Description: "Foraging with Kids is an engaging, practical book for adults and children to work through together to build knowledge and understanding of the natural world through exploration and play. The projects are based around 52 easy-to-identify plants found worldwide, each one illustrated with a beautiful hand drawing for easy identification that is perfect for coloring in at home. Children and adults will be amazed by the diverse uses for their finds; from making soap from conkers to stopping minor cuts from bleeding with hedge woundwort. This is the ideal companion for anyone wanting to unlock nature's larder and teach their children about the glorious abundance of the world around them."--Back cover.
Review Quotes: "The gathering of wild food puts you in a good place: a meditative state where you're just a person chewing on a leaf, and the future is in the future and the past is in the past"
-Tom Cox, The Guardian
-Sally Raikes, The Financial Times "Adele ... challenges us to leave behind our shrink-wrapped preconceptions about the right sorts of food ... and take stock of what grows wild around us"
-Catalina Stogdan, The Telegraph "Calling the local landscape a "spice rack" with spicy, sweet and savoury plants there for the picking, Nozedar doesn't think twice about sliding down a river bank to grab wild growing dandelions and more exotic fare."
-David Latt, The Huffington Post "This gorgeous book will get youngsters outside and advise on the best edible plants to gather and how to make pies and relishes once you have brought your findings home"
-The Sun "This book takes foraging to a new, and more fun, level. Illustrated with pen and ink drawings and written in an easy-to-read tone, it encourages children to look more closely at both common and less well-known edibles in the natural world and suggests imaginative ways to use them."
-Women's Institute Magazine "Foraging with Kids by Adele Nozedar, with superbly clear illustrations by Lizzie Harper, is a book every grandparent should keep in their coat pocket."
- Mat Coward, The Morning Star