Thursday, December 18, 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

    Alberta Regulator Investigates Reports That 30 Herons Died At Oilsands Site

    Alberta Regulator Investigates Reports That 30 Herons Died At Oilsands Site
     The Alberta Energy Regulator says it is investigating reports that approximately 30 blue herons have died at an oilsands site.

    Alberta Regulator Investigates Reports That 30 Herons Died At Oilsands Site

    Quebec Judge Orders Review Of Inmate's Grievance Over Porn TV Channels In Prison

    Quebec Judge Orders Review Of Inmate's Grievance Over Porn TV Channels In Prison
    MONTREAL — A Federal Court judge has ordered a new review of a Quebec prisoner's grievance over access to TV channels showing late-night pornography.

    Quebec Judge Orders Review Of Inmate's Grievance Over Porn TV Channels In Prison

    Duceppe Won't Predict How Many Seats He Can Win In Fall Election

    Duceppe Won't Predict How Many Seats He Can Win In Fall Election
    MONTREAL — Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe says he will serve his full term if he is elected this fall, no matter how his party fares at the ballot box.

    Duceppe Won't Predict How Many Seats He Can Win In Fall Election

    Canadian Health Officials Warn About Outbreak Of Intestinal Illness Cyclospora

    OTTAWA — Public health officials are warning about an outbreak of the intestinal illness Cyclospora, with 83 cases are being investigated across Canada.

    Canadian Health Officials Warn About Outbreak Of Intestinal Illness Cyclospora

    One winning ticket for $50-million jackpot in Friday's Lotto Max

    The ticket was purchased somewhere in Alberta.

    One winning ticket for $50-million jackpot in Friday's Lotto Max

    Experts Weigh In After Chris Hyndman's Mother's 'Sleepwalking' Suggestion

    Experts Weigh In After Chris Hyndman's Mother's 'Sleepwalking' Suggestion
    Glenda Hyndman told the Toronto Star that she believed her son fell to his death while sleepwalking on the terrace of the downtown Toronto home he shared with his professional and personal partner Steven Sabados. 

    Experts Weigh In After Chris Hyndman's Mother's 'Sleepwalking' Suggestion