2
2.0
Nov 6, 2024
11/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 2
favorite 0
quote 0
which is greens that apparently the oswego indians used. they were wild greens of some kind, and they used them as sort of a supplement. in the early spring, there was nothing else to eat. man, people would dig up the roots of dandelions, they would consume them, and i think it is something similar to oswego tea. the point you make is that the native people had a great wealth of knowledge, and when we opened our eyes and listened with our ears, we could learn a great deal from them. oswego i.t. yes, ma'am? >> the lemonade, i have tried that, i have made it before. >> and? >> it is pretty weak compared to what we have, but it is okay. >> and you are talking about the staghorn sumac with the bright red? >> there is another very similar that is poisonous, but the usual one around here is [ inaudible ]. >> is very important for the migrating birds to have it on your property, if you could please just leave some of it up. in the starting season for wildlife, which is february, march, into april, until things begin to grow again, sumac berries ar
which is greens that apparently the oswego indians used. they were wild greens of some kind, and they used them as sort of a supplement. in the early spring, there was nothing else to eat. man, people would dig up the roots of dandelions, they would consume them, and i think it is something similar to oswego tea. the point you make is that the native people had a great wealth of knowledge, and when we opened our eyes and listened with our ears, we could learn a great deal from them. oswego i.t....
0
0.0
Nov 28, 2024
11/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
there's also something called oswego bitters. does anybody know about that, which is greens that apparently the oswego indians use them. not sure what kinds of they were wild greens of some kind and they use them as sort of a supplement in the early spring. there's nothing else to eat. i mean, people would dig the roots of dandelions, they would consume them. and i think it's something similar with as we go to the point you make is that the native peoples had a great wealth of knowledge, a great wealth of knowledge. and when opened our eyes and listened with our ears, we could learn a great deal from them. oswego, too. yes, man another thing to drink. we saw that the sumac, the lemonade rye type bar. i've tried that i've made it before and it's it's pretty weak you know, pretty weak of what we have. it's, you know. okay. okay. and you're talking about the staghorn sumac with a bright red. yes. because there are there is another that's very similar. that's poisonous. so, yes, but yeah. so usual run around here is the steak for big
there's also something called oswego bitters. does anybody know about that, which is greens that apparently the oswego indians use them. not sure what kinds of they were wild greens of some kind and they use them as sort of a supplement in the early spring. there's nothing else to eat. i mean, people would dig the roots of dandelions, they would consume them. and i think it's something similar with as we go to the point you make is that the native peoples had a great wealth of knowledge, a...
14
14
Nov 6, 2024
11/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
oswego bitters, greens that apparently the oswego indians use period. they used them as a supplement. in the early spring, man. people would dig up the roots of dandelions. the point that you make is that the native people had a great wealth of knowledge, and when we opened our eyes and listened with our ears we could learn a great deal from them. oswego tea. >> the lemonade type. i have tried that and made it before. >> and? >> it is pretty weak compared to what we have. it is okay. >> you are talking about the bright red. >> yes. there is another one that is similar that is poisonous. >> it is very important for the migrating birds. in the starving season for wildlife, february and march and into parliament when things grow again the berries are one of want few things that are out there. anyway good point. i guess we are done. thank you so much for your attention. i think kathleen gave us a whole new perspective on the revolutionary war. it's a wonderful, wonderful. our next program is going >> thank you. >> the revolutionary war. it is wonderful. the
oswego bitters, greens that apparently the oswego indians use period. they used them as a supplement. in the early spring, man. people would dig up the roots of dandelions. the point that you make is that the native people had a great wealth of knowledge, and when we opened our eyes and listened with our ears we could learn a great deal from them. oswego tea. >> the lemonade type. i have tried that and made it before. >> and? >> it is pretty weak compared to what we have. it...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
oswego, both humans have relied more and more on them and being able to go on to legs freed up, i'll have to dominate an entire planet. how do we use our hands today? it's just cooking and cleaning. when you gave things to people 40, i get dressed with my hands. i brush with these. i do a lot of stuff with my head. non stop scrolling on, social media keeps our hands quite busy in the modern well. but what did they look like? millions of years ago. this is lucy story. she left around 3200000 years ago . let's look at how her tiny hands, my tough shape, the evolution of humanity. lots of cities all her rowing, lucy, take center stage. scientists of all over the world have come to this german city to study how to find out how the sheet, how species, who anthropologists have named australia put the coast of parenthesis lift died. a may be health pipes the evolution of the road that led to us smoking humans. so who was lucy really 50 years ago? american anthropologists don't know. johansen, history stumbled upon her bones poking out of the ground, the a new kind of human ancestral one tha
oswego, both humans have relied more and more on them and being able to go on to legs freed up, i'll have to dominate an entire planet. how do we use our hands today? it's just cooking and cleaning. when you gave things to people 40, i get dressed with my hands. i brush with these. i do a lot of stuff with my head. non stop scrolling on, social media keeps our hands quite busy in the modern well. but what did they look like? millions of years ago. this is lucy story. she left around 3200000...
0
0.0
Nov 26, 2024
11/24
by
KNTV
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
this is going to create a long-duration lake-effect snow event from cleveland to buffalo, oswego to newitterly cold on friday. saturday, a winter chill continuing, that cold air. warmer and sunnier down through the south. sunday, lake-effect snow. again, the airports like detroit could have some problems. boston is not bad. salt lake city, san francisco all looking good. if you are going to be driving on sunday, lake-effect snow is going to cause big problems seeing some rain still moving across parts of the bay area from san francisco over toward the east bay, but eventually that's going to be clearing out. we will say cloudy with highs near 60 degrees, and it's only a touch warmer tomorrow, but that's after a cold start and we are going to see more cold mornings and mild afternoons. and this is the last rain chance we have for quite a while. and it looks >> especially if you want to be at an event with your in-laws, you've got to go train. >> my mother is watching. she is thanking you for that. >> you forgot your password on amtrak. >> i did forget my password. >>> "wicked" smashing e
this is going to create a long-duration lake-effect snow event from cleveland to buffalo, oswego to newitterly cold on friday. saturday, a winter chill continuing, that cold air. warmer and sunnier down through the south. sunday, lake-effect snow. again, the airports like detroit could have some problems. boston is not bad. salt lake city, san francisco all looking good. if you are going to be driving on sunday, lake-effect snow is going to cause big problems seeing some rain still moving...