Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don't you just stop and ask them?
Op here again. There is no good place to stop. There is no shoulder at all on Persimmon Tree Road and you would have to park in a neighborhood and walk a bit and I always have my kids with me. For the curious, the trees are not in a park, there are on a very wide grassy strip of land between the road and the fence beside someone's house, not a park.
Anonymous wrote:Could it be black walnuts? I'm collected those and spent an excruciating amount of energy extracting thr walnuts. They are delicious and valuable. I had a tree on my property and they only produce nuts every second year and have sought out other trees on off years.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you just stop and ask them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an enormous ginkgo in front of my house. I can't believe it, but people--mostly E Asians--collect those stinky fruits and cook with them. And I can attest that they are falling now.
I tried cooking them once and it created the most foul smell I have ever had in my kitchen or elsewhere. I'm an adventurous eater but -- puke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, I want some of whatever they were gathering.
- eater of public park fruit
Be careful, just saw another link on dcum yesterday where a public park berry picker was heavily fined!
Anonymous wrote:I have an enormous ginkgo in front of my house. I can't believe it, but people--mostly E Asians--collect those stinky fruits and cook with them. And I can attest that they are falling now.
Anonymous wrote:I have an enormous ginkgo in front of my house. I can't believe it, but people--mostly E Asians--collect those stinky fruits and cook with them. And I can attest that they are falling now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chestnuts?
There are no more chestnuts -- they were wiped out by some kind of blight.