I would have never thought of eating nettlesIt's common nettle -- Urtica dioica.
It's a very useful plant for both humans and rabbits, but for the rabbits it must be either well wilted or dried so that they don't get stung. It has uses as a human food and medicinal plant. Nettle soup, nettle tea and other dishes can be made from it.
Just to the right in the photo is another great rabbit food plant. It's the one with the rounded leaves with scallops. It is either round-leaf mallow (Malva rotundifolia) or perhaps common mallow (Malva neglecta). There are something like 30 species of mallow -- wonderful plants for rabbits.
Many of the invasive European weeds arrived in North America as pot herbs -- greens that could be used for food. They also tend to be plants that the European rabbit, from which our domestic rabbits are descended, have been eating since the last Ice Age. We call them weeds, but they have a great deal of value -- if you know how to use them.I would have never thought of eating nettles
I've toyed with the idea of proogating them into my garden scheme. I never seem to get out for them when they have gone to seed though. Yesterday I put out seed for bishop weed (Aegopodium podagraria) and wintercress (Barbarea vulgaris). I hope to get rugosa roses established this year. While not edible for human or rabbit, I missed getting dogbane in again last year.I love the fact you guys think of these as a rarity when I spend the majority of my weeding time fighting the damn things back!
The English make nettle wine out of them as well because they're English and wouldn't know a decent bottle of wine if it smacked them in the back of the head.
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