Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Field Guide Highlights Edible Seaweeds On West Coast, Explains Why They Smell

The Canadian Press, 18 Aug, 2015 10:48 AM
    MADEIRA PARK, B.C. — Stroll along a west coast shoreline and you might come across a diverse range of seaweeds — big, small and sometimes smelly.
     
    They can be brown, green or red. And their shapes can include "crusts as thin as paint smears on a rock, delicate blades, wiry clumps, fleshy sacs or kelps as tall as a red cedar," writes Bridgette Clarkston in "A Field Guide to Seaweeds of the Pacific Northwest," a new water-repellent pamphlet from Harbour Publishing.
     
    There are more than 640 species of seaweed in the Pacific Northwest.
     
    Clarkston, a Comox-born seaweed biologist, highlights some of the most important and interesting varieties you're likely to encounter, including edible ones such as sea cabbage, giant kelp, bull kelp and the exotically named feather-boa kelp.
     
    She also offers tidbits of information about how the plants are exploited commercially. Compounds extracted from brown seaweeds, for example, are used in everything from textiles and medical dressings to ice cream. Red seaweeds are widely used to preserve and thicken food.
     
    Clarkston's advice to foragers is to harvest only the top 30 per cent of a seaweed, and collect only a few from any given area. Also, avoid heavily populated or industrialized areas, since "seaweeds can concentrate heavy metals and other pollutants."
     
    "Dried into crispy chips, chopped into stir-frys or eaten straight off the beach, seaweeds are nutritious and delicious."
     
    Washed onto shore in piles called drift or wrack, seaweeds begin to decay soon after exposure to air, which is why they have "the unfair reputation" of being smelly, Clarkston writes.
     
    "Everything rotting smells unpleasant." 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Counsel Of Bible Helped Wright Decide To Help Duffy, Keep It Quiet, Court Told

    Counsel Of Bible Helped Wright Decide To Help Duffy, Keep It Quiet, Court Told
    OTTAWA — Nigel Wright, Stephen Harper's former chief of staff, says he was trying to quietly do a "good deed" when he gave Mike Duffy $90,000, then privately notified the prime minister's director of issues management.

    Counsel Of Bible Helped Wright Decide To Help Duffy, Keep It Quiet, Court Told

    Oilsands Being Left In The Ground Is Just A Matter Of Fact, Experts Say

    EDMONTON — The furor over a New Democrat candidate's remarks about leaving Alberta's oilsands in the ground reflects how poorly the issue is understood, say energy experts.

    Oilsands Being Left In The Ground Is Just A Matter Of Fact, Experts Say

    Kinder Morgan president says draft Trans Mountain pipeline conditions achievable

    VANCOUVER — Kinder Morgan Canada's president says 145 draft conditions affecting the company's proposed expansion of its Trans Mountain pipeline are rigorous but achievable.

    Kinder Morgan president says draft Trans Mountain pipeline conditions achievable

    70-Year-Old Woman Beaten, Sexually Assaulted In Daytime Robbery In Her South Surrey Home

    70-Year-Old Woman Beaten, Sexually Assaulted In Daytime Robbery In Her South Surrey Home
    She suffered significant injuries before the 20- to 30-year-old suspect fled

    70-Year-Old Woman Beaten, Sexually Assaulted In Daytime Robbery In Her South Surrey Home

    Canadian Man Spots Knockoff Tim Mortons Coffee In South Korea; Tim Hortons To Take Legal Action

    Canadian Man Spots Knockoff Tim Mortons Coffee In South Korea; Tim Hortons To Take Legal Action
    Canadian Mike Elgar posted a photo of bags of Tim Mortons Mocha Gold Coffee Mix on Instagram on Sunday.

    Canadian Man Spots Knockoff Tim Mortons Coffee In South Korea; Tim Hortons To Take Legal Action

    Fentanyl Worth $348,000 Seized In Vancouver's International Mail Centre, Calgary Man, 27, Charged

    Fentanyl Worth $348,000 Seized In Vancouver's International Mail Centre, Calgary Man, 27, Charged
    Kasimir Tyabji, who is 27 and from Calgary, is charged with one count of importing a controlled substance

    Fentanyl Worth $348,000 Seized In Vancouver's International Mail Centre, Calgary Man, 27, Charged