One Tree Produces 40 Crops Per Year for a Century — Why Did USDA Orchards Burn Their Groves?
Автор: Outlawed Harvest
Загружено: 2026-02-18
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One Tree Produces 40 Crops Per Year for a Century — Why Did USDA Orchards Burn Their Groves?
Why can’t you buy the most productive fruit in America at the grocery store?
In this video, we uncover the strange and volatile history of the Mulberry tree (Morus alba and Morus rubra). It’s a tree that produces ripe fruit every day for three months straight, requires zero maintenance, and yields 7x more iron than blueberries. Yet, in 1839, Americans burned these orchards to the ground in a fit of rage.
From King James I demanding colonists plant them for silk, to the "Mulberry Mania" financial bubble that ruined thousands of farmers, the story of this tree is the story of American ambition and failure. Today, we explore why this "weed" is actually a forgotten superfood, why modern industrial agriculture hates it, and how it might just be the key to resilient, regenerative food systems in a changing climate.
In this deep dive, we cover:
The Miracle Crop: How one tree produces up to 600 lbs of fruit per year.
The Silk Road Connection: How the Mulberry built empires and fueled the global trade.
The Panic of 1839: The economic bubble where trees cost $17,000 (adjusted for inflation) and the crash that followed.
The Science: Why mulberries are nutritional powerhouses compared to blueberries and strawberries.
The Ban: Why cities like Las Vegas and El Paso made planting these trees illegal.
The Future: How permaculture and regenerative agriculture are reclaiming this "forbidden fruit."
If you want to understand food sovereignty, forgotten history, and the abundance growing in the cracks of the concrete jungle, this video is for you.
📚 Sources & Further Reading:
USDA National Clonal Germplasm Repository
History of the Silk Industry in America
Nutritional analysis of Morus Species
Tags
Mulberry tree, Morus alba, Morus rubra, Mulberry Mania, history of silk in America, 1839 panic, permaculture fruit trees, regenerative agriculture, food forest, foraging, wild food, gardening tips, superfoods, sustainable farming, why mulberries are illegal, USDA orchard history, rare fruit, backyard gardening, self-sufficiency, food sovereignty, growing fruit trees, invasive species vs native, free food, organic gardening.
Hashtags
#Mulberry #Permaculture #FoodHistory #Foraging #Gardening #SustainableAgriculture #FruitTrees #Homesteading #FoodSecurity #Nature #SustainableLiving
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