
The Grassy Meadows Have Delicious Food
The seed tells a story of a plant. If you’re willing to listen, you will benefit from your experience with the plant. Such was the case for some of the plants I grew at my farm that by seed were considered challenging. Phragmites was one. Remarkable and a powerful perennial grass, Phragmites can do it all. It is a well-known as a plant silt stopper in the wetlands of North America as well as a circumpolar plant found throughout northern Europe and China. It is growing in places where few other plants can tread. Once it’s job is done, it quietly fades into the background. Even the cattails can’t do it like phragmites which often grow right next to it.

It was only natural that I try growing it to test its adaptability in non-wetland conditions. I was quite fond of the sprouts of phragmites flavor. In the spring, I would pluck a few and nibble my way around the pond. In many ways they were like mini-bamboo sprouts found near the base of the canes. I have several edible wild books touting Phragmites as a delicious edible plant found widely in North America. Like another wetland species, River cane bamboo, the sprouts are completely delicious, crispy and worth harvesting. The first place I took the roots home was my home garden. I told no one because people have strong negative reactions to any stoloniferous grass that can skip on the surface of a pond twenty feet in a year. I hid in my grassy meadow of ideas with my eat-the-sprouts philosophy. I did have company. I joined the muskrats. They had figured this out and were not bashful in decimating the populations every now and then. The bluegill and frog populations exploded after Phragmites and cattails first appearances at the pond. The high sugar content of the leaves brought in colonies of aphids which also fed other insects willing to dine on their sugary excretions. I carefully plucked out several roots from my family’s farm pond and put them in my garden. It took less than a month and they died quietly. My next attempt was from seed. I gathered a grocery bag full and layered them in a propagation tray. Six seedlings came up out of several hundred thousand seeds. Obviously, the Phragmites plant does not need the seeds too much to continue its existence. Because of their rarity, once the seedlings were grown, I plunked them carefully into a sandy dry hillside next to the river cane bamboo. It too is found in wetland conditions but will grow perfectly fine in dry conditions. This time it took a little more than a month to die out. My perennial sprout farm and grassy meadow dream filled with phragmites was a no go and fading fast.

Not to give up entirely, I moved on with cattails. Cattails have sprouts that are wonderful fresh. Pure white and crispy is the cattail sprout. This time I found a cattail colony on a steep bank off a major highway intersection in Michigan. It was just plain weird this colony was growing over 40 feet uphill from the native soils below. I pulled over and picked a grocery bag full of heads and drove off. As people stared at me driving by, I repeated, “Nothing here. Move along now.” Many of the seeds blew around in my cab as I drove away. Like a snowstorm of seeds, I had accidentally left the passenger’s side window open which left me fully engulfed with the fluffy seeds as I headed north on I-69. I eventually took them to my farm and put them in a propagation tray of which nothing came up. Luckily, it rained and I had left that same window open in my truck. The seeds that stuck to my carpet on the floorboard sprouted. It wasn’t like the blow molded alfalfa sprout package density but a few here and there. This too failed and it was obvious that growing a good cattail root for eating would take only wetland conditions. For the record, the F-150 floorboard is not conducive to cattails.

I still have this idea and cannot shake it. If you were farming your meadow of sprouts, it would not make sense to convert a wetland to your perennial green idea. The same is true with running irrigation in non-wetland conditions to make the whole system work. This is not a crop like cranberries so well known in modern agriculture. Few will care about your love of sprouts. The Phragmites for all intents and purposes is the running bamboo. I tried a sterile Miscanthus for a while. It was a good landscape plant growing in my dry soils but the flavor and toughness was not good. There are many hydrologically damaged ecosystems done entirely by humans that could be used for species like cattails and phragmites. But since the actual crop yield and desirability is in question you need a representative planting where that could be measured and tested that same way you would grow a new tree crop. The same questions apply and yields could be done by selecting seedling characteristics which show a greater propensity for dense sprouting along the long stoloniferous roots. I have seen this characteristic on all plants while digging thousands of plants by hand over the last 40 plus years. Even the potato has it. This type of selection would be a highly dense sprouting plant with more of a clumpy nature with dense sprouting just like asparagus varieties. It is no different only you harvest the plants before the cholorophyll gets a chance to fill in. It is also possible it could be grown in darkness in the spring to allow the sprouts to develop to larger sizes the same way asparagus is done. The vigor of the species is most evident in the spring as the water temperature heats up.

I once tried to talk to a company about installing certain woody plants in a wetland area that was a superfund site. I was planning on donating the plants as I had many extra Michigan holly plants. I thought we could bring over some employees from my farm to help too. Win-win. I had the thought, I will just knock on the door and show up with my great idea. The company that got this massive contract had this trailer parked out front with people working in it. It was near the Kalamazoo River. After the second time, I noticed that the office in back would get mysteriously quiet when I walked in. The office manager wanted me out of there and said please do not come back in a very nice way. Before I left, I tried to share with her some of my ideas, thinking certainly she is interested. She said, “Please do not come back.” She was very nice. People don’t want to hear new ideas because the old ones are already bought and paid for. You can’t interfere with that. Today there is grass and nothing but grass and this grass is mowed ever now and then. Of course, it looks very nice.


The story of a grassy meadow sprout farm is within us. That is where the meadows can start and flourish without the noise and misinformation from the outside world. Phragmites and cattails help create the grassy meadow. In this meadow, you could grow sprouts and eat them like many have done for thousands of years. Maybe we can hide there with the muskrats and bluegills for a while and enjoy the flavors. The laws of nature in the grassy meadow allow it. Here you can uncover and quietly enjoy the delicious nature of the world. But let’s keep that a secret for now. The sprout farm will have to wait.

Enjoy. Kenneth Asmus

































































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