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Use this lightweight, flexible and colorful field guide to
find common and delicious edible plants in the wilds of
the United States. That's right, I'm talking about the
field guide represented by the gorgeous photo on the left
(smaller than actual size) of an edible aquatic plant.
I'll tell you the name of the plant later on. Use the
field guide also to identify common poisonous plants.
Actually you can choose between two guides:
- EDIBLE AND POISONOUS PLANTS of the Eastern States,
- EDIBLE AND POISONOUS PLANTS of the Western States.
Or choose both. Each of these field guides is made up of
fifty-two cards with a full color photo of a common edible
or poisonous plant on the front and its description on the back.
By the way, if you order today, you will receive the 27-page bear safety report entitled
Backcountry Bears: Rules of Encounter absolutely free.
Why lug a heavy book into the wilderness when you can take
a very light set of cards with full-color photos and
descriptions of 52 of the most common edible and poisonous
wild plants of the eastern or western United States? The
dimensions of the cards are the same as playing cards. So,
you can see that they're really light.
Why, you can make the field guide even lighter
by cutting down the number of cards that you take from the
set of 52. The useful flexibility of this field guide for
edible and poisonous plants is the ability to take from 1 to
52 cards with you to the wilderness to identify common
wild plants.
Identify Wild Plants:
The beautiful photo on the front of a card and the information
printed on the back is all you need to identify a wild plant.
The information on the back of the card icludes
a description, the habitat and some uses of the plant.
Isn't that cool? Just think of it. Cards that will fit in a
shirt pocket with clear and beautiful pictures to help you
identify specific plants in the wilderness. That's what these
cards are all about. They're made to help you identify plants
where they grow.
That's right you take the card to the wilderness, find
the habitat where this plant is likely to be found and look
for the plant. When you think you've found it, you compare
it carefully to the picture and the description on the back
of the card for positive identification.
Now, I promised to tell you what plant is in the photo. I'll do
that at the top of the next page.
Click here for the next page. >>>
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