 |
Carpenter Ant pupae under a log (note
how the photographer's excitement at
the
prospect of a good meal produces a
slightly shaky image) |
As a kid I read Euell Gibbons' articles
in National Geographic and dreamed of living off the land; problem
was I was an extremely picky eater. Though that's no longer the
case, I haven't yet learned my wild plants. Mushrooms and insects,
yep.
And though it's true that Native
American groups west of the Mississippi included more insects in
their diets than those easterly of that river, one can still go
foraging/hunting for insects in, for example, my home state of Rhode
Island.
When I go out, I look for ant pupae
- mostly Carpenter Ants; Katydids and other orthopterans; and Sow
Bugs (even though they are technically not insects, but terrestrial
isopods).
There are undoubtedly many other
edible insects in the northeast, but while I hope and intend to
expand my knowledge of what's edible in the insect world, I'm obliged
to accept both common sense and the cautions of the experts, namely,
"if you don't know - meaning, if you don't have it on the word
of an authority on the subject that a given insect species is edible,
or if you are not sure of the identification of something that you've
caught - don't eat it!! |