CLOUDBERRY : My Hunt For One Of The World's Most Elusive Fruits - Weird Fruit Explorer

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  • čas přidán 26. 09. 2020
  • Episode 500: Cloudberry (Rubus chamaemorus) - Weird Fruit Explorer
    Location: Finland
    +Help the channel GROW by:
    -Supporting on Patreon: / weirdexplorer
    -Trying Cloudberry Jam: amzn.to/3cCS7eS
    ---
    Sources:
    -Bakeapple's in Newfoundland: www.newfoundlandlabrador.com
    -Visiting Santa in Rovenemi: www.visitrovaniemi.fi
    -Cloudberry Festival in Ranua: www.hillamarkkinat.fi
    -Staying at a Husky Farm: www.primitifaventure.fr
    ---
    + New videos posted every Wednesday, Friday and Sunday!
    ---
    + GET A SHIRT:
    www.weirdexplorer.com
    ---
    + Follow me on SOCIAL MEDIA:
    IG: @weirdexplorer
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    ---
    + SPECIAL THANKS:
    Smarter Every Day, Alt-Pod
    ---
    + MUSIC:
    -"Quasi-motion""Floating Cities""Cold Sober" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    -"Web Weavers Dance" Asher Fulero
    -"Spying in the 60s" Sir Cubworth
    -"Habanera" Bizet

Komentáře • 5K

  • @WeirdExplorer
    @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +1853

    Thank you everyone who has followed along on my adventures over all these years. Its hard to believe its been 500 Episodes!
    If you are new to the channel, welcome! Check out this playlist of my top episodes: czcams.com/play/PLvGFkMrO1ZxJldWKpSAhhnxuPYVeCt8oj.html

    • @youtube.commentator
      @youtube.commentator Před 3 lety +23

      Awesome fruit for episode 500, well documented

    • @nakrul987
      @nakrul987 Před 3 lety +9

      will there be cats?

    • @robsonwilianwinchester9726
      @robsonwilianwinchester9726 Před 3 lety +10

      You should try Brazilians fruits like jaboticaba and pitanga.amora.brazilians mangoes and citrus 🍊🥭.

    • @stanervin6108
      @stanervin6108 Před 3 lety +7

      New citrus: Sanbukan. Japanese.
      EDIT:Spelling may be 'Sanbokan'.
      🍋

    • @josephhubbard6076
      @josephhubbard6076 Před 3 lety +3

      will there be another series similar to the coco de mer episodes?

  • @taseenmahmood6484
    @taseenmahmood6484 Před 3 lety +8033

    Maybe the real cloudberry was the friends we made along the way
    just want to clear something up, this isn't a reference to any show, it's just a saying that I changed to make a joke about the video.

  • @tud5200
    @tud5200 Před 3 lety +6353

    My man went looking for cloudberries and found himself

  • @callistoemarilawson8483
    @callistoemarilawson8483 Před 3 lety +1424

    In Norway, you can find them in swamps and generally damp areas. They're not that rare but still most people will never tell you where they pick theirs so that no one else knows their "secret" cloudberry spot.

    • @bensoncheung2801
      @bensoncheung2801 Před 3 lety +42

      Could multiple people still visit those spots, say, by finding them themselves, or would they argue?

    • @ogueyratogeyrat7448
      @ogueyratogeyrat7448 Před 3 lety +79

      @@bensoncheung2801 they argue

    • @bensoncheung2801
      @bensoncheung2801 Před 3 lety +13

      @@ogueyratogeyrat7448 For how long?

    • @sunsundks3891
      @sunsundks3891 Před 3 lety +6

      Like mushrooms

    • @jomarundertun8419
      @jomarundertun8419 Před 3 lety +16

      @@bensoncheung2801 technically you could, but there would probably be some arguing, yes

  • @thebonkest3166
    @thebonkest3166 Před 3 lety +1075

    He's obsessed with cloudberries because he knows they increase all of your max stats

    • @avioracrown6967
      @avioracrown6967 Před 3 lety +7

      What reference is that?
      Jojo?

    • @5types918
      @5types918 Před 3 lety +61

      @@avioracrown6967 ...

    • @OHOE1
      @OHOE1 Před 3 lety +6

      I like to eat cloudberry jam to pancakes

    • @MrCrasherdog
      @MrCrasherdog Před 3 lety +68

      @@5types918 when in doubt, just assume that it’s a jojo reference lmao

    • @helenaorr
      @helenaorr Před 3 lety +1

      @@avioracrown6967 i think one piece lol

  • @kamron3506
    @kamron3506 Před 3 lety +2511

    this guy is literally a pokemon collecter in the real world, he's literally collecting wild fruits from around the world like a pokemon collector, cloudberry just sounds like something from pokemon

  • @david82633
    @david82633 Před 3 lety +382

    Cloud berries are very fragile, so just because they look mushy doesn't mean they are bad. They can still taste great

    • @SSirloiNN
      @SSirloiNN Před 3 lety +17

      @City17.76 Ever tried a durian? I'm not sure how accesible it is in the western part of the world but in Asia its pretty common. Despite its ankylosaurus style shell, its quite sweet if you can stand the smell.

    • @SSirloiNN
      @SSirloiNN Před 3 lety +1

      @City17.76 You should give it a go. I'm kind of a noob when it comes to choosing the better durians but if the flesh of the fruit is more bright yellow its generally a lot sweeter. The ones with less flavour look more beige-like.

    • @aydinsha
      @aydinsha Před 3 lety +12

      I thought it was stupid that he said that about the two first markets, but then goes and has his first taste be jam....

    • @riran6636
      @riran6636 Před 3 lety

      I love the smell and taste of durian! Guess it's just an acquired taste.

  • @MajaElise95
    @MajaElise95 Před 3 lety +1344

    It’s so funny to see this video as a norwegian. My grandparents pick cloudberries every year and when they get too old to I’m definitely going to take up that tradition for myself. It’s not as available as other berries like blueberries and rasberries, but still something I’m used to getting every year. In our family (and many other norwegian families) it’s a part of a traditional dessert we often have at christmas. I do treasure them over all other berries, but it never occured to me it would be this rare in the rest of the world.

    • @MajaElise95
      @MajaElise95 Před 3 lety +73

      @Peter Parlee-Carr people do! He just seemed really intent on having perfectly fresh berries.
      The berries are still kinda hard to get in large quantities, so it will always be expensive.
      I keep my berries in the freezer. Making it into jam is common.

    • @peltomies6975
      @peltomies6975 Před 3 lety +24

      Same for me, but im from Finland

    • @wsellias7360
      @wsellias7360 Před 3 lety +11

      @Peter Parlee-Carr my family makes yam out of them and store them in glassjars, its sooo good😋

    • @hjallegamer6332
      @hjallegamer6332 Před 3 lety +33

      Yeah. Same here om from sweden and every summer me and My family just pick about. Like, 15 kilograms(33lbs) of cloudberries or hjortron as we say in sweden,and yes, i looked up how much 15kg is in pounds just for the sake of this comment. You should be thankful you damned americans. And I just didnt know that it was so rare. Yes i knew that it was much less uncommon to be found like up in The northern areas of the world but I check in The freezer and think. I could make a lot of money of this. So in about 10-20 years of this comment. If you see anyone in The USA selling cloudberries its defenitly me. So see you later, i guess.

    • @derpinator8789
      @derpinator8789 Před 3 lety +12

      Didn't know they where that rare.
      But if you find an area on the mountain with cloudberries, you don't tell anyone.

  • @grey8771
    @grey8771 Před 3 lety +251

    I picked cloud berries with an Inuit mother and son at the top of Canada in a tiny town called Tuktoyaktuk. We ate them with powdered milk and sugar- and it was absolutely awesome.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +33

      powdered milk? Interesting! sounds good

    • @kyrab7914
      @kyrab7914 Před 3 lety +10

      That's definitely an experience you don't usually get. Sounds magical, and like something to treasure. Thanks for sharing

    • @sylvia106
      @sylvia106 Před 2 lety

      That’s awesome!

    • @camillepepin8512
      @camillepepin8512 Před 2 lety +10

      As a fellow Canadian, sometimes I look at a map and just think about how far I've gone in my travels and still I have absolutely no clue what the farthest villages in the North looks like. And It's my goal to go in one of those remote, unknown almost forgotten place some day.

    • @alpaktuna
      @alpaktuna Před 2 lety +1

      That is based.

  • @SquishyDuckling
    @SquishyDuckling Před 3 lety +783

    Always forage yourself in Norway, Sweden & Finland. It is super expensive to buy mushrooms and berries that has been picked by others.

    • @boopeep9670
      @boopeep9670 Před 3 lety +12

      Do you have poisonous mushrooms up there? If you do are they easy to tell apart from safe edible mushrooms?

    • @SquishyDuckling
      @SquishyDuckling Před 3 lety +66

      @@boopeep9670 Hi! Yeah we do. But here in Norway we have a mushroom control app that is very popular and safe to use. The most sought after mushrooms to pick in Norway is Kantarell (Chanterelle), Piggsopp (Wood Hedgehog Mushroom) and Steinsopp (Penny Bun) - unfortunately the Chanterelle has a very similar looking evil twin mushroom called Fake Chanterelle which is poisonous. Once you know them though it is easy to tell them apart :)

    • @boopeep9670
      @boopeep9670 Před 3 lety +23

      @@SquishyDuckling Thank you so much for replying princess Domo!
      That is fascinating and a great idea for an app. I love all kinds of mushrooms but I’ve never heard of the last two you listed I’m going to have to look those up. I wish we had more food that was accessible here to forage in Texas. I love traveling (before Covid) and experiencing other peoples culture and countries. Learning how to live in a completely different terrain than what you’re used to is endlessly interesting. There’s always something more to learn. It looks like we have the same problem with mosquitoes though lol.
      Stay safe.

    • @SquishyDuckling
      @SquishyDuckling Před 3 lety +23

      @@boopeep9670 No problem! Mushrooms are so interesting, everything in the nature is really. Being able to forage and live so close to nature is something I cherish so much :)
      Thank you, stay safe :)

    • @maple494
      @maple494 Před 3 lety +16

      Yep, in Finland 1kg of blueberries costs like 2,70€ even though they grow in everyone's backyard. People are just too lazy to go pick them up theirselves, but hey I don't complain at least it's easy money. Like a bucket full of blueberries goes for 25€, and that you can gather with a friend in an hour, which for a teenager is a nice amount :D
      And don't get me started on cloudberries...

  • @EatMeNerd
    @EatMeNerd Před 3 lety +2095

    In summary:
    "Where can I find cloudberries? It's so hard!
    No, not that one.
    Not these either.
    Get that shizz away from me.
    Not even.
    Nope.
    Good yes, this one in the middle of this bog will be fine.
    It was ok I guess"

  • @PugsleyThePear
    @PugsleyThePear Před 3 lety +575

    Being eaten alive by mosquitos is part of the true cloudberry hunting experience.

    • @Ulrna
      @Ulrna Před 3 lety +10

      The locals always have the best mosquito repelants for sale or to borrow.

    • @petergyenes4794
      @petergyenes4794 Před 3 lety +5

      I can't decide if is this annoyance or Valheim reference.

    • @frosty6960
      @frosty6960 Před 3 lety +7

      @@petergyenes4794 The Valheim creators knows this ... they are from this region :)

    • @deViant14
      @deViant14 Před 3 lety +2

      Some OFF deep woods or Sawyer's would solve that problem

    • @eelimaaninka2712
      @eelimaaninka2712 Před 2 lety +3

      Justiin näin😂

  • @rafaelvillalobos6872
    @rafaelvillalobos6872 Před 10 měsíci +22

    this video inspired me to move to Finland. after watching this video, I fell in love with everything from the language, the culture, the people, the nature, fruits, and everything in between! if it weren't for this video, I wouldn't be where I am right now, so I cannot thank you enough. I have met some of the kindest people on the planet here.
    HYVÄ SUOMI!!!
    Kiitos kaikesta, suomi, mä rakastan suomalaisia. Tämä maa on paras maa maailmassa!
    :DDDD

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 10 měsíci +8

      that's incredible. so happy to hear it

    • @YoopsYoops
      @YoopsYoops Před 4 měsíci +2

      the ":DDDD" tells me you have assimilated in to the finnish culture well

  • @japanesedude4594
    @japanesedude4594 Před 3 lety +1942

    "I don't want my first taste of Cloudberry to be all mushy"
    *proceeds to consume Cloudberry jam*

  • @trashpanda2938
    @trashpanda2938 Před 3 lety +1778

    You’re telling me such a rare fruit grows in the small turd island I live in

    • @Rzmnz
      @Rzmnz Před 3 lety +239

      Finland isn't a turd island. Look at an Euro coin. There, Finland's a ballsack. And Sweden's a big d*ck. And Norway doesn't even exist...

    • @CoconutSmoothieAJ
      @CoconutSmoothieAJ Před 3 lety +90

      turd island

    • @daisycinnimon
      @daisycinnimon Před 3 lety +71

      @@CoconutSmoothieAJ never come to long island.

    • @CoconutSmoothieAJ
      @CoconutSmoothieAJ Před 3 lety +6

      @@daisycinnimon what

    • @you_actually_read_these_702
      @you_actually_read_these_702 Před 3 lety +11

      @@daisycinnimon no offense but why?

  • @user-yp7zv1ei4h
    @user-yp7zv1ei4h Před 3 lety +173

    “Maybe the real cloudberry was the friends we made along the way”
    Sun Tzu, Art of War

  • @richardponsford5147
    @richardponsford5147 Před 2 lety +22

    I'm a horticulturist, and just love this guys passion for the weird and wonderful. Hats off!

  • @shardshep1571
    @shardshep1571 Před 3 lety +1034

    Imagine he eats all the fruit that is known to man and on the last 1 he gets an achievement

    • @kearaoshaughnessy1224
      @kearaoshaughnessy1224 Před 3 lety +114

      ACHEVIMENT GET a balanced diet

    • @kearaoshaughnessy1224
      @kearaoshaughnessy1224 Před 3 lety +31

      @Caslyn Mahoney i took it from minecraft...... its the acheviment for eating all food items

    • @BigMan-kp6ug
      @BigMan-kp6ug Před 3 lety +12

      @@kearaoshaughnessy1224 I can't read that without the minecraft bell sound effects

    • @PyreRecords
      @PyreRecords Před 3 lety +3

      @@BigMan-kp6ug AHAHAHA I HEAR IT TOO!!

    • @xen_is_on
      @xen_is_on Před 3 lety +5

      *gets an update*
      Fuck

  • @fyst4413
    @fyst4413 Před 3 lety +457

    In Norwegian these berries are called “molter”
    I have these bad boys growing in my field that is 100m from my house.
    We usually pick about 5-7L of these and sell them for around 700 dollars.

    • @ErikaLH
      @ErikaLH Před 3 lety +22

      Same here in Sweden ^.^ Have just behind my house XD Need pancakes and Hjortronsylt now, drool!

    • @amberphylaxis7314
      @amberphylaxis7314 Před 3 lety +3

      Bruh

    • @weedoctor1
      @weedoctor1 Před 3 lety +20

      What 100dollars per liter!?!?! Thats insane

    • @recatwc
      @recatwc Před 3 lety +8

      Damn son where'd you find this!

    • @arcticblue248
      @arcticblue248 Před 3 lety +12

      @@weedoctor1 it is insane, people pay alot for this, so that there is no economy in it .. I don't know :-) but maybe its because of the supply and demand, the demand is bigger than the supply for now.

  • @bismarkbizmark5639
    @bismarkbizmark5639 Před 2 lety +45

    The truffle of the fruit world! I'm gonna use that line promoting cloud berries to my friends. They taste so sweet and special, mango apricot vanilla, but i've never found them in large quantities.

    • @Kjetibel
      @Kjetibel Před 2 lety +3

      In my country they become more frequent in hillsides, from about 50 meters up. Special rule only pick the berry, not the green it sits on, folklore says it won't grow new berries for 10 years if you do.

  • @patronsaintofpoison
    @patronsaintofpoison Před 3 lety +27

    I just found your channel today and I am so happy that I did. I have just recently experienced terrible loss in my life (I lost my apartment where I lived alone for 8 years and now I have to stay with my mother who yells at me every day). Your weird fruit series will certainly brighten my life. I really need positive and educational entertainment to distract my mind. I was overjoyed when you found the cloudberries. It is wonderful that you go on adventures for a beautiful purpose. I look forward to watching your other videos. I am sure this will be one of my favorite YT channels.

  • @ghostl337
    @ghostl337 Před 3 lety +665

    You should write a book with all the fruit you've tried and their taste

  • @eugenebebs7767
    @eugenebebs7767 Před 3 lety +1108

    When grandpa brought those from the forest: "These suck, why couldn't you bring raspberries?"
    American: flies across the world to grab a few of those

  • @oofmybuns6721
    @oofmybuns6721 Před 3 lety +71

    I lived in Alaska and every spring-summer I would pick blueberries and cloudberries not knowing what cloudberries wore

    • @wakeenmo2270
      @wakeenmo2270 Před 3 lety +4

      ill be visiting Alaska for the first time this summer,thanks for confirming wild cloudberries are available up there!

    • @jordanblackbird7223
      @jordanblackbird7223 Před 3 lety

      @@wakeenmo2270 I think In Alaska u need to take a hike and not come back to find anything in tha bush

  • @evelinaeriksson9281
    @evelinaeriksson9281 Před 2 lety +48

    Made me so happy that you took the opportunity to explore cloudberries or as we call it in Sweden "The gold of the forrest". Actually I just came home from the forrest hunting for cloudberries, they are ripening in sweden now! Best time of the year!

    • @r.gbucketshorts1345
      @r.gbucketshorts1345 Před 2 lety +4

      In pakistan we dont have these weird things like cloud berries but usual fruit are can be found in market and also i dont even eat blue berry cuz there us no blue berry here but i drink cold drink of blue berry

    • @GratDuForloradeArgumentet
      @GratDuForloradeArgumentet Před rokem

      Yeah I also thought of the gold of the forest directly, I wonder if that's something we just say in Sweden, cause that's what popped up in my head as well.

  • @Drapug7777
    @Drapug7777 Před 3 lety +406

    I can just imagine a border potrol in Finland asking him why do you come here for then he says berry's

    • @DarkLink1996.
      @DarkLink1996. Před 3 lety +29

      Probably wouldn't be the first they've heard that reason either

    • @user-zu3wq3lf3h
      @user-zu3wq3lf3h Před 3 lety

      what the fuck is potrol

    • @leinsanelyinsaneman7258
      @leinsanelyinsaneman7258 Před 3 lety +5

      @Rick Sanchez you know what he meant

    • @pfamilygal
      @pfamilygal Před 3 lety

      Patrol

    • @skolkor
      @skolkor Před 3 lety +6

      Wouldn't even be that rare. Every year northern Sweden gets a lot of people from SEA who are flown in to pick berries for a living. I assume it's the same in Finland.

  • @TheMuffinBagare
    @TheMuffinBagare Před 3 lety +519

    "It's addictive to find a place far from home, where something unfamiliar to me is just a part of life."
    As a Swede, yes, cloud berries are just a part of life.

    • @Reddotzebra
      @Reddotzebra Před 3 lety +8

      Can confirm, you can buy the jam everywhere when it's in season, and there's even a place nearby where you can pick these, unless someone else beats you to it.

    • @marcusaronsson8764
      @marcusaronsson8764 Před 3 lety +37

      He is barely able to find it meanwhile grandpa comes home with buckets filled with them

    • @zapshark9031
      @zapshark9031 Před 3 lety +16

      @@marcusaronsson8764 That's cause everyone keeps their foraging spot a secret. Like kantareller or in this case cloudberries.

    • @jordanpayne6838
      @jordanpayne6838 Před 3 lety +10

      Same here in Newfoundland accross the ocean, I sell them for 50$ a gallon. Usually pick around 20 gallons every season for some extra money.

    • @demoniack81
      @demoniack81 Před 2 lety

      @@jordanpayne6838 w-why would you sell fruit by volume though
      I can only assume you must be some kind of serial killer

  • @stianyttervik9070
    @stianyttervik9070 Před 3 lety +634

    My father warned me when I was young: It is one thing to sleep with another man's wife. That can be excused. It is an entirely different thing, to pick the cloudberries on another man's property.

    • @BaibaVulgaris
      @BaibaVulgaris Před 3 lety +3

      Lmaoo, pervs:)

    • @palipalli4348
      @palipalli4348 Před 3 lety +11

      It is and should be everyman's right.

    • @minibuns5397
      @minibuns5397 Před 3 lety +19

      The Alpha male does both at the same time

    • @corvusduluth
      @corvusduluth Před 3 lety +29

      @@minibuns5397 Alpha males get speared in the guts from ambush by 'cowardly' omegas. Something to think about.

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Před 3 lety +5

      @@palipalli4348 Not on someone's private property.

  • @naukumaija7056
    @naukumaija7056 Před 3 lety +32

    Thank you so much for showing the (desolate, lol) market square in Rovaniemi, I used to live right next to it, and seeing it made me feel very homesick now that I live in Helsinki.

  • @jojjo113
    @jojjo113 Před 3 lety +267

    In Sweden we call them "Forest gold".My favorite way to eat them is cold vanilla icecream with hot mashed cloudberries.

    • @todorminchev2123
      @todorminchev2123 Před 3 lety +11

      This sounds dope can you share a recipe !

    • @strawberrytiramisu
      @strawberrytiramisu Před 3 lety +47

      @@todorminchev2123 vanilla icecream from a freezer and cloudberries that have been mashed-

    • @Rzmnz
      @Rzmnz Před 3 lety +22

      @@todorminchev2123
      Take cloudberries, put in small pot, gently heat it up until it's steaming.
      Gently squish the berries in the pot with a spoon or a fork. Just enough so some bubbles pop and let out all that yum-yum juice.
      Take your ice-cream, place it in a bowl. For this I prefer just plain vanilla, because it's the berries I'm after, but heck, mix it up if you want to. Throw in some crackers, chocolate flakes. whatever... Only your imagination limits what you can combine.
      Pour the berries over the ice-cream.
      Enjoy with a cup of coffee and a shot of cloudberry liquer or punsch (not to be confused with punch)

    • @todorminchev2123
      @todorminchev2123 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Rzmnz this sounds delicious, unfortunately where i live i dont think they sell cloudberries as far as in aware atleast i did bought a Ikea jam from cloudberries and i definitely dont think its close to the real thing but word that work as an temporary alternative? Do i still have to heat it up or will it caramelise?

    • @ichhabe330
      @ichhabe330 Před 3 lety +3

      And if you want to bring that dessert to a whole new level, have a little dash of Cognac on top of it (or as much you think you deserve). Next stop, Nirvana.

  • @hamstersdailylife4938
    @hamstersdailylife4938 Před 3 lety +180

    As an English non-native I must mention that this is one of the most foreigner-friendly, easy-to-listen narrations I’ve ever heard :)
    And the content is intriguing as well! Subscribed. Now I will spend my days binge watching videos about exotic fruits.

  • @cometastral
    @cometastral Před 3 lety +92

    They're extremely easy to find them, just go to a plains biome and you'll literally harvest hundreds of them. Just watch out for Deathsquitoes

    • @sarabob8552
      @sarabob8552 Před 3 lety +2

      Wat

    • @sarabob8552
      @sarabob8552 Před 3 lety

      Deathsquiutos?

    • @cometastral
      @cometastral Před 3 lety +2

      @@sarabob8552 its a reference

    • @rolfmeurink5373
      @rolfmeurink5373 Před 3 lety +10

      I just scrolled down the comments wondering where the first Valheim reference would be. Congrats, it's yours.

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Před 2 lety

      @@sarabob8552 In North America, mosquitoes can be terrible.

  • @randomguydoes2901
    @randomguydoes2901 Před 2 lety +45

    this is by far the best jam you'll ever have. Try it warm with ice cream and/or waffles. Pancakes.
    Anyone who disagrees is flat out wrong.

  • @jonaskruckie1450
    @jonaskruckie1450 Před 3 lety +1031

    Northern russia is full of cloudberries, I could never get over the fact that it tastes like an old peoples couch to me though

    • @mattezuka1274
      @mattezuka1274 Před 3 lety +102

      The ones I've picked in alaska tasted rotten. But the jam they made was fantastic.

    • @thirstfast1025
      @thirstfast1025 Před 3 lety +22

      Hahaha! That's a great way to describe it!

    • @kvoltti
      @kvoltti Před 3 lety +3

      Matt Ezuka makes a nice liquor as well

    • @anniebur4603
      @anniebur4603 Před 3 lety +3

      В Якутии растёт морошка

    • @grayman1993
      @grayman1993 Před 3 lety +71

      So you were eating old people's couch before?

  • @PigeonCrash
    @PigeonCrash Před 3 lety +108

    I grew up in Norway and didn't realize that cloudberries were rare until I noticed I didn't know what they were called in English a few years back.
    Cloudberry cream might be my favorite dessert ever, but they're also great with just regular vanilla ice cream.

    • @magicpensel9548
      @magicpensel9548 Před 3 lety +10

      As a fellow Norwegian I was just sitting here thinking. They are rare? That can't be right. It's like a 15 min drive and then 10 min walk from my home to find them. I have soo easy access that it doesn't compute for them to be hard to find. Also Cloudberry cream is just the best. Well anything with Cloudberry in it is, in my opinion

    • @kendrahein45
      @kendrahein45 Před 3 lety +2

      I’m jealous. I want to try these and I want to go back to Norway(I have friends in Bergen) but I haven’t been able to yet.

    • @magnus4537
      @magnus4537 Před 3 lety

      As a fellow Norwegian, "Multekrem" is good af, and a must-have during Christmas!

  • @tomwinter2906
    @tomwinter2906 Před 3 lety +21

    "projectile vomiting sea-lions" had me laughing out loud - as an infant, i was such a sea-lion :-) and about 1964, I was in Helsinki, plus I love this channel!

  • @benvanzon3234
    @benvanzon3234 Před 3 lety +24

    21:10 hard to find a lot of them he says. Asked a Finnish friend if he maybe had a few. He showed me his freezer and showed that he had around ~2 buckets of the stuff lol.

    • @Meskarune
      @Meskarune Před rokem +1

      Finnish people go out for like 8 hours to pick berries. They are really insane about it.

  • @elsalaiho1699
    @elsalaiho1699 Před 3 lety +372

    I have to say, as a native Finn, it was a very interesting thing to see something as ordinary as cloudberry treated as an odd and exotic thing :D Yeah, sure, it's not something I'd have every day here either, and definitely more often as jam than fresh, but it doesn't really feel that rare. But I also think you did the right thing by trying to forage them! Yeah, if you just wanted to taste a berry, it was a waste of time (and to you probably also money), but just walking in the forest is a reward in itself. I rarely go intentionally to pick berries, although if I'm going to a forest in summertime when blueberries are ripe I might take a small box with me so I can pick what I come across, but I'm pretty sure that even the Finns who really intentionally go to pick berries for their own use really go because they enjoy spending time outdoors. Besides, a berry you picked by yourself is always going to taste better than store-bought, even if it's bitter and not quite ripe, just because it's something you did, yourself!
    Also, I would personally, if I went searching for cloudberries, rather look for the leaves first and only then see if there were any berries, bc otherwise you might miss berries that are covered or hidden by something in front of them, or you might look for them where there are no cloudberry plants. That's what my parents do, anyway (again, we don't really go out looking for berries but if we end up where we know something grows, we might see if we can find any).
    Also, congratulations. You, an American, have now travelled in Finland more than I, a Finn, ever have! I really want to go hiking in Lapland some day (I hear fall is really the best season for that, because there's less mosquitoes and other pesky insects than in summer, plus nature looks very gorgeous when everything is in its autumn colors, all yellow and orange and red), but it's far away and kinda expensive to go there, plus I don't really have supplies for proper hiking, couldn't set up a tent even if I had one, and I can't really make a fire so... for now it's just a dream

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +48

      Good tip on the leave spotting. I hope you get to lapland soon, it's well worth the journey.

    • @blackhole3407
      @blackhole3407 Před 3 lety +2

      hello from latvia! people here also pick cloudberries and make delicious jam, they are definetly not that rare. we call them bearberries

    • @alfepalfe
      @alfepalfe Před 3 lety +2

      @@blackhole3407 Hey in Sweden we call blackberries björnbär wich translates as bearberries.

    • @chuckmeister6897
      @chuckmeister6897 Před 3 lety +1

      Cloudberries are also very common in Northwest territory

    • @isilduur7848
      @isilduur7848 Před 3 lety +4

      I live in Norway and sometimes go outside to get cloudberries and come back with kilos of it

  • @cynthiajohnson6747
    @cynthiajohnson6747 Před 3 lety +875

    I know a berry maybe even more rare then cloudberries. They are called nagoon berries they have a lot in common with cloud berries but are a deep red-purple color.

    • @hotdogstandman
      @hotdogstandman Před 3 lety +22

      chhhiiiiiillllllll

    • @erikjohnson9223
      @erikjohnson9223 Před 3 lety +65

      A few companies ( I bought mine from Indiana Berry) are now selling hybrid Arctic raspberries, so in the right climate you can grow your own. Just remember that like apples and unlike regular red, black, or purple raspberries, they won't self-pollinate, so you need 2+ different varieties. So far in continental Z 5b (Illinois), they have survived 2 years but scarcely grown and not flowered for me. Probably not competitive this far south. Some of that may be my poor gardening and indecision--do I need partial shade from companions and weeds to keep them cool in summer, or do I need to be ruthless because otherwise literally every other plant will outcompete them?

    • @Gorthuba
      @Gorthuba Před 3 lety +38

      I have these growing in my garden, they taste great! Something between a wild strawberry and normal raspberry in taste. They're real easy to grow and increase in number quickly, so you only need a couple of plants and within a few years you'll have a whole ton of them all over.

    • @cynthiajohnson6747
      @cynthiajohnson6747 Před 3 lety +1

      Cool! I just planted some in my garden. I’m hoping they do well

    • @hannayoung9657
      @hannayoung9657 Před 3 lety +7

      Arctic raspberry as the other name for this and they grow in the same area as cloudberries.

  • @pale9819
    @pale9819 Před 3 lety +19

    We have so many names for these in Finland like lakka, hilla and suomuurain and I love cloudberry jam. In fact my mother lived in Jakomäki a few years ago and it has a small forest where cloudberries grow.

  • @Jimbo_McBacon
    @Jimbo_McBacon Před 3 lety +49

    There is a kind of light-headed mania that befalls some people during the "White Nights" of midsommer, that takes place when you can't get much sleep and the body's biorhythms get thrown out of whack. The opposite happens in the dead of winter in the arctic when lack of daylight causes depression, lethargy and other psychological and physiological problems.

    • @kexchoklad4konsum
      @kexchoklad4konsum Před 3 lety +3

      Ever heard of blinds?

    • @davidlane8811
      @davidlane8811 Před 3 lety +5

      I’m feeling that right now in Alaska. I’m tired all the time because I have this constant mania to take advantage of the daylight. It makes the beginning of winter nice, because we can finally relax!

  • @griffinc3263
    @griffinc3263 Před 3 lety +901

    Love these really well written, in depth fruit documentaries. Well done!

  • @Gorthuba
    @Gorthuba Před 3 lety +772

    If you ever visit Norway I know of several places in the forest right above my house where cloudberries grow like thick blankets of golden orange on the hillside. I also have arctic bramble/nagoonberry in the garden which I would mail for review, though I suspect they wouldn't survive the journey. They're pretty great, the taste is something between a wild strawberry and a raspberry. There's plenty of black crowberry around too, though you have to forage it, plus stone bramble, bog blueberry, hackberry, black currant and lingonberry. There's a lot of sea buckthorn growing at the end of two rivers here as well, if you ever want to try them fresh. I just planted three of those bushes in the garden this year.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +194

      Thanks so much for the offer. The arctic bramble is high on my list of fruit I have to try. At some point I plan on doing another trip to find it.. it'll probably be a couple years though until that can happen. When is it typically in season?

    • @mrminer071166
      @mrminer071166 Před 3 lety +16

      Did a Norwegian National Jamboree; lived on Knaakebrod and various berry jams for two weeks. Such good memories.

    • @GeneralArmorus
      @GeneralArmorus Před 3 lety +8

      Is this the beginning of a beautiful next series?

    • @Gorthuba
      @Gorthuba Před 3 lety +63

      @@WeirdExplorer I have them growing opposite of some wild strawberries which ripen at about the same time, so around july-august if I recall correctly. August is probably the best, so that there are for sure plenty of nice and ripe ones. They don't grow wild where I live, though they're found in the two northernmost regions of Norway. Far more common in Finland though, from what I've heard.

    • @saethman
      @saethman Před 3 lety +1

      Oh, make him do lingonberries! muahaha Lingonberry&whipped cream, "yum" lol

  • @thegaminpianistccc3580
    @thegaminpianistccc3580 Před 3 lety +112

    'the cheese squeaks when you eat it'
    that is literally one of my worst fears

    • @henningbartels6245
      @henningbartels6245 Před 3 lety +15

      The cheese is not very flavourful but squeaking makes all the fun.

    • @thefoxmoonlight
      @thefoxmoonlight Před 3 lety +29

      That means its fresh :P
      Or has a mouse in it.

    • @mullisaukko423
      @mullisaukko423 Před 3 lety +4

      @@henningbartels6245 That's why you add the cloudberries, to give it more flavour!

    • @MagS258
      @MagS258 Před 3 lety +2

      It is extremely chewy and kind of hard to put into words. I want to say rubbery but that's not quite it either.

    • @henningbartels6245
      @henningbartels6245 Před 3 lety

      @@MagS258 it's not hard - maybe stiff.

  • @superlitin1
    @superlitin1 Před 3 lety +7

    So happy to have grown up with cloudberries every year. Spent a lot of the autumn time harvesting them with my mom, out in the marshy mountains of Norway, for jams and such for winter. It's incredibly sweet and my absolute favourite berry.

  • @Magmafrost13
    @Magmafrost13 Před 3 lety +368

    - youtube recommends this video to me
    - it seems really interesting
    - its half an hour long
    - there's 499 prior episodes
    Oh no Im going to lose *weeks* to this show, arent I?

  • @maxjansson3672
    @maxjansson3672 Před 3 lety +160

    As a Swede, I had no idea cloudberries were so rare. They literally grow everywhere here. Fun fact we call them Hjortron!

    • @andreasjensvold9881
      @andreasjensvold9881 Před 3 lety +13

      norwegian, not rare at all, multe

    • @ernomalmikankare6301
      @ernomalmikankare6301 Před 3 lety +6

      Finnish, not rare, we call them Lakka

    • @filipolofsson
      @filipolofsson Před 3 lety

      Hjortron

    • @snailsaredumb9412
      @snailsaredumb9412 Před 3 lety +12

      American, not rare at all, because we have no clue what these are so we don't call them anything...

    • @jonahlindhe756
      @jonahlindhe756 Před 3 lety +2

      Jag tror att de växer i massor där de trivs. Jag är från Skåne och har aldrig sett färska hjortron.

  • @embers8732
    @embers8732 Před 3 lety +8

    This is the first video ive seen from you and its all i needed in order to subscribe. "A geek that likes fruit" if thats what people think then they dont know how to enjoy the simple things in life. You are living my dream and i may even consider you as a motivation to seek out doing things that bring me peace and happiness

  • @MatildaV1980
    @MatildaV1980 Před 2 lety +4

    Pickning cloudberries with my grandparents here in the north of Sweden was a recurring summer adventure throughout my childhood, and this video brought back so many happy memories! I’m glad you got to experience the Nordic summer midnight sun. We take it for granted, but it’s actually almost magic.

  • @RememberYourSafeword
    @RememberYourSafeword Před 3 lety +286

    my man actually travelled across the world just to find a berry. Respect.

    • @snailsaredumb9412
      @snailsaredumb9412 Před 3 lety +1

      Well cloudberries can go for a few hundred dollars fresh, probably cheaper to fly there, eat 1 berry, and leave, than buy them on ebay

    • @silverbullet5083
      @silverbullet5083 Před 3 lety +1

      @@snailsaredumb9412 probably not considering how much it costs to fly

    • @xibzz3907
      @xibzz3907 Před 3 lety

      Bro what are the odds, I finished watching the Ridonculous Race like a week ago. Also, I think I might remember your account posting a comment on one of the episodes, but maybe I am remembering it wrong.

  • @EncompassingChaos6
    @EncompassingChaos6 Před 3 lety +358

    So, I didn't know that cloudberries exist, but I now know where you can get some in the US. There are some growing along the trail to Cascade Falls in Pembroke, VA. It is the trail to the left.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +89

      nice discovery!

    • @binkao2938
      @binkao2938 Před 3 lety +20

      Just don’t confuse them with salmonberries

    • @MarcoNegrisEye
      @MarcoNegrisEye Před 3 lety +17

      @@binkao2938 yeah I would be more inclined to say those are salmonberry. Which are beautiful fruit themselves. I discovered them growing in Aberdeen, Scotland of all places!

    • @freehat9075
      @freehat9075 Před 3 lety +3

      @@binkao2938 are they not the same? Live in Alaska and we call them salmon berries, and look the same

    • @jlhumor1565
      @jlhumor1565 Před 3 lety +7

      I'm from the US and visited Finland and Russia a few years ago and visited that exact market. Wish I saw this video first so I could have tried this elusive cloudberry fruit.

  • @_LeMoth_
    @_LeMoth_ Před 3 lety +9

    I've been eating cloudberries since I was 1 year old, my parents would just place me on top of a blanket laid down on the marshes and I would just sit there and eat all the berries I could see. All the while my parents took a walk around the area.

  • @karenlewis4142
    @karenlewis4142 Před 3 lety +10

    Wow! It's so flat there. 7:00. Such a cool looking berry. I'd love to go to Finland.

  • @mintundeer
    @mintundeer Před 3 lety +111

    Even more rare fruit would be mesimarja (Rubus arcticus, the Arctic bramble or Arctic raspberry). They are very hard to find and when you do, the yields are even lower than cloudberry. I have never actually tasted the arctic raspberry fresh but in syrups and jams it is incredibly tasty.

    • @ragnhildlautz7165
      @ragnhildlautz7165 Před 2 lety +10

      They are getting rarer the Rubus Arcticus 😔 And do not ripen every year. But the taste, the taste is so good that l can’t describe it😍

    • @Divig
      @Divig Před rokem +4

      Åkerbär taste so good!
      The wild ones are tastier than the domesticated ones by far.

  • @piros44
    @piros44 Před 3 lety +308

    They call them bake apples in Newfoundland after the French question: baie q’apelle? What berry is this? turned into bakeapple.

    • @acek2016
      @acek2016 Před 3 lety +23

      Oh wow, that’s kinda funny

    • @abramthiessen8749
      @abramthiessen8749 Před 3 lety +13

      Kind of like the story behind inconnu fish. From the french word for "unknown".

    • @MUNGRYSOLDIER
      @MUNGRYSOLDIER Před 3 lety +3

      I was wondering how they came up with that name. We took home a jar of bakeapple jam from NFLD.

    • @Tintan54725
      @Tintan54725 Před 3 lety +1

      Newfoundland eh

    • @naufalluthfi9123
      @naufalluthfi9123 Před 3 lety +1

      is it like the "i dont know ", marsupial from australia then

  • @alexnoyle
    @alexnoyle Před 11 měsíci +2

    I think this is your best video. A masterpiece. The narrative is so well done.

  • @shelltor2398
    @shelltor2398 Před 3 lety +8

    "Land of the midnight sun"
    Bro that sounds so cool

  • @foobar6846
    @foobar6846 Před 3 lety +196

    It's funny to see someone so excited about something you dreaded as a kid: picking cloudberries. 😅

    • @NustingButsErrday
      @NustingButsErrday Před 3 lety +6

      What is that supposed to mean? You're saying you've had so much of this rare fruit that you've grown a distaste for merely the act of picking them?

    • @papi9305
      @papi9305 Před 3 lety +69

      @@NustingButsErrday Any routine can be a chore to a kid, to the poster, cloudberries are probably nothing special at all, they grew around them all the time.

    • @jdubya9130
      @jdubya9130 Před 3 lety +8

      They’re all around in parts of the far north

    • @wfcoaker1398
      @wfcoaker1398 Před 3 lety +53

      @@NustingButsErrday I'm from northern Newfoundland and bakeapples are common here. Picking a winter's stock of bakeapples is just something we do in late August. But picking them is hard work. First, they grow in bogs where the ground is wet. Second they grow kind of seperated from each other, so you cant really find a patch and sit for 5 or 20.minutes and pick them, even if you don't mind sitting on wet ground. So, you're basically bent over picking berries one by one. If it's not windy, the black flies and mosquitoes are a torture. My family would go bakeapple picking on windy days when I was a kid, perhaps one or 2 days at most. We'd bring sandwiches and make a day of it. We'd have a few gallons by the end of the day, for jam and pies for the winter. But now that I'm older, my back can't take it. I buy them now. Lol.

    • @user-vg2fm7zy4s
      @user-vg2fm7zy4s Před 3 lety +11

      Wf Coaker - thanks for sharing this info with us! Lived in Canada but never heard of bakeapples (cloudberries). Back in the US and got this video recommended to me.. all so interesting and informative + u +

  • @glenkoko3649
    @glenkoko3649 Před 3 lety +60

    Here in Sweden where the foraging culture is very prevalent I agree that when you are picking Berrys, especially cloudberry, every single time you find a berry it feels like finding a treasure, its very satisfying and rewarding picking raspberries, blueberries, etc. Im usually not into this kind of mind-set but I would think this very special feeling stems from foraging being literally what humans have evolved to do, we are made to enjoy it and experience it!

  • @cyborg3176
    @cyborg3176 Před 2 lety +2

    I just watched a 27 minute video on a fruit the size of maybe a single piece of popcorn.
    It was worth it.

  • @grinch56
    @grinch56 Před 3 lety +27

    Wowee i live close to rovaniemi and even closer to ranua. 2020 might have been a terrible year but it was a good cloudberry year from what i've heard (too lazy to go myselft). My birthday's coming soon and i'm hoping to have a cloudberry cake :)

    • @cvspvr
      @cvspvr Před 2 lety

      happy birthday!

    • @grinch56
      @grinch56 Před 2 lety

      @@cvspvr damn thanks (I had cloudberry cake again this year)

  • @arpakyna
    @arpakyna Před 3 lety +39

    Growing up in the Finnish Lapland, I know of places where the cloudberries grow in a thick blanket, but those places are guarded family secrets and most families have their own.
    These days, though, hundreds or thousands of vietnamese come here to gather cloudberries, sell them to local shops/restaurants and use the money to buy chainsaws and such utilities to bring back and improve their home country. There's enough land here for everyone to pick their share as long as you don't mind going out of your way from the roads a bit.

    • @thebaseelanthebasavagam220
    • @chloea8462
      @chloea8462 Před 3 lety

      We’re in Sweden and it’s much the same here. We have a family patch, the location has been a well kept secret for generations.

  • @saintbrush4398
    @saintbrush4398 Před 3 lety +457

    Finding a cloud berry is like finding a shiny pokemon.

    • @davidjames6788
      @davidjames6788 Před 3 lety +1

      not at all go to Alaska

    • @goobdraw
      @goobdraw Před 3 lety

      how so??

    • @treymtz
      @treymtz Před 3 lety +1

      @@goobdraw You got to go to specific regions of the world for your best chances and carefully look in niche areas for the best odds.

    • @SDB_Dev
      @SDB_Dev Před 3 lety

      @@treymtz They are everywhere where I live lol, I can just outside and get a bucket of Cloudberries.

    • @natpeterson5689
      @natpeterson5689 Před 3 lety +1

      Stephen Damm Bøås exactly, and we don’t... that’s literally the whole point of his comment. -_-

  • @miraclenyx254
    @miraclenyx254 Před 3 lety +3

    Aww this is amazing, a youtuber dedicated to find fruits and educate us at the same time. This kind of fruits are like finding a treasure chest hahaha

  • @fasting_with_teresa7944

    I wanted to leave an elaborate comment but, I'll just say you gained another follower. a true service to humanity!!!

  • @SmexyHorse
    @SmexyHorse Před 3 lety +1501

    Cloudberry: "One Of The World's Most Elusive Fruits"
    Me: looks in grandma's freezer
    Freezer: Do you want cloudberry or cloudberry?
    Being swedish/scandinavian has it's perks

    • @carbonbeaker409
      @carbonbeaker409 Před 3 lety +39

      Alaskan too

    • @rickym7380
      @rickym7380 Před 3 lety +45

      same thing in finland

    • @rickym7380
      @rickym7380 Před 3 lety +38

      also i recognise that cloudberry jam he showed and have got the same one in my cupboard EDIT: also that cloudberry cheese thing is nice ive had it

    • @TheSexiestGoblin
      @TheSexiestGoblin Před 3 lety +30

      When I saw this video I was confused because I have some norwegian family and they send my grandma cloudberry jam every Christmas so I was confused that it was so rare

    • @The0neWhoCares
      @The0neWhoCares Před 3 lety +12

      Freezer: or you want another berry called cloudberry

  • @Lot_2023
    @Lot_2023 Před 3 lety +156

    And don't forget Snozzberries. They're even harder to find.

  • @SonofSarkar
    @SonofSarkar Před 9 měsíci +1

    Your finest yet, Jared! I come back to this once in a while. Almost therapeutic to me.

  • @zyriak
    @zyriak Před 2 lety +1

    Hi from Norway.
    Fantastic video. And I must say I liked the fact that you actually went all the way to actually pick the fruit in nature yourself (instead of just reviewing them from the farmers market). It's all about the feeling when roaming the nature and finding these little treasures (as you called them).
    Two thumbs up. Love your exploring videos, so please keep it up.

  • @lightlysalted3562
    @lightlysalted3562 Před 3 lety +219

    In alaska these are called “salmonberries” because if their color. Not all that uncommon there either actually. I know plenty of people that make jam out of them

    • @lightlysalted3562
      @lightlysalted3562 Před 3 lety +7

      @Peter Torbay perhaps we are just referring to them by the wrong name. Town dialect perhaps. I suppose. I have never seen anything like you are describing. Everything berry-related that i know of is low and grows at tundra-height

    • @tiny_paul
      @tiny_paul Před 3 lety +15

      You’re both right. In parts of Alaska, cloudberry is called “low-bush salmonberry” or sometimes just salmonberry because they look similar and both belong to the same genus. The taste is different though and they’re both very tasty berries!

    • @carbonbeaker409
      @carbonbeaker409 Před 3 lety +2

      Yup, they are both great

    • @k8eekatt
      @k8eekatt Před 3 lety +11

      In Oregon, we call an upright bush, with apricot colored druplets, similar to a raspberry, Salmon Berry.

    • @Etubnuel
      @Etubnuel Před 3 lety +3

      They go very well with smoked salmon and some sour cream also!

  • @Eralen00
    @Eralen00 Před 3 lety +189

    "Go down small paths" would be a suspicious piece of advice in literally any other part of the world other than Scandinavia lol

    • @acek2016
      @acek2016 Před 3 lety +2

      Lmao yes

    • @anomynus
      @anomynus Před 3 lety +3

      only urban areas really

    • @mustanaamiotto3812
      @mustanaamiotto3812 Před 3 lety +7

      finland isn't scandinavia

    • @Merido
      @Merido Před 3 lety +5

      @@mustanaamiotto3812 oooooh snap, I haven't heard anyone care about that for *ages*

    • @mustanaamiotto3812
      @mustanaamiotto3812 Před 3 lety

      @@Merido most people do where i'm from. we don't like foreigners thinking we're just swedes with weird language.

  • @georginahagenhnatiuk662
    @georginahagenhnatiuk662 Před 2 lety +7

    WOW. What a reallllllllly cool channel. Love it! My family in Norway traditionally harvest foods and makes fresh berry compote, and also preserves it. Cloudberry preserve is called Moltesyltetøy over there. They eat berries with almost every breakfast and dinner like a sauce, and on top of desserts drizzled with alcohol. They use all types of berries. However, this particular berry is divine. I found it tasted like apricot brandy when warmed up. They often serve it on reindeer with carmelized sweet cheese gravy called Gusbrandsdalenost saus. I was in heaven over there with that food, culture and nature. I would like to move to Norway. You and your girlfriend must have had so much fun in Finland. Very cool. You are a very unique person I have to say. I loved the Juustoleipa tasting and review. So cool. Thanks for taking us on the tour with you.

  • @PianoMeetsMetal
    @PianoMeetsMetal Před 3 lety +12

    "The Truffle of the fruits"
    Five Star Chef:

  • @gdvortex2169
    @gdvortex2169 Před 3 lety +215

    I love that Finland gets noticed even once. Finland is always in the shade of Norway and Sweden.

    • @Williamfuchs420
      @Williamfuchs420 Před 3 lety +9

      Hard to get noticed when its a invention of Russia and Japan and don’t really exist. What next your gonna tell me the birds are real gullible ones

    • @gdvortex2169
      @gdvortex2169 Před 3 lety +15

      @@Williamfuchs420 just shut up

    • @Williamfuchs420
      @Williamfuchs420 Před 3 lety +4

      @@gdvortex2169 oh jeez i was just joking lol

    • @gdvortex2169
      @gdvortex2169 Před 3 lety +9

      @@Williamfuchs420 sorry. I've just had a rough time today. i had spent over 40 h making a thing in my friends server and then he just deleted everything. sorry

    • @Williamfuchs420
      @Williamfuchs420 Před 3 lety +3

      @@gdvortex2169 its fine man i get wanting to tell idiots on here to shut the hell up. Probably not the best time to be spreading these insane theories

  • @yesno4628
    @yesno4628 Před 3 lety +131

    These are what the "i found my berries" guy was talking about

  • @DevI-vl7gp
    @DevI-vl7gp Před 3 lety +16

    "How many times can we ignore what we're looking for to add more places to our tax write-off, before the IRS notices and raids our home?"

  • @PKMNmastercass
    @PKMNmastercass Před 3 lety +6

    So these were the berries I saw back when I lived in Long Island. (that was 12 years ago when I was 10).

  • @filipefmelo
    @filipefmelo Před 3 lety +222

    Alright! 500! I'm almost done with all of them. Took a while but a pleasant while.
    This episode, so far, takes the cake. This is very close to a Netflix episode on a fruit based series. Well done Jared! Please keep on making great stuff. I'm upping my Patreon backing.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +19

      Thanks so much Filipe!

    • @GeneralArmorus
      @GeneralArmorus Před 3 lety +1

      From here, as J starts to experience the lack of new fruit, maybe a lot more episodes will feel special.

  • @chiliblue1945
    @chiliblue1945 Před 3 lety +191

    I feel somewhat lucky that these litterally grow in my Grandma’s backyard in northern Norway

    • @siiluviilu
      @siiluviilu Před 3 lety +11

      Same they grow right by my house in estonian

    • @jobiplakkajose4555
      @jobiplakkajose4555 Před 3 lety +6

      @@siiluviilu Estonia sounds a place where a Disney Princess lives lol

    • @nekomimicatears
      @nekomimicatears Před 3 lety +1

      @@jobiplakkajose4555 yes

    • @kokko9507
      @kokko9507 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm even luckier and happier since I get these in Finland.

  • @vincentprice9156
    @vincentprice9156 Před 3 lety +1

    This was easily one of my favorite video's by the Weird Explorer and I'm not sure exactly why. Very well done!

  • @jamalsalads
    @jamalsalads Před 3 lety

    I’m finally glad your channel is getting more recognition! I have been enjoying your videos for years

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Před 3 lety +1290

    I would so love to try this fruit

    • @danu4763
      @danu4763 Před 3 lety +57

      Its very good i like it on vanilla ice cream too (i am finnish)

    • @ritter_cracker
      @ritter_cracker Před 3 lety +68

      I would say its an aquired taste. Its far from the tastiest berry in the world. Eating it straight from the ground is not really good at all. Every year, me and my family always pick maybe 5 to 10 liters of these berries, and everything becomes jam. Thats when it gets somewhat tasty. Its best on pancakes and also microwaved for 30 seconds and then put on high quality vanilla ice cream.

    • @kalexandersen8950
      @kalexandersen8950 Před 3 lety +20

      Its not Even rare here in norway

    • @n0namesowhatblerp362
      @n0namesowhatblerp362 Před 3 lety +2

      Go to ikea.

    • @user-giganiga546
      @user-giganiga546 Před 3 lety

      @@danu4763 hyvä

  • @jadefox6167
    @jadefox6167 Před 3 lety +66

    I feel at any moment a Elf is going to materialize out of the woods to mock you:
    "Do you get to eat the Cloudberry fruit very often? Oh of course not what was I thinking"

  • @LilNess99
    @LilNess99 Před 3 lety +25

    Me being a swede: walks outside at my grandmas house, "oo a cloudberry"

  • @yourikhan4425
    @yourikhan4425 Před 3 lety +3

    This video reminded me how much I miss travels.

  • @GoTouchSumGrass.
    @GoTouchSumGrass. Před 3 lety +87

    CZcams doesn’t deserve to air this man’s content. He should be featured in a TV show.

    • @xen_is_on
      @xen_is_on Před 3 lety +2

      He had us in the first half not gonna lie

  • @eddpumpkinboi4652
    @eddpumpkinboi4652 Před 3 lety +24

    I like his "Fine I'll do it myself" way of doing things

  • @tarawebster6797
    @tarawebster6797 Před 2 lety

    I loved this video. My favorite part was the last 2 minutes. It was awesome to see you explaining your current situation. You were really living in the moment!

  • @kyrab7914
    @kyrab7914 Před 3 lety +1

    First of all, I'm glad you included music man from the cloudberry festival. I have no idea what he was singing, but I love that music kind of transcends that barrier. Secondly, this is cute af, I'm glad y'all had a good time on your trip :) And lastly, BONUS PUPPIES!

  • @tyffis9525
    @tyffis9525 Před 3 lety +65

    At first I was like "oooh cloudberries I wonder what those are"
    Then I realized you were just talking about hjortron. They're pretty tasty though.

    • @apolion3309
      @apolion3309 Před 3 lety +5

      same

    • @Vivian-rg2pg
      @Vivian-rg2pg Před 3 lety +1

      Wait you guys have had these before?

    • @onefingerdeathpunch4175
      @onefingerdeathpunch4175 Před 3 lety +8

      ​@@Vivian-rg2pg There are aot of them in Norway, Sweden and Finland. I didnt even know they were rare until now lol

    • @Vivian-rg2pg
      @Vivian-rg2pg Před 3 lety

      That’s cool

    • @Vivian-rg2pg
      @Vivian-rg2pg Před 3 lety

      I don’t even live in America but I’ve never heard of hjortron

  • @thequeenofmags
    @thequeenofmags Před 3 lety +132

    SO THAT'S WHAT THEY'RE CALLED IN ENGLISH

  • @TheItalianoAssassino
    @TheItalianoAssassino Před 2 lety +1

    Beautiful message at the end.

  • @findit6333
    @findit6333 Před 2 lety

    Never heard of a cloud berry. I will now progressively watch all your videos, Knight of the Fruit.

  • @awetistic5295
    @awetistic5295 Před 3 lety +263

    Trying cloudberries is one of my new life goals now.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Před 3 lety +42

      Its a good one to have :)

    • @WheresTheSauce
      @WheresTheSauce Před 3 lety +5

      Idk i tried em. You're not missing much IMO

    • @JP-hs2li
      @JP-hs2li Před 3 lety +33

      @@WheresTheSauce As a finn who have aten them alot I think they are the best berry.

    • @WheresTheSauce
      @WheresTheSauce Před 3 lety +5

      @@JP-hs2li no one cares about your nationality bud

    • @CadPlaysMC
      @CadPlaysMC Před 3 lety +3

      They grow here in newfoundland canada if you ever wanted to visit the most eastern part of canada

  • @ghost_clutch_yt2883
    @ghost_clutch_yt2883 Před 3 lety +121

    this is the most dedicated, wholesome, and underrated chanel on earth

  • @apriltaylor1003
    @apriltaylor1003 Před 3 lety

    Totally get the thrill of the berry hunt! Thanks for allowing your fans to travel along with you on all your many fruit adventures! :)

  • @maarit9529
    @maarit9529 Před 3 lety +3

    I have a distinct childhood memory from the SINGLE time I went with relatives to pick cloudberries in northern Finland. It was on a swamp, everything was both wet and uncomfortably warm, mosquitoes everywhere, I'd eaten cloudberries before (preserves and frozen) and thought they were kind of meh anyway. But sitting on a little hillock, bored and eating them straight of the plant, I recall thinking "huh, they actually taste good".
    tldr I'm glad Mr. Rydelek got to taste cloudberries at their best too. : )
    And even rarer nordic berry, that I've only eaten as a child a few times when we used to find individual plants once in a blue moon near where my grandparents lived, would be rubus arcticus (arctic bramble/raspberry or apparently sometimes called nagoon in the US)? It was many years ago since I ate them but I recall them having a very unique taste. Called mesimarja (honeyberry) in Finnish, and as far as I recall it was sweet but also refreshing. Never seen them sold anywhere however, don't think they can be found in sufficient quantities. For flavouring at most.

  • @ImaginaryMdA
    @ImaginaryMdA Před 3 lety +107

    "They are sitting there with a big bowl of strawberries." *shakes fist*

  • @havrekli
    @havrekli Před 3 lety +48

    We often call the cloudberrys or the yellow funnel chanterelles 'forest gold' here in Sweden.

    • @SkullZie
      @SkullZie Před 3 lety

      Ja, jag brukar säga det när jag glömmer bort vad det faktiskt heter

  • @darthsionreven
    @darthsionreven Před 3 lety +5

    “Walking through trying to find wet spots “ That’s me walking through life.