Calochortus were a staple food? I know their bulbs are edible, but they are not particularly large nor fast growing. Where did you hear they were a staple? Occasionally seeds of calochortus spp. are available on the PBS bulb exchange. And some west coast specialty nurseries off them irregularly. E.g. telos rare bulbs, dancing oaks, and far reaches farm. On Sat, Feb 11, 2017 at 4:36 PM Khanh Duong via pbs <pbs@lists.ibiblio.org> wrote: > Dear All, > I wish to pose a question, please: Do you know of the allowances (or > otherwise) and availability to obtain, of the tubers and/or seeds for > Calochortus species (especially C. aureus, C. gunnisonii, C. luteus, C. > macrocarpus, C. nuttalli, C. tolmiei, C. venustus), and/or of Psoralea > esculenta (Breadroot) (synonym Pediomelum esculentum), potentially for > growing non-commercially in the UK? Are these restricted for import and/or > for growing in the UK, or not? Who might supply tubers/seeds to enable them > to be growing in the UK if import and growing is freely allowable? Given > that both are said to have been 'staple' foods (at least for part of the > seasonal round) by 'Native Americans', their potential for food, in > addition to their own lovely characteristics anyway, is an additional > thought. > Thanks if you can advise, > Chris.Location: Southern part of the UK.[the email address here used (in > case it is visible to the group) is that of an acquaintance of mine, rather > than my own personal email (which I no longer use)] > _______________________________________________ > pbs mailing list > pbs@lists.ibiblio.org > http://pacificbulbsociety.org/list.php > http://pacificbulbsociety.org/pbswiki/