The index lists the following pages: - The grapevine - The tomato plant - The ephedra bush - The cannabis plant - The row of cannabis plants - The celery plant - The wild wheat plant - The carrot plant - The blue mushroom - The garlic plant - The bitterwood bush - The coffee tree - The date palm - The benzoin tree - The camphor tree - The dwarf apple tree - The macadamia tree - The rotfruit tree - The rubber tree - The palm tree - The fever tree - The tupelo tree - The banana plant - The olive tree - The scandalously thin ficus - The echinocactus - The peyote cactus - The raspberry bush - The mutant barnacle cluster - The deep sea barnacle cluster - The cholla cactus - The thornbush - The poppy flowers - The rosebush - The clover patch - The daisy cluster - The lotus plant - The blue flowers - The patch of lettuce - The sugarbeet patch - The deep sea kelp plant - The ivy - The oak tree - The wild banana plant - The cluster of rice plants - The potato plant - The radmelon vine - The cornstalk - The row of cornstalks - The onion patch - The row of cabbage - The wild cherry tree - The wild rye plant The grapevine: A thick woody vine curls up from the ground and forms a tangled bush adorned with flat fanlike leaves. It can be harvested for bunches of grapes -- Dark purple and quite round; it is filled with juicy juices. Harvest begins in August and ends in November. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in Slagtown, Devil's Towers, the ocean cliffs, and the our dear lady of lust. The tomato plant: It looks kind of like a pot plant. Pity. It can be harvested for tomatoes -- A round, reddish fruit with a somewhat squishy feel to it. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in kakuri island, the bombed-out building, Kakuri Monastery, Botany Bay, the country road, and the macero. The ephedra bush: A squat, spiky bush of thin needlelike leaves. It can be harvested for bundles of ephedra leaves -- A small bundle of dried green leaves. Harvest begins in February and ends in December. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the shoreline, Stormfront Island, and the macero. The cannabis plant: The skunky smelling cannabis plant appears to be of the indica variety, and stands about three feet tall. You see a few 9 finger sun leafs, and the buds are growing in tight clusters. It can be harvested for colas of weed -- A cluster of sticky, stinky buds of marijuana. Hrr. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the luskentyre plateau and the mountain pass. The row of cannabis plants: A thick, green heaven of bustling THC. Fronds of cannabis leaves, coated in crystals, dangle invitingly in front of your face. It can be harvested for colas of weed -- A cluster of sticky, stinky buds of marijuana. Hrr. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in Weyland-Utani Building. The celery plant: A group of fresh-looking stalks of premium fun-size celery. It can be harvested for stalks of celery -- A long, green affair striated lengthwise with strands of xylem and phloem. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Botany Bay and the country road. The wild wheat plant: A large patch of wild wheat stalks. The golden yellow stalks reach for the sky. It can be harvested for bundles of wheat stalks -- A small bundle of wheat stalks. They don't look very appetizing. Harvest begins in January and ends in December. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the luskentyre plateau and the macero. The carrot plant: A small bundle of leaves that sticks up above the ground. It can be harvested for huge carrots -- An enormous carrot, over a foot long and thick as your wrist. Far from the sleek cones of ages past, this lumpy agglomeration of fibrous orange vegetable seems barely edible. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the luskentyre plateau, the bombed-out building, the country road, and the macero. The blue mushroom: A ring of stout mushroooms, each with a thick grey cap, speckled with royal blue. It can be harvested for mushroom sludges -- A ball of paste made from a pulverized blue mushroom. Ick. Harvest begins in February and ends in August. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Stormfront Island. The garlic plant: A tube of green leaves that sprouts out of the ground. Delicious roots lie beneath the soil. It can be harvested for cloves of garlic -- A pungent bulb of papery white garlic. Smells delicious, unless you're a vampire. Harvest begins in January and ends in December. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in Slagtown, the bombed-out building, and the luskentyre plateau. The bitterwood bush: A globular bush of black twigs covered in tiny dark red leaves. It can be harvested for bitterwood shoots -- A shoot of fresh growth from a bitterwood bush. Smells mediciney. Harvest begins in March and ends in June. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Stormfront Island and Weyland-Utani Building. The coffee tree: A tall tree, with many brushy branches. You see ripe and unripe clusters of coffee cherries. It can be harvested for bundles of coffee cherries -- A small bundle of red coffee cherries. You think this could make coffee somehow. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Botany Bay, the insufferable isle, and the shipwreck cove. The date palm: A rail-straight trunk of overlapping woody plates rises about twenty feet to a cluster of long grassy green fronds. It can be harvested for dates -- A dark brown squishy fruit. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the glass mesa. The benzoin tree: A modest scraggly evergreen with a thin grey trunk. It can be harvested for benzoin barks -- A thick strip of bark from the benzoin tree. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the mountain pass, Stormfront Island, Weyland-Utani Building, and the crater forest. The camphor tree: A spindly tree towers a hundred feet above you, papery grey bark on crooked trunk, but a few branches dangle clusters of thin leaves within reach. It can be harvested for bundles of camphor leaves -- A fistful of thin papery grey leaves. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Stormfront Island. The dwarf apple tree: A short, sickly tree, maybe four feet tall. Its leaves are a waxy greenish color. It can be harvested for apples -- A red fruit that fits nicely in your hand. A twig sticks out of its top. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the crater rim, Slagtown, Devil's Towers, the snow globe, the luskentyre plateau, the country road, the shipwreck cove, and the our dear lady of lust. The macadamia tree: A large green thin-leaved tree with long white flowers. It can be harvested for macadamia nuts -- A small, beige colored nut. It looks tasty! Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the ocean cliffs and Botany Bay. The rotfruit tree: The thin sickly branches of this gray tree hang in low arches from a gnarled trunk. The plant seems barely alive. It can be harvested for rotfruits -- A golfball-sized pitted yellow pod. It smells faintly of dead fish. Harvest begins in September and ends in June. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in the glass mesa. The rubber tree: A vine-like tree with many stalks and long, wide dark-green leaves. It can be harvested for bundles of rubber tree leaves -- A bunch of long, wide, dark-green waxy leaves. They're tied together with some twine. Harvest begins in February and ends in September. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Stormfront Island, the forest trail, the north beach, and Pangu Island. The date palm: A rail-straight trunk of overlapping woody plates rises about twenty feet to a cluster of long grassy green fronds. It can be harvested for dates -- A dark brown squishy fruit. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the glass mesa. The fever tree: A short bushy deciduous tree with wide splayfinger leaves. Its bark hangs in loose flexible strips. It can be harvested for quina barks -- A thin strip of flexible brown tree bark. It emits a pleasant floral aroma. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the mountain pass, Stormfront Island, and the crater forest. The tupelo tree: A massive trunk splits into two huge low branches, forming a canopy of delicate twigs and broad leaves. It can be harvested for tupelo pods -- A papery thumb-sized pod, holding hundreds of gritty black seeds. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Stormfront Island, the ashen valley, and the mountain pass. The banana plant: A tall tree-like plant with rough outer bark. Large wind-torn leaves sprout from the upper part of the pseudostem in a spiral pattern, some reaching at least nine feet out. It can be harvested for coventry plantains -- A long yellow-skinned fruit with a few brown spots and a mooshy white inside. Harvest begins in January and ends in December. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in Coventry Island. The olive tree: A large tree with a gnarled trunk, white flowers, small oblong leaves. You can see clusters of small, green protofruits growing on the branches. It can be harvested for handfuls of olives -- A handful of small green and dark brown olives. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's quite rare. The scandalously thin ficus: Scandalously bare and thin as a super-nova hot model, this fig trees twisted trunk and sparse leaves bring a touch of warmth and green. The glazed ceramic pot itself is rather charmingly simple and roundly squat. It can be harvested for bundles of ficus leaves -- A bundle of small green leaves, each on about 5 centimeters long and 1 centimeter wide. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in W-U 8th: Special Projects. The echinocactus: A cluster of dark green beachballs, covered in a thin needle-spike fur. It can be harvested for echino pulps -- A damp lump of fibrous lime-green vegetable pulp. Harvest begins in October and ends in June. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the death adder ravine, the glass mesa, the crater rim, the star field, and the abandoned highway. The peyote cactus: A small, spineless cactus. It can be harvested for peyote buttons -- A disc-shaped button from a peyote plant. Harvest begins in October and ends in June. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the glass mesa, the northern desert, Devil's Towers, and the junktown. The raspberry bush: A dense bush, about 3 feet high, with long thorny branches. It can be harvested for raspberries -- A small dark red fleshy berry about a centimeter in diameter. It smells good and looks juicy. Harvest begins in October and ends in June. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the luskentyre plateau, Coventry Island, and the macero. The mutant barnacle cluster: A cluster of horribly mutated barnacles. It can be harvested for mutant barnacle stems -- A stem from a mutated barnacle. Harvest begins in September and ends in July. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Devil's Towers and Coventry Island. The deep sea barnacle cluster: A cluster of deep sea barnacles. It can be harvested for deep sea barnacle stems -- A mass of greasy barnacle meat. Harvest begins in October and ends in June. It's quite rare. The cholla cactus: A chest-high olive green cactus, with rounded arms pointing in all directions. It appears to be entirely covered in long yellowish-white needles with thin hooks at the ends. It can be harvested for cholla pods -- A dull green bean, palm-sized, covered in crusty warts. Harvest begins in October and ends in June. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the crater rim, the glass mesa, and the wasteland. The thornbush: A thin brown bush of narrow leaves and wicked curved thorns. It can be harvested for thornberries -- A cluster of tiny yellow berries on a twig. Harvest begins in October and ends in June. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the glass mesa, kakuri island, the forest trail, Botany Bay, the mountain pass, and the junktown. The poppy flowers: A patch of a few dozen red poppy flowers. It can be harvested for poppy seedpods -- A small green sphere of plant matter containing the seeds of a poppy flower. Harvest begins in March and ends in September. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the mountain pass, New Clearwater, the macero, and Botany Bay. The clover patch: A small patch of frilly clovers, growing in an oddly neat circle. It can be harvested for four-leaf clovers -- A small clover with four leaves, and rumored to be good luck. Harvest begins in March and ends in March. It's fairly uncommon. The lotus plant: An abundance of deep green pad leaves of varying size--some only big enough for the tiniest frog, others large enough to hold an infant. Myriad lotus flowers are scattered amongst the vegetation, ranging from the palest hue of moonlight to the most vivid of pink. The blooms perfume the area with a light but exotic floral scent. It can be harvested for lotus blossoms -- A beautiful, diaphanous lotus blossom. It's an exquisitely pale pink beyond compare, leaving you to imagine whether it might be the color of an angel's cotton candy. The flower is in full bloom, each outer petal spread wide. A fragrance both delicate and heady emanates from it. Harvest begins in March and ends in September. It's quite rare. The blue flowers: A clump of tall reedy pale green stems sprouts from a halo of prickly flat leaves. It can be harvested for blue blossoms -- A delicate pale blue flower blossom, shot through with tiny red veins. You recognize it as mors ontologica, a psychoactive plant. It's natural, so how could it be bad for you? Harvest begins in March and ends in September. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the beatrice acres. The patch of lettuce: Hey! It's a patch of lettuce! You really need a fucking description? It can be harvested for heads of lettuce -- It's lettuce. A slice of green lettuce, to be exact. Nice, crisp, and green. Harvest begins in March and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Botany Bay and the country road. The sugarbeet patch: A bushy cluster of floppy dark green leaves, sprouting up from white root tops. It can be harvested for sugar beets -- A knobby pale-purple tuber, with a few vegetal hairs and bits of dirt hanging off. Harvest begins in July and ends in December. It's very common. It can be found growing in the wild in the ocean cliffs, Botany Bay, Stormfront Island, kakuri island, Pangu Island, and the junktown. The deep sea kelp plant: Tendrils of a decidedly leafy thick green and yellow plant grow here. It can be harvested for blades of kelp -- A slender blade of brownish seaweed. Harvest begins in January and ends in December. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in the shipwreck cove. The ivy: An evergreen climbing ivy, with strange-looking curling tendrils. It can be harvested for vines -- A long fibrous jungle vine. Harvest begins in May and ends in September. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in the shipwreck cove. The oak tree: A tall oak tree with a trunk of about 8 feet in diameter. Its gnarly but beautiful trunk leads up roughly 80 feet, approximating it to be pre-collapse due to its age. Its ever-green leaves are spirally arranged, with light yellow veins straight down the middle. It can be harvested for acorns -- A dark-brown cup shaped cupule, encasing a single nut inside its tough leathery shell. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in the suburban home. The wild banana plant: A sturdy banana plant, about 10 feet tall with wide and luscious green leaves. Wild bananas hang from its arm in clusters. It can be harvested for wild bananas -- A thick, chartreuse colored fruit shaped like your average softball, unlike domesticated bananas. It feels as hard as a rock. Harvest begins in March and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in Pangu Island and the shipwreck cove. The cluster of rice plants: A few tall grassy plants with drooping stems, laden with bunches of thin seeds. It can be harvested for handfuls of rice grains -- A fistful of rice grains, not very appetising raw, but a staple food when prepared. Harvest begins in March and ends in November. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the macero. The potato plant: A short plant with broad oval dark green leaves. It can be harvested for potatoes -- An egg-shaped tuber with yellowish skin. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the macero. The radmelon vine: A scraggly creeping vine with sickly etiolated-looking leaves and thin runners growing between the jagged rocks it nestles between. It's quite rare. The cornstalk: The large yellow silky leaves of this plant are attached to a stalk as thick as a mutants thumb. It can be harvested for ears of corn -- An ear of colorful red-and-yellow mutant corn. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the crater rim. The onion patch: The tiny green sprigs of wild onions stick out here and there in the ground. It can be harvested for onions -- A tawny bulbous vegetable with a springy green chute. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the macero and kakuri island. The row of cabbage: The leaves of a bright green barrel head cabbage spur out of the ground in a planted row here. It can be harvested for napa cabbages -- An almost tooth-shaped head of bright green cabbage with tear-shaped white cores on each side. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's fairly uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the macero and kakuri island. The wild cherry tree: The leaves of this cherry tree are spiny and toothed quite similarly to holly, some up to a finger long. It is a spindly brown thing with a dappled trunk, its limbs a rich bloody color. It can be harvested for clusters of wild cherries -- A sprig of crimson-colored choke cherries. Harvest begins in June and ends in October. It's quite rare. It can be found growing in the wild in the pitcairn island. The wild rye plant: A large patch of wild rye. The ears seem to perk as you move closer. It can be harvested for ears of rye -- A single ear of rye. Dark blotches of goo smear its earthy tone. Harvest begins in January and ends in December. It's not uncommon. It can be found growing in the wild in the cargill beach, the wrygley field, Weezer Dam, the macero, and the crater rim.