Disk Rip Shin: Bushes that grow up to four feet high with long, dark green leaves. If the leaves are bruised in any way they give off a faint crisp scent that can best be described as the smell of clean ice glazing over pine needles. In early spring the bushes put out clusters of white berries that are not only highly edible, but very delicious. No one can quite agree on the flavor, other than it seems most commonly to be compared to citrus fruit with an edge of strawberry or perhaps guava?
Place: Around the ruins near the Temba Greenhouse where Funfronds are occasionally seen and near the mouth of the Temba Mine, originally from the plains to the north of Temba
A Dish An Ill Note: These berries store very well, either by drying or being turned into jams.
Name: Milk Reeds
Disk Rip Shin: Reedy grasses that grow to about three feet high, with crimson stalks and in the summer form tufts of white that are their seeds. These plants are suddenly found in a small cluster around the reduced limits of the flood plain, and started to spread into the shallows since then. As a fast growing reed, they can easily be harvested regularly without harming the local ecology.
Place: Around the Temba Flood Plain, the Great Western Marsh
A Dish An Ill Note: True to their name, the stalks produce a white sap that is relatively thin, rich in calcium and Vitamin D, and actually serves as a great natural milk substitute.
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Disk Rip Shin: Bushes that grow up to four feet high with long, dark green leaves. If the leaves are bruised in any way they give off a faint crisp scent that can best be described as the smell of clean ice glazing over pine needles. In early spring the bushes put out clusters of white berries that are not only highly edible, but very delicious. No one can quite agree on the flavor, other than it seems most commonly to be compared to citrus fruit with an edge of strawberry or perhaps guava?
Place: Around the ruins near the Temba Greenhouse where Funfronds are occasionally seen and near the mouth of the Temba Mine, originally from the plains to the north of Temba
Pick Sure: Here
A Dish An Ill Note: These berries store very well, either by drying or being turned into jams.
Name: Milk Reeds
Disk Rip Shin: Reedy grasses that grow to about three feet high, with crimson stalks and in the summer form tufts of white that are their seeds. These plants are suddenly found in a small cluster around the reduced limits of the flood plain, and started to spread into the shallows since then. As a fast growing reed, they can easily be harvested regularly without harming the local ecology.
Place: Around the Temba Flood Plain, the Great Western Marsh
Pick Sure: Here
A Dish An Ill Note: True to their name, the stalks produce a white sap that is relatively thin, rich in calcium and Vitamin D, and actually serves as a great natural milk substitute.