Berry Patch Secrets

Is there any other region where berry picking is a tradition? Patches are kept secret. Super secret. As in not brushing out roads and hiking into secret. Kind of sounds like pot growing.
We pick huckleberries next month. That's when they ripen up in the woods. I've been picking off and on since age 5. Nowdays, we have more problems to deal with. The huckleberry has become popular in restaraunts, candles, lotions, etc. We now have vans full of commercial pickers to hide our spots from. A couple years ago, I returned to my old reliable patch only to find 3 large van loads of pickers stripping it. I have abandoned that one.
I agree with the local tribes' beliefs that huckleberries are special and shouldn't be sold. I freeze some and use them for pies around the holidays. I can berries and give those away as special gifts. The berries are rare and special.
I was out checking my new super secret got to drive in on a horrible road then walk in a ways, then give the password to the troll...just kidding on the last part. The brush was in bloom and the bees were working.
I'd like to camp out in my Little Guy, but the roads are so bad that just driving up can be hard. So, that is out of the question. I will commute. The formerly secret patch used to have a good road to it. So good that my folks could tow a large fifth wheel trailer up there and camp. Now it has waterbars that make it hard to drive in unless you have pretty high clearance.
Huckleberry patches are becoming fewer. Pickers are becoming more numerous.
We used to have a good, reliable source of new patches from clearcuts on the National Forest here. That practice has stopped, the last clearcuts were done in the 1990s and the trees are filling in. The Tribal People used to burn the areas in the correct elevations, but of course, that stopped a long time ago. Scrubby lodgepole has taken over a lot of that country.
So, we hunt and find and keep our patches secret. I can't wait.
We pick huckleberries next month. That's when they ripen up in the woods. I've been picking off and on since age 5. Nowdays, we have more problems to deal with. The huckleberry has become popular in restaraunts, candles, lotions, etc. We now have vans full of commercial pickers to hide our spots from. A couple years ago, I returned to my old reliable patch only to find 3 large van loads of pickers stripping it. I have abandoned that one.
I agree with the local tribes' beliefs that huckleberries are special and shouldn't be sold. I freeze some and use them for pies around the holidays. I can berries and give those away as special gifts. The berries are rare and special.
I was out checking my new super secret got to drive in on a horrible road then walk in a ways, then give the password to the troll...just kidding on the last part. The brush was in bloom and the bees were working.
I'd like to camp out in my Little Guy, but the roads are so bad that just driving up can be hard. So, that is out of the question. I will commute. The formerly secret patch used to have a good road to it. So good that my folks could tow a large fifth wheel trailer up there and camp. Now it has waterbars that make it hard to drive in unless you have pretty high clearance.
Huckleberry patches are becoming fewer. Pickers are becoming more numerous.
We used to have a good, reliable source of new patches from clearcuts on the National Forest here. That practice has stopped, the last clearcuts were done in the 1990s and the trees are filling in. The Tribal People used to burn the areas in the correct elevations, but of course, that stopped a long time ago. Scrubby lodgepole has taken over a lot of that country.
So, we hunt and find and keep our patches secret. I can't wait.