Ditches across Essex County, Ont., are home to a delicious secret: Wild asparagus - Action News
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Ditches across Essex County, Ont., are home to a delicious secret: Wild asparagus

The ditches of Essex County, Ont., are filled with a hidden treasure: Fresh, tender wild asparagus.

The ideal season for wild asparagus is early spring to the end of June, says 1 forager

A man in a hat holds up a stalk of asparagus.
Gerry Waldron is a botanist and asparagus grower, with a local property where groups can often be spotted picking asparagus in the ditches around his home. (Mike Evans/CBC)

The ditches of Essex County, Ont., are filled with a hidden treasure: Fresh, tender wild asparagus.

It's a secret known to some. If you've ever seen cars pulled over on rural roads and people rooting around the overgrown grass, there's a good chance they're hunting for asparagus.

Antonio Rossi has been picking asparagus on the sides of rural Essex County roads for more than 50 years, going out with a reusable bag and a small knife to trim the stalks.

This man has been picking wild asparagus for 50 years

1 year ago
Duration 1:36
It's a treat Antonio Rossi shares with friends and pickles for use all year.

This year's crop might not be as good as in previous years, by Rossi's estimation. The area needs more rain, he says.

Rossi sayshe picks asparagus for his family and friends, and will pickle some of it so he can enjoy it all year.

While hewas reluctant to reveal too many of his foraging secrets "If they go, I don't pick it," he said with a chuckle he did have a tip for anyone looking to try their luck: "Just go out, have a nice walk and fresh air."

A man stands on grass near some asparagus that is at least 4 feet tall, and almost as tall as he is.
Gerry Waldron, a botanist and asparagus grower, shows off some tall stalks of asparagus on his rural Amherstburg property. (Mike Evans/CBC)

Gerry Waldronoften spots foragers like Rossi along the edges of his propertyrural in Amherstburg, Ont.The land has been in his family since 1850 and Waldron, a botantist by training, saysasparagus flourishes.

"Today it's nothing to see three parties of people going up and down the ditch," hesaid.

His family would forage for asparagus in the 1950s, he says.

And that itflourishes in local ditches because the areas aren't typically mowed, so it grows uninterrupted.

The ideal time to forage for asparagus is early spring, according to Waldron, with the season wrapping up by the end of June.

Waldronsaysheprefers to harvest asparagus taller than what you'd typically find in stores, noting it's still fresh and tender. Some stalks can grow as tall as 1.5 metres in height.

As for how best to enjoy freshly-picked asparagus?Waldronsays he knows what he likes.

"I'm very partial to I hope my cardiologist isn't listening frying it up in butter," he said, adding asparagus is nicely served cut into pieces on thediagonal.

"You can keep the tender tips and put them in at the end."

A man in a white coat holds a stalk of asparagus from a distance.
Antonio Rossi has been picking asparagus in the ditches of Essex County for 50 years. He says 2023 might not be the best year for the wild crop, but will distribute what he picks among friends and pickle the vegetable for eating all year round. (Mike Evans/CBC)

Waldron welcomes the people he sees roaming the edges of his property foraging for the fresh vegetable.

"I always feel, 'Come and get some exercise, pick some of this stuff,'" Waldron said. "There's so much of it anyways."

with files from Mike Evans