The land was never empty. It was always speaking.
Foraging is often mistaken for a simple act: finding edible plants and bringing them home. But true foraging is not just gathering. It is learning how to read a landscape, recognize living patterns, and participate in an ecosystem without diminishing it.
In Wild Harvest: Foraging and Native Flora of North America, Kody Loper offers a practical and respectful guide to reconnecting with the natural world through native plants, seasonal awareness, and ethical harvest. Moving beyond basic identification, this book introduces the Wild Harvest Method: a grounded approach built on Recognition, Relationship, Respect, Responsibility, and Return.
Whether you are stepping into your own backyard, walking a woodland edge, or learning to notice the plants growing along familiar paths, Wild Harvest teaches you to see the landscape not as scenery, but as a living community.
Inside, you will discover:
The Forager’s Foundation: essential tools, safety practices, and the ethics of honorable harvesting.
Plant Profiles: detailed guidance on edible, medicinal, and useful plants, including dandelion, yarrow, elderberry, wild pawpaw, and many others.
Critical Safety Protocols: clear warnings about toxic look-alikes and the importance of harvesting only with certainty.
Seasonal & Habitat Guides: what to gather in spring, summer, and autumn, and how to read meadows, wetlands, forests, and edges.
Application & Stewardship: recipes, basic plant preparations, and strategies for building a backyard native plant garden.
Wild Harvest is for beginners, educators, gardeners, naturalists, and anyone who wants to build a slower, safer, and more respectful relationship with the plants around them.









