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Plants Always Win

Plants Always Win

Von: Sean Patchett and Erin Alladin
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A podcast where two Ontario gardeners dive down plant-fact rabbit-holes, answer audience questions, interview intriguing guests, and compete to bring you the most interesting stories and information. We care about ecologically sound gardening, strong human communities, and up-to-date science.Copyright 2025 Plants Always Win Wissenschaft
  • Ep. 41 Thoughtful Foraging with Gabrielle Cerberville
    Dec 19 2025

    If you’re looking to build a relationship with the land that feeds you, you can start by embracing the wisdom of the Internet’s Mushroom Auntie.

    Gabrielle Cerberville, a.k.a. your new Mushroom Auntie, a.k.a. The Chaotic Forager, has spent her academic life collecting degrees in music. If you catch her in the forest, however, she’s more likely to be collecting mushrooms and plants for cooking and preservation. She’s known online as a mycologist and foraging educator, and—more recently—as the author of the book Gathered: On Foraging, Feasting, and the Seasonal Life – An Illustrated Adventure in Wild Food, Self-Discovery, and Honoring Earth. Part memoir, part field guide, part cook book, and part guided nature meditation, Gathered is 100% an invitation to connect more deeply and authentically with the earth. This week, Gabrielle joins Erin and Sean to discuss its writing, the deeply collaborative process of its editing and fact-checking, and the interconnectedness of nature, food, politics, and community.

    Find Gabrielle online at:

    ChaoticForager.com

    Instagram: www.instagram.com/chaoticforager

    TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@chaoticforager

    YouTube: www.youtube.com/channel/UC0LqNI92KujRLCj-247ve3w

    Facebook: www.facebook.com/chaoticforager

    Purchase a copy of Gathered: www.harpercollins.com/products/gathered-gabrielle-cerberville?variant=43429934661666

    Comments? Feedback? Want your garden question to be featured in a future Q&A segment?

    Email us, reach out over social media, or get Q&A priority by supporting us on Patreon.

    Discord: https://discord.gg/K6wF9dY4Ja
    Bluesky: @plantsalwayswin.com
    TikTok: @plantsalwayswinpodcast
    YouTube: @plantsalwayswinpodcast
    Website: www.plantsalwayswin.com

    Citations

    Can you forage on Crown land in Canada?

    Using wood from Crown land for personal use. (2025, May 26). ontario.ca. https://www.ontario.ca/page/using-wood-crown-land-personal-use

    Credits

    Website Design and Illustration by Sophia Alladin

    Intro and Outro Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/soundroll/when-my-ukulele-plays

    License code: GWOIMMBAS15FG6PH

    Timestamps

    00:14 Introduction
    01:10 Gabrielle Cerberville, Your Internet Mushroom Auntie
    03:20 The Chaotic Forager and ADHD
    05:16 The Myth of Being a Self-Taught Forager
    08:29 Community Sufficiency, Not Self-Sufficiency
    11:55 Gabrielle’s Music Education
    14:35 Marrying Music and Foraging: The Deep Ecology Project
    19:01 How Gabrielle Develops Recipes with Foraged Foods
    21:40 Foraging and Seasonality
    23:30 The Honourable Harvest
    26:37 Building a Relationship with the Land
    31:04 Foraging on Public Land (Food Is Political)
    40:48 The Process Behind Gathered
    48:51 Gabrielle’s Shout-Outs
    53:45 Outro and Contact Us

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    56 Min.
  • Ep. 40 Nut Trees and Connection with Elspeth Hay
    Dec 2 2025

    Feeding humanity doesn’t need to come at the Earth’s expense. Elspeth Hay is here to talk nut trees, ecosystems, and humans as keystone species.

    In 2019, Elspeth was a local food writer who felt despondent about humans’ need to tear up nature in order to feed ourselves. When she discovered that acorns are edible—that they had, in fact, once been a central pillar of an abundant North American food system—she was electrified. This week she joins Erin to talk about the book that resulted from her all-consuming research into that subject, Feed Us with Trees: Nut Trees and the Future of Food.

    If you have ever felt like human beings are rootless and adrift without our own habitat or wild food that can sustain us, this conversation will open your eyes and seize your heart. Erin and Elspeth discuss the oak savannas and chestnut trees that, managed by Indigenous peoples’ understanding of succession ecology, once fed the human and more-than-human life of a continent. They look at the still-living food culture of chestnuts in Switzerland, grieve over the politics that deliberately erased abundance at home, and embrace hope at the re-emergence of traditional land management practices in agroforestry and restoration agriculture.

    Join us in re-discovering our habitat and home. Who knows—maybe acorns will change your life, too.

    Find Elspeth Hay Online

    Website: https://elspethhay.com/
    Instagram: @elspethhay
    The Local Food Report: https://www.capeandislands.org/podcast/the-local-food-report
    Feed Us with Trees: https://newsociety.com/book/feed-us-with-trees/?aff=65

    Comments? Feedback? Want your garden question to be featured in a future Q&A segment?

    Email us, reach out over social media, or get Q&A priority by supporting us on Patreon.

    Discord: https://discord.gg/K6wF9dY4Ja
    Bluesky: @plantsalwayswin.com
    TikTok: @plantsalwayswinpodcast
    YouTube: @plantsalwayswinpodcast
    Website: www.plantsalwayswin.com

    Credits
    Website Design and Illustration by Sophia Alladin

    Intro and Outro Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/soundroll/when-my-ukulele-plays

    License code: GWOIMMBAS15FG6PH

    Timestamps

    00:14 Introduction
    01:00 Feed Us with Trees: Nut Trees and The Future of Food
    01:48 Elspeth’s Career in Food and the Environment
    02:41 The Lightbulb Moment: Humans Can Eat Acorns
    03:27 It Never Made Sense to Me That We Didn’t Have a Habitat
    07:39 The Chestnut Huts of Switzerland: A Living Food Culture
    09:46 Our Grief and Homesickness for Connection to Place and Species
    10:43 The Land of Opportunity Myth
    13:07 Oak Savannas and Chestnut Groves: Pillars of an Indigenous Food System
    14:39 Food is Politics: The Deliberate Dismantling of Abundance in North America
    19:40 Trespass Laws Were Created to Control Formerly Enslaved Foragers
    22:00 How Capitalism Makes Food Political
    23:47 The Movement to Revive Perennial Food Ecosystems
    26:50 Ecological Succession and Embracing Traditional Land Management
    30:41 Oaks as the Tree of Life, Biodiversity Champions
    32:00 Nature Preserves Are the Wrong Approach. The Land Needs Us.
    34:17 Hazelnut Basketry and Kuruk Culture to Elspeth and Erin’s Willow Basketry
    37:42 The New Forest in England: An Unenclosed English Farm
    40:20 Elspeth’s Recommended Resources
    41:50 Elspeth’s Shout-Outs
    44:26 Parting Words of Wisdom
    45:12 Outro and Contact Us

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    47 Min.
  • Ep. 39 Plant Evolution: Kid Q&A
    Nov 25 2025
    Kids ask the best nature questions!

    For this episode, a class of elementary-school students prepared a list of questions about plants for Sean and Erin to answer. The best part, of course, is that these are questions few adults would think to ask, and they let our hosts explore all sorts of fascinating topics. How did plants come to be the way they are? Why did they evolve to have roots (or no roots!) and leaves and fruit? What makes one tree grow big leaves while another one has narrow needles? We talk evolutionary niches, the tree of life, food chains, and even how plants move water and sugar through their cells.

    Step into our plant-life classroom and see what you can learn from the curiosity of children!

    Comments? Feedback? Want your garden question to be featured in a future Q&A segment?

    Email us, reach out over social media, or get Q&A priority by supporting us on Patreon.

    Discord: https://discord.gg/K6wF9dY4Ja
    Bluesky: @plantsalwayswin.com
    TikTok: @plantsalwayswinpodcast
    YouTube: @plantsalwayswinpodcast
    Website: www.plantsalwayswin.com

    Credits
    Website Design and Illustration by Sophia Alladin

    Intro and Outro Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/soundroll/when-my-ukulele-plays

    License code: GWOIMMBAS15FG6PH

    Citations

    Bryophytes and Tracheophytes? Categories of Plants With and Without Roots
    Plant diversity. (n.d.). NatureWorks. https://nhpbs.org/natureworks/nwep14b.htm

    The Parts of a Leaf
    Libretexts. (2022, May 4). 13.1: Leaf parts and arrangement. Biology LibreTexts. https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Botany/A_Photographic_Atlas_for_Botany_(Morrow)/13%3A_Leaves/13.01%3A_Leaf_Parts_and_Arrangement

    Making Paper from Plants at Home

    Quillen, K. (2023, October 3). How to make paper from plants – Mother Earth news. Mother Earth News – the Original Guide to Living Wisely. https://www.motherearthnews.com/diy/making-paper-from-plants-zm0z17jjzqui/

    Lipman, B. (2024, October 16). Paper from Iris and Daylily. https://www.handpapermaking.org/post/paper-from-iris-and-daylily

    Timestamps

    00:13 Introduction
    01:13 What’s Growing On: Sean’s Seed Saving
    02:56 What’s Growing On: Erin’s Season Extension
    05:53 Do All Plants Have Roots? Let’s Talk Bryophytes
    06:08 Plants’ Vascular Systems: Xylem and Phloem
    08:40 Why Do Plants Need Roots?
    11:15 Many Types of Roots
    12:29 What is the Blade on a Leaf?
    14:40 Why do Oak Leaves Get So Big?
    20:22 How Fast Can Some Flowers Grow?
    26:17 Why Do Plants Grow Food?
    32:51 How Do Plants Survive the Winter?
    41:38 Erin’s New Picture Book: If You Go Walking
    42:58 How Do You Make Paper with Plants?
    46:10 Paper Recycling Tangent
    47:06 Making Paper from Daylilies and Iris
    54:33 Outro and Contact Us

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    56 Min.
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