Where The Wild Things Are In The Suburbs
Reader's Digest US|May 2017

When we forage on the edges of our town’s sprawl, my family discovers not only incredible edibles but also timeless joy.

Elizabeth Bastos
Where The Wild Things Are In The Suburbs

I LIVE in a landscape of strip malls. In these increasingly ever present and very American places, it’s challenging to feel connected to the land.

I wanted dirt for my children. Soil. Connection. Madre Tierra. Ecology. 

I’m not crunchy. I don’t wear a nut bag around my neck; I don’t wear hemp shoes. I’m a classic Bobbi-Brown-lip-gloss- and cardigan-wearing suburban mom.

But I grew up spending summers at my grandparents’ farm, on the eastern shore of Maryland. I used to pick wild blackberries, catch a dinner of blue crabs, and run between the rows of the tall corn plants. I knew what wild garlic looked like; when the figs on the fig trees were ready to eat, I ate them. I delicately picked flowers from the honeysuckle vine and sucked the nectar out. I’ve taught my kids to do the same. “It’s so sweet, Mom,” they tell me.

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