Steve Brill

Steve Brill
Born New York City, New York
Other names Wildman
Occupation Naturalist, environmental educator, author
Years active 1981 to present
Known for New York City park forager
Website http://www.wildmanstevebrill.com/

Steve "Wildman" Brill is an American naturalist, environmental educator and author. He gained notoriety in 1986, when he was arrested in New York City's Central Park for eating a dandelion.

Education

Brill was a pre-med student at George Washington University.[1] He later changed his major to psychology, but learned botany, foraging, and gourmet vegan cooking on his own, after college.[1]

Career

Brill has been taking people on nature walks in New York's Central Park, and parks throughout the Greater NY area, since 1982.[2] Brill says his tours had the approval of the parks department until they began refusing to issue him a weed-picking permit in 1983.[2] He gained notoriety in 1986 when he was arrested by two undercover park rangers and charged with criminal mischief after allegedly eating a dandelion he had picked in New York's Central Park.[2] Brill was released with a "desk-appearance ticket" pending trial.[3] According to Brill, the New York City Parks Department "dropped the charges and hired me to lead the same tours I was busted for" until a change in park administration in 1990.[4]

In 1994, Brill published his book: Identifying and Harvesting Edible and Medicinal Plants in Wild (and Not So Wild) Places which explains how to identify and forage for edible or medicinal plants.[5] In 2001, Brill published The Wild Vegetarian Cookbook: A Forager's Culinary Guide; a 500 recipe wild and natural foods cookbook.[6] In 2008, he released his self-published "Shoots and Greens of Early Spring in Northeastern North America, and in 2014, he released his self-published "Foraging with Kids."

In 2011, Brill released an iPhone app called Wild Edibles Forage with Winterroot, which gives information on "250 common North American plants".[7] They also created an Android version. Both applications feature Brill's edible plant photos, his botanical illustrations, and hundreds of his vegan whole-foods recipes.[8]

Brill is reported to be the foremost expert in The Northeast foraging and works with nature centers, schools, day camps, libraries, parks departments, land trusts, nature centers, museums, health food stores, farmer's markets, teaching farms, and other organizations, to educate the public on foraging in the Northeastern US. Many of his tours are co-led by his foraging expert daughter, Violet Brill (born 2004).[9]

References

  1. 1 2 Clark, Kenneth (September 23 1985) "Wild Man", Chicago Tribune
  2. 1 2 3 Harney, James (3 April 1986). "Don't Eat The Dandelions, Arrested Ecologist Ordered". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
  3. Brill, Steve. "Wild Foods and the Environment". Raw Foods News Magazine. Archived from the original on 26 June 2007. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
  4. Kharakh, Ben (August 13, 2007) The Wildman: Steve Brill, Naturalist Archived 2012-05-15 at the Wayback Machine. Gothamist, retrieved March 26 2012
  5. Steve Brill; Evelyn Dean, (1994) New York : Hearst Books, retrieved March 26 2012
  6. Brill, Steve (2002) Boston, Mass. : Harvard Common Press retrieved March 26 2012
  7. Miller, Jenny (April 8, 2011) Plants App Hits iPhones Grubb Street New York, New York magazine, retrieved March 26, 2012
  8. Driver, Blake (October 31 2011)Pick Pockets Time (Vol. 178, No. 17|2011)
  9. Mathew, Kirsten (2012)The Man Who Ate New York: Wildman Steve Brill New York Post, retrieved March 26 2012
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