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Berlin environment blog

Tamsin Walker
June 23, 2017

Malicious and maligned, nettles are a pain. Quite literally. But they're also brilliantly designed and kind of tasty. Maybe it's time to give them another chance. Maybe?

https://p.dw.com/p/2fFte
Stinging nettles
Image: DW/T. Walker

Having grown up in the English countryside, stinging nettles were as much a feature in my life as the grass in which they loved to hide. They were everywhere and they acquainted themselves with my ankles, arms and legs from an early age. But I, like most children of rural British origin, was imbued with the popular wisdom that where there are nettles, there are docks - as in the plants - also known as Rumex L. And that they, being somehow magical, would be a salve to the misery of being stung.

Whether they really did or not, indeed do or not, is the subject of ongoing debate. It's obviously an important issue of our times. I'm not going to get hung up on the science of it. Too sweet are my post-sting memories of spotting red-tinged leaves growing beside their less benign bedfellows. Too delicious, the green goodness that, if rubbed hard enough on the affected spot, left an equally green stain. And removed the pain.

If, in my blithe acceptance of the relationship between good plant-bad plant, I had ever stopped to think about whether they would be bedfellows in other parts of the world, I would likely have seen no reason for that not to be the case. Foolish me.

It came as something of a shock then, when having had my first brush with the unforgiving plants here in Berlin, to find no dock leaves in sight. Nichts. Not a one. And not for want of my looking. In the ensuing years, I relived that same painful reality time and again, until I was forced to conclude as a point of fact that Rumex L. and Urtica dioica are estranged.

A young nettle plant
The young leaves of the nettle plant are said to be the best ones to eatImage: wilderwegesrand.de

More point than fact, I discovered recently on a jaunt to Brandenburg, the state that surrounds the capital. Having been stung, (and yes, it does happen to me a lot) I was as stunned as excited as delighted to see clumps of leathery docks growing within physical reach of their caustic counterparts. I helped myself. Thank you, Mother Nature.

That conclusion has all the trappings of a happy ending, but as life would have it, that story leads seamlessly into another which is actually very much in its infancy. For that encounter with the nature of nettles made me realize how much I like their smell, how the sight of their familiar form is somehow comforting, and how, perhaps because they have been a part of my life since it began, I feel a kind of kinship with them. And on top of it all, I admire the brilliance of their engineering, the glass-like hairs that cover each leaf and snap off when gently touched thereby releasing the disputed stinging substance. In short, I now like nettles.

So much so, that I've decided to eat them. From this moment onwards, it will be Urtica dioica soups, smoothies and sides. The list is as long as the plants' stalks, which incidentally - and this is a real fact - can be made into textiles. It might be a while before I actually get around to wearing them, but I have started to drink them. Large pots of nettle tea. Followed by nettle and dandelion tea. But that, is a whole other tale.

Deutsche Welle Tamsin Walker
Tamsin Walker Senior editor with DW's environment team