Where do you get your fruit and vegetables – a supermarket, a greengrocer... or the wild? For our distant ancestors, foraging for wild food was vital for survival, while these days we tend to rely on farmed food, bought in shops. Pippa and Beth discuss foraging and teach you some new vocabulary.Find a full transcript, worksheet and interactive quiz for this episode at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/6-minute-english_2025/ep-251218The Reading Room - improve your reading skills here: ✔️https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/features/the_reading_roomSUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER: ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/newslettersFIND BBC LEARNING ENGLISH HERE: Visit our website ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish Follow us ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/followusLIKE PODCASTS? Try some of our other popular podcasts including: ✔️ Learning English Grammar ✔️ Learning English from the News ✔️ Learning English for WorkThey're all available by searching in your podcast app.
Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
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Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
Chapter 2: What is foraging and why is it important?
I'm Pippa. And I'm Beth.
Foraging is the activity of walking in the countryside looking for plants you can eat that grow in the wild. That's anything from blackberries and chestnuts to mushrooms and wild garlic. It's something humans have always done and recently it's become fashionable among groups of young people. Pippa, have you ever been foraging?
Chapter 3: What are the rules for safe foraging?
Yes, we used to go and pick blackberries when I was younger, but I haven't really done it as an adult. And I would be a bit nervous to look for mushrooms or things like that. What about you? I'm exactly the same. If I see a blackberry on a bush, I will eat it. But mushrooms, no, too scary.
So in this episode, we'll meet two young women from different countries who are passionate about foraging wild food. They're both self-taught, having learned to forage by studying the natural world around them. And it's important to say that they only eat what they can identify with 100% certainty, sticking to the rule, if in doubt, leave it out.
We'll also be learning some useful new words and phrases, all of which you'll find on our website bbclearningenglish.com. But before that, I have a question for you, Pippa. As mentioned, when foraging, you must know for certain what is safe to eat. Something definitely not safe to eat is the mushroom death cap.
As the name suggests, it's one of the world's deadliest mushrooms and it's common across the British Isles. But what colour is it? Are death cap mushrooms A, brown, B, white or C, red?
I'm going to say if it's dangerous, maybe it's red.
OK, well, we'll find out later in the programme. First, let's meet Roshana Gray, a wild food forager living in Cape Point, South Africa. Roshana learned how to forage from her mother-in-law, as she explains here to BBC World Service programme, The Conversation.
So she is a horticulturist. She has a deep knowledge of plants. And so I would be kind of scanning the landscape and learning about these new plants or new to me. and wondering if you could eat them. Something that's incredibly important in foraging is to know 110% if you can eat it. positive identification of the plant and so she was my plant person.
Roshana's mother-in-law is a horticulturalist, a person who studies or grows plants such as flowers, fruits and vegetables. She has a deep knowledge of the wild plants growing in nature. A deep knowledge means a thorough understanding of a subject gained from experience and study, not just knowing the basic facts.
One skill foragers need is scanning the landscape. Scanning means searching a wide area with your eyes to find some particular thing. In this case, edible plants and herbs.
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Chapter 4: Who are the young foragers featured in this episode?
Here the idiom 110% means Roshana is completely sure, she has no doubt. And that's important as the consequences of eating poisonous plants are serious, sickness or even death.
Our second female forager, Emily Smith, moved to rural Japan to work on a project cataloguing and collecting wild mushrooms. With around 5,000 varieties, 300 of which are edible, mushrooms are an important part of traditional Japanese cooking. But with names like death cap and a reputation for being poisonous, mushrooms are what many wild foragers worry about the most.
Emily discussed these worries with BBC World Service programme The Conversation.
That stigma is a bit misplaced, I think, because plants can be just as dangerous, if not more dangerous than mushrooms. And I think that mushrooms have been much maligned. I mean, you've got to exercise caution, as Roshana said, in anything that you pick. You need to know what it is before you consume it. If in doubt, throw it out is a very good phrase to say.
Emily thinks there's a stigma around mushrooms. A stigma is a negative belief about something which is not necessarily true or fair. In fact, many plants are just as poisonous as mushrooms.
The main thing is to exercise caution, to act with care and attention so as to avoid possible dangers.
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Chapter 5: What challenges do foragers face when identifying plants?
In other words, to be careful.
And the best way of doing that is learning the difference between what's safe to eat and what's not. Speaking of which, what was the answer to your question, Beth?
Ah, I asked you, what colour are death cap mushrooms? You said red, which I also thought was the answer, but actually they are white. Right, it's time to recap the vocabulary we've learnt about foraging, starting with horticulturalist, a person who studies or grows plants.
If you have a deep knowledge of a subject, you have a thorough understanding of it gained from experience and study.
Scanning involves searching a wide area with your eyes to find some particular thing.
If you're 110% sure about something, you're absolutely certain you have no doubt. A stigma is an unfair negative belief about something.
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Chapter 6: What vocabulary should you know about foraging?
And finally, to exercise caution is a more formal way of saying to be careful, something you should definitely remember if you go wild foraging yourself. Once again, our six minutes are up. If you enjoyed this episode, you'll find a quiz and worksheet to practice the vocabulary on our website, bbclearningenglish.com. See you again soon. Bye for now.
Chapter 7: How do mushrooms compare to plants in terms of safety?
Goodbye.