How to Find Ginseng Root
Instructions
-
-
1
Search for ginseng root in habitats where wild ginseng grows. Wild ginseng grows in shady forest floors where there are ample organic nutrients and calcium deposits. Wild ginseng is found in forests throughout the eastern United States.
-
2
Time your search for ginseng beginning in late spring and stretching through summer and into September. Ginseng roots send up stalks with clusters of five-toothed leaflets. Every spring these stalks produce flowers through the summer and pods of red seeds in the fall. The older the root, the more stalks it will send up. The leaves turn opalescent yellow in late September.
-
3
Smell the air for signs of ginseng. The plant's yellow-green flowers smell like lily of the valley.
-
4
Avoid areas that have oak growing in them. Ginseng grows well in areas seeded with poplar and sassafras, but do not grow near oak trees.
-
5
Watch for companion plants that grow well near ginseng, including similar-looking plants such as sarsaparilla and cohosh. Because these plants look similar to ginseng, they are sometimes called fool's seng or seng pointer.
-
6
Look uphill from immature ginseng plants. Immature plants will grow from seeds that roll downhill from a mature plant.
-
1