When Digging for Ramps Goes Too Deep

FOR Ashton Berdine, a ramble in the woods to dig for the pungent tender-leaved wild leeks known as ramps has been a springtime ritual since he was a teenager. Even today, at 45, as the first buds appear on trees, he takes his family into the woods near his home in Elkins, W.Va., to dig a few ramps to cook with fajitas.

But lately, Mr. Berdine, a botanist with the environmental group the Nature Conservancy, has had to hike deeper and deeper to find ramps, he said. The acres-wide patches that used to carpet the forest floor are becoming elusive. Mr. Berdine has seen areas where every single ramp has been scraped up, he said, as if by ā€œwild hogs rooting in the forest.ā€

Earlier this month, he caught a glimpse of one of those hogs.

ā€œI pulled up behind a truck at a stoplight,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd I just saw bags and bags of ramps, piled high in the truck bed.ā€

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Full article at nytimes.com

 

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