/pine
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2009
- Messages
- 12,450
Never had soft shell. I am inland, are these coastal?
Don't really know what their range is...They are considered a delicacy wherever they're found...

Never had soft shell. I am inland, are these coastal?
We had quite a few of them up here in South Bend when I was growing up in the 60s-70s. Don't seem to be as many anymore. However, we still see them on occasion in our local river. For that matter, about 10-15 years ago my wife and I were parked by the river eating lunch and watched a large soft shell dig a nest in the sand in the grass above the riverbank.Never had soft shell. I am inland, are these coastal?
I just grow them at home. Awful good.Road-side berries.
We ate gallons of wild berries like raspberries growing along the roads for decades.
I still try to collect them when time allows
Being from the South, I've never been able to convince people that slow cooked, buttered, and spiced cabbage with root bulbs is a thing to eat. Its an entirely not used, vegetable in the PNW. Which I find odd, as there is plenty of Cabbage , and plenty of Beets. But no one wants to eat Borsch, no matter how well prepared it is.![]()
Being from the South, I've never been able to convince people that slow cooked, buttered, and spiced cabbage with root bulbs is a thing to eat. Its an entirely not used, vegetable in the PNW. Which I find odd, as there is plenty of Cabbage , and plenty of Beets. But no one wants to eat Borsch, no matter how well prepared it is.![]()
You're welcome to it.Proper Borsch is one good soup.