Today is the day I am picking the stinging nettles and eating them.
I am writing this now, so you can hold me to it. Although, already, I can feel myself slipping. The truth is I am afraid of the stinging nettles. I can’t remember what I was thinking planting them. Something I read in one of my herb books about how they’re chock full of nutrients? And after a cold dreary winter they’re often the first shoot of green in the garden? And something something about medicinal tea and helping with arthritis? Or the kidneys? I can’t remember.
Three years ago, four, I bought an adorable nettles seedling at the farmers market and planted it in a pot in the back of the herb garden, but I haven’t touched it since. Except one time, I did brush against it, briefly, on my way toward something else, and it was like I was shot with a stun gun. Not that I have ever been shot with a stun gun, but I can imagine.
I steered clear after that, but then, a couple of years ago, I actually ate a nettle salad at a farm my husband and I visited with our son and daughter-in-law way up in up-up-up state New York. The nettle salad was tasty, and I gushed about it to the farmer-host. But also, I had to ask the guy, How did you pick these without feeling like you were being shot with a stun gun?
I can’t remember what he said. Okay, I looked it up. You’re supposed to wear heavy gloves. You dunk the nettles in boiling water for one to two minutes. You immediately plunge them in ice cold water. Supposedly, this removes the sting.
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I am really going to do this now.
But first, I am going to fortify myself with a second cup of coffee. While I’m drinking it, I want to tell you a story about how the other day a stranger came to the door wanting to give me a magazine. The magazine had something to do with aviation. I have seen this magazine before, stuffed inside my Little Free Library. Every few months, a new issue. I’d let it sit out there and after a while, I’d toss it in the recycle bin. How many pilots live in this neighborhood, is what I was thinking.
Anyway, as it turns out, it isn’t a magazine for airline pilots. It’s a magazine for pilots of model airplanes. What the guy wanted to tell me was that he subscribed to the magazine and he loved it and he wanted to pass his joy on to other potential model aviation enthusiasts, so he’d been putting it in my Little Free Library and whenever he checked, the old issues had been snapped up.
He was so excited, he wrote to the magazine, and they featured my little free library. Here, he said, and he gave me a copy to thank me for being a part of our neighborhood’s fledgling model aviation community.
Did you tell him? My husband said, after I relayed the conversation. Meaning, did I tell the guy that there likely wasn’t another model aviation enthusiast in the neighborhood. It was just me, recycling the magazines without a glance.
Oh my God no, I said, and a wave of guilt due to my callous disregard for other people’s passions crashed over me.
I did it.
I donned a long sleeve shirt and went outside with the gloves, and I glovingly grabbed the nettles.
I dunked them in the boiling water for two minutes. I plunged them in ice cold water. My husband tossed them into our seafood gumbo dinner bowl, and we ate them.
They were tasty, and now that I am chock full of nutrients, here’s something else I promise to do: The next time my neighbor leaves a copy of Model Aviation in my Little Free Library, I’ll leave it there.








