherent identity.
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Normandie: Kaczysnki’s views on the development of human societies is that they cannot be rationally controlled, that is that people cannot impose a change on society for the long-term unless it is in line with a pre-existing historical trend, such as the gradual ‘democratization’ of the west. It is not just when machines are involved, but It is my opinion that the primary force driving human society in the modern world is not men or men’s profits. What drives humanity is an encompassing motivation, it is something that is a religion in the hearts of most men today. That is the technological system, technical development in all fields, in all facets, in all aspects of living, at all costs, for whatever end, and with whatever means, simply for the sake of doing it; if it can be done it must be done. Most technological developments appear to have more upsides than downsides in the immediate effects, so they will always be pursued whether or not they will be disastrous later on, which is hardly capable of being predicted. Men are not the shepherds of technology in the modern world, but are shepherded by the technological system. All technical developments are advantageous in natural selection, and are pursued. Industrial economies are a means to pursue, coordinate, plan, and engage in this totality of technical development.
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The world is a large supersystem composed of many competing subsystems. In the short term, natural selection favors those that recklessly pursue advantages, even if those advantages are destructive in the long term. Those that are prudent for their long-term future are beat out by those that pursue advantages with little to no regard for long-term consequences. Let’s say for example that an anarcho-communist society with an attempt at rational prudence were to form successfully. Movements are always corrupted when they achieve their goals and can offer members of it status or power in some way. The idea that all people can be made to care about this altruistic prudence and not pursue reckless advantages at some point is a fantasy. Some actors at some point will pursue the destructive short term advantages for power, and they will beat out the prudent actors. If a movement is to achieve its goal, it needs to have a clear, concise, and concrete objective that once obtained will be irreversible, and it needs to achieve its goal quickly before corruption sets in. A convoluted vision of society that is easily reversible, such as keeping the ‘good parts’ of the industrial system and not utilizing the rest, is doomed to fail.
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Does modern life erode our freedoms?
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Theo: I campaign for people to have the autonomy to choose their own means in life, I want people to have the option of loads more wildlife habitat than currently exists, to live in if they want to. But I also want people to have the freedom to go to a worker owned business to fulfil their intellectual passions.
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Normandie: I would absolutely love to spend my life minding my own business on my land with my community and not paying mind to how others live their lives. If I didn’t truly believe that industrialism has inexorable, terminal dangers for the future of humanity and the Earth, then I would just live my days on my homestead. I’m not a revolutionary because I don’t like cities or factories and want to impose my preferences on others. It is because I genuinely believe that if the industrial system continues to its conclusion, my children won’t have a place to live, they will be subjugated and changed beyond the point of any remaining human dignity or they will be extinct, along with the rest of the Earth’s ecology.
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Is modern life unfulfilling?
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Theo: He thinks people are trained to be over-socialized as a form of entertainment in service to technology, so political advocacy is just a surrogate activity, where people are trained to feel guilty for not helping people, to waste their time advocating others become more invested in the collectivist system.
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I just disagree that its an unfulfilling project or we should do it out of guilt. Being able to reach a point in our social evolution where we can care for the basic needs of everyone to a basic extent is a beautiful and satisfying goal to work towards and to sustain through living those communal relationships.
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Has technology increased suffering?
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Theo: It may have done, but I’m not a utilitarian who only cares about pain vs. pleasure, I think suffering is necessary for self-actualizing, so achieving your goals and feeling a deeper happiness, which the stoics called eudaimonia which just means happy flourishing.
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As well the foundations for any pleasure at all for disabled people and other innocent victims of disease and lack of basic security that would be denied in any anti-tech revolution which took us backwards.
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Ted thinks primitive man can handle these issues stoically, but why then cannot modern man do the same with technology in order to reap the benefits of innocent items like penicillin and seeing glasses.
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Would industrial society re-emerge?
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Theo: I’m sceptical of Kaczynskis’ confidence that a new industrial revolution wouldn’t simply re-emerge, especially with people passing down memories and books of all the benefits to modern life.
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Firstly, the harm to the environment would be much worse than us simply transitioning to renewable energy and rewilding areas as we depopulate as is the trend in advanced countries. Secondly, I would argue the probability that we will achieve a long-lasting, mostly peaceful, technologically advanced, left-anarchist society is far more valuable to me than returning to an either never ending series of warring feudal societies or feudal societies that repeats the industrial revolution and has another series of world wars for resources.
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Primitive life is more appealing to me personally than feudalism in that I could be born into a fairly egalitarian tribe like the Penan or that I wasn’t but I wouldn’t know any different life or if I had some of the egalitarian ideals I had now, the possibility would be there to strike out on my own and form an egalitarian tribe. But bar convincing everyone to be hunter gatherers, or technological incentives to have fair and democratic communication among societies who trade with each other, you just are going to recreate feudal era societies, where you’d have to be very lucky to escape from conscription and tyrants and environmental destruction could be far worse.   
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Normandie: Even if society were to at some point in the future begin the process of industrialization again, it is not sensible for us to worry about that. We must deal with the problems facing our time just as they will have to deal with the problems facing their time. If society were to industrialize again, it would most likely be some 500 or 1,000 years in the future. There are some people who even believe that it would not be possible to industrialize again because the conditions and resources that allowed for industrialization in the first place are no longer there. I’m not one of these people who think it is impossible, but it would certainly take hundreds of years or more to rebuild the system, both because the development of the system is a long and convoluted process and because of the lack of plentiful natural resources that were consumed in our time.
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Just because there is a possibility that society industrializes again does not mean we should give up, because the alternative is destruction. The larger the system grows, the more disastrous the effects of its breakdown will be. If we do not bring it to collapse in time, we are facing a technological crisis that entails total ecological destruction. If we carry out a successful revolution in time, then there is at least a chance of humanity, and other complex living organisms, surviving.
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What level of violence is justified to achieve this anti-tech revolution?
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Theo: He thinks accelerating the need to dismantle industrial society is too urgent to wait on non-violence, because the effects of waiting will only be worse.
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Most people agree that anyone who took it upon themselves to assassinate Hitler a day before the break out of WW2 would be seen as committing an ethical act, no matter who follows, because throwing a wrench into the cult of personality spell built around Hitler would be a significant setback for the fascist state’s grip over the people. And given all the evidence pointing to the inevitability of war, such an act could easily be seen as a necessary preemptive act.
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Most can sympathize with quick revolutions against dictatorships where the result is a freer society, like the Kurdish uprising in Northern Syria which took power from a regime who had rolled tanks on demonstrators and outlawed teaching of their native language.
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But, even there, there are key foundations you need to work from, like the probability you won’t just give an excuse for the oppressor committing even worse horrors as was the case with the Rohingya militants who ambushed a police checkpoint, resulting in army & citizen campaign to burn down many villages, plus murder and rape those that couldn’t get away.
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As well as a responsibility to put down arms after winning political freedoms and a majority are in favor of diplomacy through electoral politics, like in Northern Ireland today.
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Under representative parliamentary systems, the sentiment of most is that even if it could be argued that a war of terror against the ruling class was the easiest route to produce a better society, that it would still be ethically wrong to be the person who takes another’s life just because it’s the easiest way. Since regardless of manufactured consent or anything else you still could have worked to build a coalition to overcome those obstacles and change the system slowly from within.
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And I agree, it would be an act of self-harm to treat life with such disregard when you could have been that same deluded person shrouded in the justificatory trappings of society treating your behavior normally. I don’t think the way we win today is treating a cold bureaucratic system with equally cold disregard in whose life we had the resources to be able to intimidate this week. Time on earth is the greatest gift people have, to make mistakes and learn from them.
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Still some are tempted into violent direct action as a reaction to what they see as the state’s terrorism in the form of drone strikes or torture at Guantanamo bay, Vietnam war’s white phosphorous, or in my country undercover cops sleeping with and having kids with protesters they’re investigating.
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As a socialist, I do think we can hypothesize the unrealistic case of 99% of society desiring a referendum on a shift from parliamentary representative system to a federated spokes council system and the MP's dragging their feet, the same way both parties gerrymander the boundaries to make it easier to win despite it being the one issue most everyone agrees is bad, and people needing to storm the halls of power to force a vote to happen.
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More likely though, an opportunity for revolution might arise from such a confluence of events as climate refugees and worker gains forcing the state and corporations into trying to crack down on freedoms in order to preserve their power and enough people resisting that move, who are then able take power and usher in radical policy change, with either the army deciding to stand down or splitting into factions.
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Should we use domestic animals in a peaceful world?
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This argument is not going to win me any favours with the majority of people, but I’m curious to get your response, because as a primitivist you’re critical of how we are domesticated as people against our interests, I’m actually against breeding domesticated animals like chickens and mules because I think we should be freeing up space for wild animals like the jungle fowl, which are better able to express their capabilities in the wild than say chickens which we have bred to have numerous health problems like being egg bound and too much meat so they can break their legs more easily carrying the weight.
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I guess you see it as necessary to practice these things for surviving the collapse, which I also don’t see as likely, but I understand that that would be justified if true. What about in a world where everyone was vegan and there was no war, where everyone grew food forests, so even if you desired to move, you could always help someone else with their food forest?
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Further Reading
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General Resources
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The Philosophy of the Unabomber (15 min philosophy breakdown video)
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The Unabomber: The Devastating Use of a Brilliant Mind (20 min biography)
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A brother lost, a brotherhood found (article)
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From the Unabomber to the Incels: Angry Young Men on Campus - Eileen Pollack Considers Their Rage and Our Responsibility (article)
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Children of Ted Two decades after his last deadly act of ecoterrorism, the Unabomber has become an unlikely prophet to a new generation of acolytes. By John H. Richardson (article)
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Running to Do Evil (podcast with recorded snippets of Kaczynski)
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Unabomber - In His Own Words (2 h 55 min documentary series with recorded snippets of Kaczynski)
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Manhunt (true-crime drama)
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Rational Wiki Profile (wiki article)
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Unabomber: the secret life of Ted Kaczynski (book biography by his neighbour)
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Every Last Tie: The Story of the Unabomber and His Family (book biography by his brother)
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Mindhunter: Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit (book biography by the FBI profiler who caught him)
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Hunting the Unabomber: The FBI, Ted Kaczynski, and the Capture of America’s Most Notorious Domestic Terrorist (a new book biography on the case)
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Effect on the left-wing
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The Left-Overs: How Fascists Court the Post-Left (30 min read time - history article)
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The Politics of Attack: Communiqués and Insurrectionary Violence (well researched book which covers groups inspired by the Unabomber)
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AFed statement on kneecapping of nuclear executive by Informal Anarchist Federation by The Anarchist Federation (article)
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Anarcho-Nihilism Review || The Ideology of Insurrection (15 min comedy/educational video)
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Individualists Tending to the Wild (In Spanish: Individualistas Tendiendo a lo Salvaje, ITS) (ex-leftist, eco-fascist terror group inspired by the Unabomber)
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There’s Nothing Anarchist about Eco-Fascism: A Condemnation of ITS
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Not Our Comrades: ITS Attacks on Anarchists
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“Eco-extremism and the indiscriminate attack – The Church of ITS Mexico” by L (UK) (critique of wild reaction an eco-fascist group inspired by the Unabomber)
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Of Indiscriminate Attacks & Wild Reactions An Anti-civ Anarchist Engages with ITS and Atassa, Their Defenders and Their False Critics by Edelweiss Pirates - Text & PDF
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Against the World-Builders: Eco-extremists respond to critics (An ex-leftist defends eco-fascism)
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Comments on the communiques from Individualists Tending toward the Wild — by Último Reducto 20 pp.
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Apostles and Heretics by John Jacobi (Eco-fascist journal)
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Ash & Ruin - Subversive Nihilist Periodical (ex-leftist eco-fascist zine)
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The New Wave of Eco-Terrorism and Nihilist Militancy by Popular Front (podcast)
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Communiques of ITS — 132 pp.
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Interview with Individualists Tending toward the Wild — 9 pp.
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Effect on the right-wing
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Inside the Unabomber's odd and furious online revival plus pictures left out of the editors edition & response by the twitter eco-fascists called Who are the pines? - Wired article
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Eco-Fascist ‘Pine Tree Party’ Growing as a Violent Extremism Threat - Terrorist watchdog site
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The Dark Side of Environmentalism (Eco-fascism) (8 min video)
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Ted Kaczynskis' Writing
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Theory
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Industrial Society and Its Future - 120 pp. (manifesto)
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Hit where it hurts — 17 pp. (call to violence written from prison)
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Technological Slavery (book of essays)
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Afterthoughts to Technological Slavery - 14 pp.
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Why the Technological System Will Destroy Itself (essay)
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Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How (an updated version of the manifesto)
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Key Life Events
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How I Blew Up Harold Snilly
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Letter to a Turkish anarchist —  27 pp.
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An Interview with Ted Kaczynski — 16 pp.
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The Communiques of Freedom Club — 34 pp.
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Truth & Lies - Part 1 & Part 2 (Book written just after his sentencing, never published in print, just photocopied online)
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Unabomber’s letters show he hasn’t changed much behind bars (article)
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Ted Kaczynski’s Comments on Timothy McVeigh — 7 pp.
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Fiction
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Ship of Fools — 8 pp.
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Misc. Letters
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Ted Kaczynski’s Interview with the John Jay Sentinel — 10 pp.
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Ted Kaczynski Letter to an Anonymous German — 17 pp.
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Ted Kaczynski Letter to A.O. — 5 pp.
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Ted Kaczynski letter to M.K. — 9 pp.
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Ted Kaczynski on Individualists Tending Toward Savagery (ITS) — 4 pp.
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Ted Kaczynski’s Letter to the Saturday Evening Review (1970) — 3 pp.
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Answer to Some Comments Made in Green Anarchist — 9 pp.
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Misc. Theory
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The Littering Ape — Apios Tuberosa (pseud. Ted Kaczynski) 3 pp.
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Marcos Loves Modernization — 4 pp.
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Morality and Revolution — 16 pp.
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Progress versus Liberty — 21 pp.
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The System’s Neatest Trick — 21 pp.
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When Non-Violence is Suicide — 5 pp.

Revision as of 18:30, 22 July 2021

Test edit comparison

Theos’ Video Title: The Ideas of Ted Kaczynski (the Unabomber) & Preventing The Fascist Creep

Index 1. Intros Theos’ Story Normandies’ Story 2. Should We Add Disclaimers When Mentioning Kaczynski? 3. Anti-Industrialists & Preventing The Fascist Creep A leftwing affinity group are moved over to eco-fascist terrorism by the Unabomber 4. Kaczynskis’ Ideas Our evolution Jacques Ellul Can People Choose How Society Is Run When Machines Are Involved? Does modern life erode our freedoms? Is modern life unfulfilling? Has technology increased suffering? Would industrial society re-emerge? What level of violence is justified to achieve this anti-tech revolution?


1. Intros Theos’ Story Theo: I’d consider myself a pragmatic left-anarchist, who advocates dual power campaigns and direct action up to the point of property sabotage under representative democracies in non-revolutionary periods.

Normandies’ Story Theo: From reading around, I understand you’re an ex-marxist luddite with pre-industrial communist principles when it comes to caring for those in one's own community.

2. Should We Add Disclaimers When Mentioning Kaczynski? Theo: When discussing Kaczynski & his ideas, do you think it’s important to add disclaimers that some of his ideas and actions were wrong & how critical do you think those disclaimers need to be? Normandie: Yes, I use them myself all the time when talking about Kaczysnki so that people don’t get the wrong idea. I had not properly read the mission of your podcast at the time of my initial comments on the reddit post and came off with the surface level idea that it would be a standard recounting of Kaczysnki’s life. Disclaimers should certainly be used, except of course in the case of discussions in a group that regularly talks about techno-skeptic philosophy and already knows the disclaimers as a given. Normalization of violence is not healthy or righteous, even for people forced into deadly wars. Theo: Right, so my position is you just shouldn’t platform people who have done evil without disclaimers or unless you are debating them and know you can draw more of their fans over to your side. Yes, critique the ideas as if anyone could have said them, but even if the ideas are perfectly good, make sure there is a critique of the evil actions he’s done and evil groups inspired by him, encase people go on from that to learn about him and sympathise with him and his legacy. I’d say the same of Bakunin, Foucault, Simone De Bouvier, etc. Normandie: I fully recognize that there is certainly negative conflation; however, the core of his ideology, which is the inevitable terminal dangers of industrialism, holds up whether or not he murdered people. This is an important distinction, the argumentative robustness of the philosophy regarding the nature of industrialism stays strong regardless of disagreements about what should be done about it, i.e. the nature of a revolution against the industrial system, which is a separate issue to be debated apart from his ideas about industrialism itself. Theo: I think it’s important to acknowledge there can be negative conflations even if he was right, for example someone’s motivation for putting the effort into putting out good political theory could be to cover over or make recompense for things they’ve done in the past. So if I was to not critique their past, someone could have good feelings about their political theory, find out about their past, then come up with justifications for why it wasn’t so bad because they like their theory. But regardless, I do think he in part absolutely developed a tailor-made ideology as a shield for unethical murderous desires. As he himself acknowledged the desire to kill psychologists and anyone else he hated was a major turning point in his life, another big change in his ideology also coincided with personal life changes in that after he was imprisoned, he set out a concrete plan for revolution and hoped he could be used as a symbol for it, which reflects how he could no longer take personal revenge and the most meaning he could conceive for himself was being this theorist for how others could work together to bring about a revolution. As to the moment his ideology changed towards violence, he started to have sexual fantasies of becoming a woman I think because he didn’t know how to have relationships with women, so he wanted to explore desires for women which he hadn't had the space to learn to understand (I don’t think it was out of any felt-emergence that he was a woman). So he made an appointment to go see the university psychologist and at the last minute decided he didn’t want to talk about having a sex change. He writes in his diary that this is when the first desire to kill happened: “I felt disgusted about what my uncontrolled sexual cravings had almost led me to do. And I felt humiliated, and I violently hated the psychiatrist. Just then there came a major turning point in my life. Like a Phoenix, I burst from the ashes of my despair to a glorious new hope. . . So, I said to myself, why not really kill that psychiatrist and anyone else whom I hate. . . I will kill, but I will make at least some effort to avoid detection, so that I can kill again.” So the psychology experiments for the CIA and this humiliating experience with the psychologist, turned into hateful resentment for a society that he felt had made him confused and depressed. Then a desire to carefully plan his murders and pick targets he thought some people would intellectually admire him for picking, as in his eyes the evilest people deserving of fighting a guerrilla war against. Could be seen as a way of getting the validation he didn’t get from friends as a child on his own terms, for being special and intelligent enough to have discovered all these connections and go after the worst offenders. Rebelling against social alienation and mediocrity/ fear of the harder task of finding meaning with others, that there’s no special meaning given to your life for just being you. Normandie: Kaczysnki likely committed his violent actions under the influence of developmental trauma. Addressing whether or not the ideology is ‘tailor made’ for murderous desires, I would say that any truly revolutionary ideology is ripe for abuse in its execution, and has been abused by many people, including most political revolutionaries in the past 2 centuries. If the philosophy of anti-industrialism is true, and I believe it is, then there are two options: to attempt revolution against this system, or to do nothing and chug ever on to the terminal end. I know many people who agree with Kaczysni and Ellul’s core philosophy, but would rather do nothing, and I used to be in this camp as well. However, if something is to be done about it, and this something is more than likely going to include violence (as all actual revolutions seem to have included), then of course there are going to be people who attempt to abuse the mask of the ideology to accomplish devious personal goals. This does not mean that the answer is to do nothing and lead the ecology of the Earth to not survive. I don't think you can blame Kaczynski for the 'fascist creep' any more than you can blame Marx for the horrors of Mao. Fascists and authoritarians of that nature would be so with or without the flare of technoskepticism inspired by Kaczynski. There is a resurgence of authoritarianism happening all over the place in many ideologies. Theo: I do blame Marx in part for the horrors of Mao. Marx knew he was writing a strategy promoting the most opportunistically violent class war revolutions possible. He thought the problem with the French revolution was that they didn't chop off enough heads, so very little sense of needing to inspire people to be invested in the new society, just terrorizing people as being of primary importance. Kaczynskis' actions and theory directly inspired some people to join both the green and insurrectionary left-anarchist movement, plus far-right terror groups who wouldn't otherwise have done so. And in the case of ITS turned them from far-left green anarchists property saboteurs to far-right terrorists. Normandie: There are, in my strong opinion, certain changes in the world that cannot come about by protracted reform. Some things can only be accomplished by revolution. If there is something of this nature that cannot be accomplished by reform, and is dire, then you can’t blame the person who pointed it out for the mishandlings of those responding to it. If that were the case, no revolution against any evil or disastrous system could happen because there will be some people who try to accomplish devious things. Even if I were to grant that the core philosophy was valid and revolution was justified, there are countless examples I can point to of Kaczynski advocating evil strategy and evil character vices, which we can get into later when we talk about What level of violence is justified to achieve this anti-tech revolution? But two examples that come to mind are the advocating the killing of biotech scientists as symbols to simply send a message and his justifying his bombing spree as the natural response to anger he felt, so including bombs in which he tried to take down airplanes where his motivation was the anger he felt at planes flying over his cabin. So as long as we can acknowledge beyond the core philosophy, his actions and other ideas have been directly responsible for encouraging others to do evil, I’ll take that as important common ground. I would still contend the core philosophy is bad too and thus not worth the revolution you desire also, but I’m happy to go over all his ideas in detail one at a time to present my counter-arguments.


3. Anti-Industrialists & Preventing The Fascist Creep Theo: There are far-left primitivists who think primitive life will be one of peace and few work-hours, then centrist-primitivists who are just anti-social egoists, then I’d say to the degree you understand primitive life is one of indifference for the disabled, etc. And you still desire it, then I’d say you’re on the anti-egalitarian right-wing of politics at least in that one aspect. It is confused by the fact I view anti-industrial society as an irrational political foundation for achieving your desires, but to the extent there are these irrational rabbit holes people can fall down anywhere on the political spectrum, they can act as a worrying kind of wormhole which fast tracks people to diametrically opposite political positions. So how this can happen on the far-left is if you’re struggling with the contradictions of having say a personal trauma which leads you to anti-industrialist politics + far-leftism which isn’t inherently against people finding value in highly technical work. So you might be worried that you could be overthrowing the current government, but will still be socially alienated from a demeaning factory work job, that is just slightly more democratic. And then from that point, find more common cause with anarcho-capitalists for just desiring to hoard what they can and kill anyone who comes onto their property, or fascists who want to hoard all the wealth for white people say. [I used primitivist to mean anyone desiring to regress to before the industrial revolution, but I’ve changed my language to reflect yours to try and avoid getting bogged down in semantics.] Normandie: Indeed there are many, especially on the ‘left’, who believe a mythological version of primitive life. However, there are also many who hold an incorrectly savage view of primitive life. There is evidence of tribes who took care of their disabled members for many years after their disability (citation coming). The idea that primitivism means indifference for the disabled is just not the case. There was also much less disability due to gradual natural selective pressures. Many conditions that were incredibly rare before civilization have widely proliferated in the population. I’ve written more on this in my article, Civilization is Unhealthy. These things can be debated, but primitivism isn’t a hill I’ll die on. I’ll defend the things I believe about it and everyone has different views on it given their value systems. As I said, I am anti-industrialist first and foremost. I don’t think it is useful or practical to retroactively cast on to hunter-gatherers the modern political compass, which is largely predicated upon industrial mass-production. We have ideas about ‘usual’ characteristics of people on the left and the right that many think can be applied to tribes, and this may be intuitive to a degree, but I still don’t think it is accurate to describe tribes who were both largely egalitarian and market-based traders. If I believe in egalitarian communalism, but I believe that life on Earth will be destroyed, or humans domesticated and controlled to such a degree as to make them hardly human anymore, if the industrial system remains, it doesn’t make me a right winger. The choice in the anti-industrialist philosophy is to save life on Earth from annihilation, or to let life on Earth go extinct because disabled people such as those in an iron lung would be unable to survive without the industrial system. If you believe that all life dying is better than some people dying, I can understand and respect that position. In fact, I used to prefer that all people die when I was a committed misanthrope. Nonetheless, I completely believe in taking care of disabled people. If there is a disabled person in my commune, we are taking care of them. This position of wanting the survival of life on Earth and having to make hard choices doesn’t make me a right winger. You may think it is ‘socially conservative’ somehow, but I strongly disagree. As a disclaimer, I’m not a primitivist as a political ideology. I don’t call myself a primitivist. While I do think that humans would have a more secure existence psychologically as hunter gatherers, I don’t believe you can make all of human society primitive. You just can’t rationally control the development of a society like that. No amount of ideology will keep people from growing food if the alternative is to starve. The only way this could happen is if a meteor hit the Earth and all people except the hunter-gatherers in the Amazon and on North Sentinel Island died, which I don’t want. Primarily, I am anti-industrialist, I believe that industrialism will inevitably lead to disaster and possibly the destruction of all complex life forms if allowed to continue. People can do whatever they’d like after collapse comes. I’m not a political activist, in fact political philosophy is something that is not much of a priority right now except for how my commune will function. I don’t see anarcho-primitivism as a ‘rational political foundation’ either, because I don’t think its meant to be one outside of a small group - a tribe. I also don’t think most primitivists are driven to primitivism because of ‘trauma’ other than the lived experience of industrial distress that most everyone experiences to one degree or another. Regarding what you just said: ‘So you might be worried that you could be overthrowing the current government, but will still be socially alienated from a demeaning factory work job, that is just slightly more democratic. And then from that point, find more common cause with anarcho-capitalists for just desiring to hoard what they can and kill anyone who comes onto their property, or fascists who want to hoard all the wealth for white people say.’, I’m not quite sure how you reach that conclusion about primitivists having ‘more in common’ with this or that right-wing group. Firstly, anarcho-capitalists are delusional if they think their system is anarchism because industrial economy has a tendency toward consolidation and centralization for technical development as an inherent characteristic due to selective pressures for competition, so of course its not anarchism, the state is just replaced by the corporation. How anprims have anything meaningfully in common with fascists, I’ve no idea how you’ve reached that conclusion. Ted is explicitly anti-authoritarian and against using the state as a means to destroy the industrial system. 'This is not to be a political revolution, our goal is overthrow not government but the economic and technological basis of the present society'. Theo: Responding to your last point and working backwards, I would say regardless of if someone is against using the state to overthrow advanced technology, I don’t think that makes it any better, it's still authoritarian to stop people from having the choice of accessing advanced medicine through worker-owned industries. With regards to people shifting from left to right after becoming anti-industrialists, I don’t think I’m projecting political identities onto tribespeople who don’t know any other life, I’m specifically talking about people in the here and now changing their political sympathies towards fascism or anarcho-capitalism because they desire to just be hermits in the forest with their white family and exploiting their sons and friends through trade, but just not organizing in any way with factory production lines or punching a clock. From what you’ve just said I perceive your political foundation to still be that of the left, with your desire for egalitarian communalism, but I just reiterate that I think this to be an anti-historical and anti-science position whose effect in the real world would more closely align with right wing people in their indifference for segments of the population simply for who they are by nature. Normandie: Back to what I previously said, I don’t want to control how anyone lives their life. I don’t even believe in a state in my political philosophy, I’m an anarchist. However, I’m not willing to let that principle cause me to sit back and allow the industrial system to destroy life, or all freedoms of life that make it worth living, because it would take away some medicine that is treating mostly conditions that are largely caused by industrialism in the first place.

A leftwing affinity group are moved over to eco-fascist terrorism by the Unabomber Theo: Individualists Tending to the Wild (In Spanish: Individualistas Tendiendo a lo Salvaje, ITS) is a self-defined eco-extremist group that emerged in Mexico in 2011, whose members were originally part of the green & insurrectionary left-anarchist milieus who likely grew up on earth first monkey-wrenching manuals from the 80s. Upon reading the unabomber's manifesto they stopped committing arsons aimed at sabotaging evil companies and instead started to desire to have the wider effect of terrorizing people through fear of injury or death on the simple principle of being against technology and wanting to regress to hunter-gatherer societies: Here are old members of the FAI / CCF in Mexico acknowledging former collaboration: “Although ITS were one of the few clusters with which we did not directly coordinate when undertaking joint actions, we were in solidarity with them, in the same way that some of the comrades that made up our affinity groups obtained monetary resources for them to solve specific difficulties when requested. That has been (and is) the basis of practical co-ordination between the new anarchic insurrectionalism and eco-anarchism.” And here is an answer members of ITS gave in an text interview in 2014 showing they were leftists and not simply post-left-&-right: Individualists tending towards the wild formed at the beginning of 2011, and was motivated by the reasoning acquired during a slow process of getting to know, questioning, and the rejection of all that encompasses leftism and the civilized, and accordingly, employing all the above, we deemed it necessary to carry out the direct attack against the Technoindustrial System. We think that the struggle against this is not only a stance of wanting to abandon Civilization, regressing to Nature, or in refuting the system’s values, without also attacking it. They call themselves nihilists in that they don’t want to be beholden to pursuing any concrete narratives, like the goal of destroying all advanced technological systems, but instead hope to inspire others to a simple psychology of anger and resentment at the conformity they were forced to grow up with. Interestingly Ted in prison has critiqued the sometimes random attacks of ITS and argued to the extent they are organising with others should be working to bring about a primitivist revolution in going after riskier targets like electricity grid stations. But it’s almost as if ITS feel being able to do random attacks is what’s owed to them by being free and that to listen to Ted now would be helping serve his needs as a theorist from prison, to the detriment of their own desires. They are also now firmly on the far-right, quoting from the now banned facebook page of the eco-fascist publication Atassa: All anti-civ thought and fascism have the same founding premise and modus operandi. These are that a large chunk of the human population holds down a selected group that could potentially function successfully if these other groups were not around. The solution is thus to cull the land of those people, either the scapegoat of all societal ills (fascism) or the vast majority of people who could not function without the support of techno-industrial society (anarcho-primitivism / anti-civ green anarchy). Both ideologies can be reluctant or coy about the mehtodology they use or its results ("an ethno-state does not lead directly to genocide", "the destruction of the power grid is not intended to directly kill billions of people"). However, the ethical decision of both is the same: do what needs to be done to allow those who can be free to be free, and damn the consequences. Eco-extremism does not shy away from this. For context here is a communique of who Atassa are from ITS themselves: The northern lands of the American continent are being won over by the tendency that moves away from political humanism and spits mockingly on hyper-moral civilized values. It was obvious that the rabid followers of humanism would protest against the incorrect words and the "atrocious" acts of ITS in Mexico, Argentina, Chile and Brazil. Scared, they would whisper, "I hope ITS doesn't come to the U.S." and that's what happened. ITS hasn't come to the U.S., but (here is the "but") little by little the most emblematic theorists of eco-extremism were arriving, who created publishing projects and put into circulation websites that reproduced the discourse against human progressivism. The first sign we have to support this is the publication of Atassa magazine, the first issue of which was a tremendous blow for the humanist slanderers, demonstrating the arrival of eco-extremism to the U.S. The second issue will be a true earthquake for those same defamers of the tendency. Normandie: Let me first clarify that I am not anti-civ, but I recognize that many people who are in the wider diaspora of groups that are anti-civ commonly flirt with or idolize Kaczynski in some way. These people have either not read Kaczysnki’s magnum opus (ATR), or have and disregard the most important parts of it to instead pursue their own delusions about politics. I had not heard of ITS before this discussion. If we are staying on the topic of Kaczysnki’s philosophy, he has clearly stated (especially in Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How) that anti-tech revolutionaries must avoid working with extreme-environmentalists ,such as ITS, and anarcho-primitivists. The only goal for Kaczysnki is to destroy the technological system, and anyone who has any other priorities (especially political ambitions like fascism) should not be worked with. I am repulsed by fascist and I, along with anyone who takes anti-tech revolutionary activity seriously and practically, avoid working with these people and actively try to keep them out of our circles. It seems that the initial move away from leftism by ITS was reading Industrial Society and Its Future, but that they have moved towards ecofascism in defiance of Kaczysnki’s philosophy. Like I said earlier, any revolutionary concept is going to have people like this who use the banner for evil ends. Kaczysnki is not some religious figure to be followed by those of us who are anti-industrialist, but he has contributed valuable work to anyone hoping to do anything about the terminal dangers of industrialism, and admits that discretion and adaptation is going to be necessary for revolutionaries going forward. Anyone who took hedence to his outlining of what does and doesn’t make a revolutionary movement successful would not work with these people, so it is my opinion that the move to fascism is due primarily to their own poor qualities as people. Addressing this statement, ‘All anti-civ thought and fascism have the same founding premise and modus operandi. These are that a large chunk of the human population holds down a selected group that could potentially function successfully if these other groups were not around. The solution is thus to cull the land of those people, either the scapegoat of all societal ills (fascism) or the vast majority of people who could not function without the support of techno-industrial society (anarcho-primitivism / anti-civ green anarchy)’, Anti-industrialism is not an anti-civ ideology. Of course, people who are anti-civ are inherently against industrialism because you can’t have industrialism without civilization. However, the only goal of the anti-tech movement (as it concerns Kacyznki’s philosophy) is the end of industrialism, and nothing else. Anyone with other goals for the movement is to be absolutely avoided at all costs, as Kaczysnki himself has said. Anti-civ is a political philosophy, anti-industrialism is not. Destroying the industrial system is one concrete goal that does not concern how a society is governed. Anti-civ is a delusion that the trajectory of human society can be rationally controlled, which Kaczysnki dedicates the first chapter of ATR to show that it cannot be. You cannot force all of humanity to not live sedentary lives. Anti-industrialism does not pin the blame of the current state of the world on any group of people. Jacques Ellul spent his masterpiece detailing how the industrial system is an inorganic and encompassing force with one goal, technical development and infection of all aspects, and that humans are a middle-man between the system and its ends (a middleman that will one day not be as technically efficient as an alternative, thus being replaced). Anti-industrialism has nothing to do with groups of people. The excerpt may have a point of anti-civ and fascist commonalities, but like I just detailed, this is very much not the case for those who follow Kaczysnki’s revolutionary philosophy.



4. Kaczynskis’ Ideas Our evolution Theo: I’m sceptical that just because we did something for a long time in our evolution that it means it would provide us the most meaning in life to keep doing it, it may be less stressful in the same way that challenging yourself to read complicated philosophy might be frustrating at times, but I still view passion for technical fields as producing more important happy flourishing for most people, regardless of suffering. Evolution is a process of tinkering, finding whatever new mutated DNA will do the job of solving a problem. Our closest relatives chimpanzees and bonobos both have radically different social structures, which can’t clearly be explained by a long evolution of settling on a rigid psychology which is the most advantageous for each, but instead by theory of mind and how their brains have developed the capabilities to chose to form different social structures to manage social problems specific to their biological capabilities and their environment. So the evolution of our biological capabilities created values, the ability for things to matter to us. But, what values we choose is up to us and it’s mostly going to be a case of grappling with why our parents and neighbours structured the environment in such a way for our development, whether we learn to agree with that choice or develop on their or someone else's ideas to change things for the next generation. Normandie: The position regarding the way we evolved to be fulfilled is not an argument that there ought be a rigid psychology or way of doing things. It is that creatures evolve very gradually over a long period of time. Human beings have been essentially thrust into the industrial age, which is so much different in all aspects of life that it does have an impact on people. While everyone certainly has differences in what they seek in life and the archetypes they become, there are general things which are crucial to human well-being. Some of these are basic, such as regular exercise (the importance of which cannot be overstated), healthy sleep, exposure to nature, a healthy diet, etc. Just with the sedentary lifestyle of the modern man, most people are lacking in a major factor for our psychological health. However, one of the most crucial aspects of fulfillment is nearly totally deprived from us industrial civilians, that being the ability to go through what Kaczysnki called ‘The Power Process’. In short, people need to have goals whose attainment require effort, and they need to have reasonable success in attaining at least some of these goals, and some portion of the population has to have autonomy in the selection and attainment of their goals. Of course most people have goals whose attainment requires effort, but the basic necessities of life are so easily attained by going through the motions to get and work a job, that these serve little to no fulfillment of the power process. The means to secure our physical necessities are so alienated from what we have evolved to do that they leave one empty, even when these are attained, and people have little to no autonomy in these goals. They work the orders of their boss handed down from above. Even freelancers and business owners are beholden to the demands of their economic niche. So, people select surrogate activities to try and emulate the power process, which are ‘artificial’ goals that one sets for themselves in an attempt to emulate the power process. Surrogate activities are not inherently bad, and they do offer some amount of filling for the hole left by the absence of the power process, but the problem is when surrogate activities alone try to completely replace the power process. Some have little to no distressing symptoms of modernity, and this is mostly because there is a segment of the population which adapts easier to these industrial conditions. Industrialized nations have an incredibly high rate of suicide, depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, copious mood disorders and ‘personality disorders’, etc. Within those nations, just being in an urban area doubles the rate of schizophrenia. Some people are better at adapting to the industrial world than others, but for those who aren’t and exhibit natural symptoms of incongruity between the way we evolved to live and the way we live today, the diagnosed get separated, labeled, processed, and dealt with by being pharmacologically neutralized with drugs like antidepressants, which are a chemical lobotomy. On top of that, we are provided with a myriad of distractions to placate us, entertainment media, drugs, consumerism, etc, that many are able to pacify their distress their entire lives without being significantly disrupted by psychological distress in their functions in the industrial economy. I do not claim that technical skills cannot be fun and enjoyable because many of them are. However, given what I just outlined regarding the power process and the fact that technical skills necessitate the techo-industrial system which I believe has inevitable terminal dangers, I don’t think that the fun of some of these technical skills are worth the disastrous fatal effects of industrialism for the ecology of the Earth, human freedom, or human existence, not to mention the overwhelming negative effects of industrialism on people’s mental and physical health.

Jacques Ellul Theo: Except for the not voting and pacifism, I have no issue with Ellul, he was a Christian left-anarchist who desired to create a: “...Proudhonian socialism...by transforming the press, the media, and the economic structures...by means of a federative cooperative approach..." an Anarchist society based on federation and the Mutualist economics of Proudhon. I even agree with his take on technology I think, in that he thinks: The solution is to simply view technique as objects that can be useful to us and recognize it for what it is, just another thing among many others, instead of believing in technique for its own sake or that of society. If we do this we "...destroy the basis for the power technique has over humanity." I would like people to use technology sparingly in their personal life through the concept of minimum viable use and community tool sheds to have a much lower impact on the environment. I don’t think efficiency should be the goal and I think we should advocate eco-centrist philosophy and policies which starts with the foundation of in order to even know where it is ethical to draw a line in the sand on where and what amount of territory can be taken up by human development, we need to look to where environmental processes can and cannot support sentient life and to what degree. Normandie: I think that Ellul’s work, The Technological Society, is an incredibly important work for understanding a lot about the techno-industrial system. However, I disagree with his conclusions about what must be done and find his idea that we can take some parts of industrialism and leave the rest to be naive. This is where Kaczysnki comes in, who has written about why this is not the case in a robust way in Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How.

Can People Choose How Society Is Run When Machines Are Involved? Theo: Kaczynski has a view of history where when society changes, and the side-effects are unknown, we rationalize that we desired those side effects in the first place and planned for them through a desire for efficiency or the pursuit of knowledge, but that we begin to reflect systems of machines, rather than them being simple tools of our own desires. I agree that there can be a kind of manufactured consent situation going on, in the same way a kid can through social pressure be coerced into buying the latest iphone. But I disagree that we need to return to the middle or stone ages levels of technology to solve this problem. I would always want to put time and effort into building assembly lines for life changing items like penicillin and seeing glasses. We don’t need to conceive of society as a network of rational social contracts either, for using technology to make sense. From ‘The Politics of Postanarchism by Saul Newman’: However, can we assume that the possibilities of human freedom lie rooted in the natural order, as a secret waiting to be discovered, as a flower waiting to blossom, to use Bookchin’s metaphor? Can we assume that there is a rational unfolding of possibilities, driven by a certain historical and social logic? This would seem to fall into the trap of essentialism, whereby there is a rational essence or being at the foundation of society whose truth we must perceive. There is an implicit positivism here, in which political and social phenomena are seen as conditioned by natural principles and scientifically observable conditions. Here I think one should reject this view of a social order founded on deep rational principles. In the words of Stirner, ‘The essence of the world, so attractive and splendid, is for him who looks to the bottom of it – emptiness.’ In other words, rather than there being a rational objectivity at the foundation of society, an immanent wholeness embodying the potential for human freedom, there is a certain void or emptiness, one that produces radical contingency and indeterminacy rather than scientific objectivity. This idea has been elaborated by Laclau and Mouffe, who eschew the idea of society as a rationally intelligible totality, and instead see it as a field of antagonisms which function as its discursive limit. In other words, what gives society its definitional limit at the same time subverts it as a coherent, whole identity. Therefore, they argue, ‘Society never manages fully to be society, because everything in it is penetrated by its limits, which prevent it from constituting itself as an objective reality.’ Antagonism should not be thought of here in the sense of the Hobbesian state of nature, as a war of everyman against everyman, but rather as a kind of rupturing or displacement of social identities that prevents the closure of society as a coherent identity. Normandie: Kaczysnki’s views on the development of human societies is that they cannot be rationally controlled, that is that people cannot impose a change on society for the long-term unless it is in line with a pre-existing historical trend, such as the gradual ‘democratization’ of the west. It is not just when machines are involved, but It is my opinion that the primary force driving human society in the modern world is not men or men’s profits. What drives humanity is an encompassing motivation, it is something that is a religion in the hearts of most men today. That is the technological system, technical development in all fields, in all facets, in all aspects of living, at all costs, for whatever end, and with whatever means, simply for the sake of doing it; if it can be done it must be done. Most technological developments appear to have more upsides than downsides in the immediate effects, so they will always be pursued whether or not they will be disastrous later on, which is hardly capable of being predicted. Men are not the shepherds of technology in the modern world, but are shepherded by the technological system. All technical developments are advantageous in natural selection, and are pursued. Industrial economies are a means to pursue, coordinate, plan, and engage in this totality of technical development. The world is a large supersystem composed of many competing subsystems. In the short term, natural selection favors those that recklessly pursue advantages, even if those advantages are destructive in the long term. Those that are prudent for their long-term future are beat out by those that pursue advantages with little to no regard for long-term consequences. Let’s say for example that an anarcho-communist society with an attempt at rational prudence were to form successfully. Movements are always corrupted when they achieve their goals and can offer members of it status or power in some way. The idea that all people can be made to care about this altruistic prudence and not pursue reckless advantages at some point is a fantasy. Some actors at some point will pursue the destructive short term advantages for power, and they will beat out the prudent actors. If a movement is to achieve its goal, it needs to have a clear, concise, and concrete objective that once obtained will be irreversible, and it needs to achieve its goal quickly before corruption sets in. A convoluted vision of society that is easily reversible, such as keeping the ‘good parts’ of the industrial system and not utilizing the rest, is doomed to fail.

Does modern life erode our freedoms? Theo: I campaign for people to have the autonomy to choose their own means in life, I want people to have the option of loads more wildlife habitat than currently exists, to live in if they want to. But I also want people to have the freedom to go to a worker owned business to fulfil their intellectual passions. Normandie: I would absolutely love to spend my life minding my own business on my land with my community and not paying mind to how others live their lives. If I didn’t truly believe that industrialism has inexorable, terminal dangers for the future of humanity and the Earth, then I would just live my days on my homestead. I’m not a revolutionary because I don’t like cities or factories and want to impose my preferences on others. It is because I genuinely believe that if the industrial system continues to its conclusion, my children won’t have a place to live, they will be subjugated and changed beyond the point of any remaining human dignity or they will be extinct, along with the rest of the Earth’s ecology.

Is modern life unfulfilling? Theo: He thinks people are trained to be over-socialized as a form of entertainment in service to technology, so political advocacy is just a surrogate activity, where people are trained to feel guilty for not helping people, to waste their time advocating others become more invested in the collectivist system. I just disagree that its an unfulfilling project or we should do it out of guilt. Being able to reach a point in our social evolution where we can care for the basic needs of everyone to a basic extent is a beautiful and satisfying goal to work towards and to sustain through living those communal relationships.


Has technology increased suffering? Theo: It may have done, but I’m not a utilitarian who only cares about pain vs. pleasure, I think suffering is necessary for self-actualizing, so achieving your goals and feeling a deeper happiness, which the stoics called eudaimonia which just means happy flourishing. As well the foundations for any pleasure at all for disabled people and other innocent victims of disease and lack of basic security that would be denied in any anti-tech revolution which took us backwards. Ted thinks primitive man can handle these issues stoically, but why then cannot modern man do the same with technology in order to reap the benefits of innocent items like penicillin and seeing glasses.


Would industrial society re-emerge? Theo: I’m sceptical of Kaczynskis’ confidence that a new industrial revolution wouldn’t simply re-emerge, especially with people passing down memories and books of all the benefits to modern life. Firstly, the harm to the environment would be much worse than us simply transitioning to renewable energy and rewilding areas as we depopulate as is the trend in advanced countries. Secondly, I would argue the probability that we will achieve a long-lasting, mostly peaceful, technologically advanced, left-anarchist society is far more valuable to me than returning to an either never ending series of warring feudal societies or feudal societies that repeats the industrial revolution and has another series of world wars for resources. Primitive life is more appealing to me personally than feudalism in that I could be born into a fairly egalitarian tribe like the Penan or that I wasn’t but I wouldn’t know any different life or if I had some of the egalitarian ideals I had now, the possibility would be there to strike out on my own and form an egalitarian tribe. But bar convincing everyone to be hunter gatherers, or technological incentives to have fair and democratic communication among societies who trade with each other, you just are going to recreate feudal era societies, where you’d have to be very lucky to escape from conscription and tyrants and environmental destruction could be far worse. Normandie: Even if society were to at some point in the future begin the process of industrialization again, it is not sensible for us to worry about that. We must deal with the problems facing our time just as they will have to deal with the problems facing their time. If society were to industrialize again, it would most likely be some 500 or 1,000 years in the future. There are some people who even believe that it would not be possible to industrialize again because the conditions and resources that allowed for industrialization in the first place are no longer there. I’m not one of these people who think it is impossible, but it would certainly take hundreds of years or more to rebuild the system, both because the development of the system is a long and convoluted process and because of the lack of plentiful natural resources that were consumed in our time. Just because there is a possibility that society industrializes again does not mean we should give up, because the alternative is destruction. The larger the system grows, the more disastrous the effects of its breakdown will be. If we do not bring it to collapse in time, we are facing a technological crisis that entails total ecological destruction. If we carry out a successful revolution in time, then there is at least a chance of humanity, and other complex living organisms, surviving.

What level of violence is justified to achieve this anti-tech revolution? Theo: He thinks accelerating the need to dismantle industrial society is too urgent to wait on non-violence, because the effects of waiting will only be worse. Most people agree that anyone who took it upon themselves to assassinate Hitler a day before the break out of WW2 would be seen as committing an ethical act, no matter who follows, because throwing a wrench into the cult of personality spell built around Hitler would be a significant setback for the fascist state’s grip over the people. And given all the evidence pointing to the inevitability of war, such an act could easily be seen as a necessary preemptive act. Most can sympathize with quick revolutions against dictatorships where the result is a freer society, like the Kurdish uprising in Northern Syria which took power from a regime who had rolled tanks on demonstrators and outlawed teaching of their native language. But, even there, there are key foundations you need to work from, like the probability you won’t just give an excuse for the oppressor committing even worse horrors as was the case with the Rohingya militants who ambushed a police checkpoint, resulting in army & citizen campaign to burn down many villages, plus murder and rape those that couldn’t get away. As well as a responsibility to put down arms after winning political freedoms and a majority are in favor of diplomacy through electoral politics, like in Northern Ireland today. Under representative parliamentary systems, the sentiment of most is that even if it could be argued that a war of terror against the ruling class was the easiest route to produce a better society, that it would still be ethically wrong to be the person who takes another’s life just because it’s the easiest way. Since regardless of manufactured consent or anything else you still could have worked to build a coalition to overcome those obstacles and change the system slowly from within. And I agree, it would be an act of self-harm to treat life with such disregard when you could have been that same deluded person shrouded in the justificatory trappings of society treating your behavior normally. I don’t think the way we win today is treating a cold bureaucratic system with equally cold disregard in whose life we had the resources to be able to intimidate this week. Time on earth is the greatest gift people have, to make mistakes and learn from them. Still some are tempted into violent direct action as a reaction to what they see as the state’s terrorism in the form of drone strikes or torture at Guantanamo bay, Vietnam war’s white phosphorous, or in my country undercover cops sleeping with and having kids with protesters they’re investigating. As a socialist, I do think we can hypothesize the unrealistic case of 99% of society desiring a referendum on a shift from parliamentary representative system to a federated spokes council system and the MP's dragging their feet, the same way both parties gerrymander the boundaries to make it easier to win despite it being the one issue most everyone agrees is bad, and people needing to storm the halls of power to force a vote to happen. More likely though, an opportunity for revolution might arise from such a confluence of events as climate refugees and worker gains forcing the state and corporations into trying to crack down on freedoms in order to preserve their power and enough people resisting that move, who are then able take power and usher in radical policy change, with either the army deciding to stand down or splitting into factions.

Should we use domestic animals in a peaceful world? This argument is not going to win me any favours with the majority of people, but I’m curious to get your response, because as a primitivist you’re critical of how we are domesticated as people against our interests, I’m actually against breeding domesticated animals like chickens and mules because I think we should be freeing up space for wild animals like the jungle fowl, which are better able to express their capabilities in the wild than say chickens which we have bred to have numerous health problems like being egg bound and too much meat so they can break their legs more easily carrying the weight. I guess you see it as necessary to practice these things for surviving the collapse, which I also don’t see as likely, but I understand that that would be justified if true. What about in a world where everyone was vegan and there was no war, where everyone grew food forests, so even if you desired to move, you could always help someone else with their food forest?


Further Reading General Resources The Philosophy of the Unabomber (15 min philosophy breakdown video) The Unabomber: The Devastating Use of a Brilliant Mind (20 min biography) A brother lost, a brotherhood found (article) From the Unabomber to the Incels: Angry Young Men on Campus - Eileen Pollack Considers Their Rage and Our Responsibility (article) Children of Ted Two decades after his last deadly act of ecoterrorism, the Unabomber has become an unlikely prophet to a new generation of acolytes. By John H. Richardson (article) Running to Do Evil (podcast with recorded snippets of Kaczynski) Unabomber - In His Own Words (2 h 55 min documentary series with recorded snippets of Kaczynski) Manhunt (true-crime drama) Rational Wiki Profile (wiki article) Unabomber: the secret life of Ted Kaczynski (book biography by his neighbour) Every Last Tie: The Story of the Unabomber and His Family (book biography by his brother) Mindhunter: Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit (book biography by the FBI profiler who caught him) Hunting the Unabomber: The FBI, Ted Kaczynski, and the Capture of America’s Most Notorious Domestic Terrorist (a new book biography on the case) Effect on the left-wing The Left-Overs: How Fascists Court the Post-Left (30 min read time - history article) The Politics of Attack: Communiqués and Insurrectionary Violence (well researched book which covers groups inspired by the Unabomber) AFed statement on kneecapping of nuclear executive by Informal Anarchist Federation by The Anarchist Federation (article) Anarcho-Nihilism Review || The Ideology of Insurrection (15 min comedy/educational video) Individualists Tending to the Wild (In Spanish: Individualistas Tendiendo a lo Salvaje, ITS) (ex-leftist, eco-fascist terror group inspired by the Unabomber) There’s Nothing Anarchist about Eco-Fascism: A Condemnation of ITS Not Our Comrades: ITS Attacks on Anarchists “Eco-extremism and the indiscriminate attack – The Church of ITS Mexico” by L (UK) (critique of wild reaction an eco-fascist group inspired by the Unabomber) Of Indiscriminate Attacks & Wild Reactions An Anti-civ Anarchist Engages with ITS and Atassa, Their Defenders and Their False Critics by Edelweiss Pirates - Text & PDF Against the World-Builders: Eco-extremists respond to critics (An ex-leftist defends eco-fascism) Comments on the communiques from Individualists Tending toward the Wild — by Último Reducto 20 pp. Apostles and Heretics by John Jacobi (Eco-fascist journal) Ash & Ruin - Subversive Nihilist Periodical (ex-leftist eco-fascist zine) The New Wave of Eco-Terrorism and Nihilist Militancy by Popular Front (podcast) Communiques of ITS — 132 pp. Interview with Individualists Tending toward the Wild — 9 pp. Effect on the right-wing Inside the Unabomber's odd and furious online revival plus pictures left out of the editors edition & response by the twitter eco-fascists called Who are the pines? - Wired article Eco-Fascist ‘Pine Tree Party’ Growing as a Violent Extremism Threat - Terrorist watchdog site The Dark Side of Environmentalism (Eco-fascism) (8 min video) Ted Kaczynskis' Writing Theory Industrial Society and Its Future - 120 pp. (manifesto) Hit where it hurts — 17 pp. (call to violence written from prison) Technological Slavery (book of essays) Afterthoughts to Technological Slavery - 14 pp. Why the Technological System Will Destroy Itself (essay) Anti-Tech Revolution: Why and How (an updated version of the manifesto) Key Life Events How I Blew Up Harold Snilly Letter to a Turkish anarchist — 27 pp. An Interview with Ted Kaczynski — 16 pp. The Communiques of Freedom Club — 34 pp. Truth & Lies - Part 1 & Part 2 (Book written just after his sentencing, never published in print, just photocopied online) Unabomber’s letters show he hasn’t changed much behind bars (article) Ted Kaczynski’s Comments on Timothy McVeigh — 7 pp. Fiction Ship of Fools — 8 pp. Misc. Letters Ted Kaczynski’s Interview with the John Jay Sentinel — 10 pp. Ted Kaczynski Letter to an Anonymous German — 17 pp. Ted Kaczynski Letter to A.O. — 5 pp. Ted Kaczynski letter to M.K. — 9 pp. Ted Kaczynski on Individualists Tending Toward Savagery (ITS) — 4 pp. Ted Kaczynski’s Letter to the Saturday Evening Review (1970) — 3 pp. Answer to Some Comments Made in Green Anarchist — 9 pp. Misc. Theory The Littering Ape — Apios Tuberosa (pseud. Ted Kaczynski) 3 pp. Marcos Loves Modernization — 4 pp. Morality and Revolution — 16 pp. Progress versus Liberty — 21 pp. The System’s Neatest Trick — 21 pp. When Non-Violence is Suicide — 5 pp.