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Manandhar's plants and people of Nepal have a couple of species listed as eaten for food. R. acuminatum and R. australe is down as pickled before eating where as R. nobile can be eaten fresh. R. australe and R. nobile also down as having medicinal uses like smoking dried leaves to relieve sinus problems. Each to their own.
......... where the wild species of Rheum grew in Asia, it was wild foraged as a vegetable not as a "fruit" as it's now considered, wrongly..
Winter time is ideal to do some reading and also read the things you've missed in the busy season .What a nice report , thanks for sharing this Alan . And that Corydalis is a fantastic plant !
Fantastic report and pictures Alan you must be used to the rain 9it is the same in Forfar busy to tidy up the garden for winter love the Meconopsis pictures, cheers Ian the Christie kind
Alan - Great to follow this expedition.Is there a chance we will get to see the Rhododendron lepidotum? Is it not the highest altitude rhodo, but not necassarily so very hardy?johnw
Alan - Thanks for the pictures, they were well worth the wait. Marvelous colour. That's quite an increible altitudinal range, the lower elevations are a surprise. I do find it hard to imagine a small-leafed lepidote growing in oak woods though, were those woods open to plenty of sunlight?johnw - -11c & brilliant sunshine