(Survival Salt) Extract Salt from natural sorces (In the wild) without the Ocean

(Survival Salt) Extract Salt from natural sorces (In the wild) without the Ocean - Textured stone surface of sea coral

I'm inquiring to learn a survival technique in the wilderness. How can I extract and crystallize salt (sodium chloride) from wild plants, animals, or rocks, with access to a freshwater source only. I imagine soaking smoked meat to make a broth and letting it evaporate and crystallize, or steaming vegetables and again dehydrating a broth. Any insight will assist.



Best Answer

One option I know of is hickory salt, also found as hickory tree salt or hickory root salt. (not to be confused with hickory smoked salts, which does require salt to make)

Hickory salt is made by digging up the roots of hickory trees, shredding them, and boiling them to a dry, black, salty and mineralish powder. You may be able to get salt from hickory limbs, I saw a reference but only one, so no guarantees.

One recipe is here, another is there

Hickory seems the best bet (for me, anyway, for volume acquirable per plant, identifiability, local to my area etc)

However, it seems there are some other plants that can yield salt - including a source citing coltsfoot, and (having heard of) wild parsnip or wild carrot roots, or stinging nettles, but that source has no experience with either.

Lambs's quarters is another potential source - it's in the comments of the coltsfoot source, and mentioned here (as having mineral salts, not really "extracting them as salt source")

Another possibility is called saltbush, which is apparently used as a salty seasoning in australia.

Many of these sources are assuming a survival knowledge context, so these sources may be what you're looking for.

And of course it may be possible to find mineral salt deposits, from salty or brackish water or animal salt licks... this would involve observing larger animals (like deer, for example) to see where they're getting their salt from... it is essential for life for them as well.

It may, potentially, be possible to source salts from animal sources, since they must be sourcing salt somewhere, but I don't know anything about that or how to tell if any such preparation has it in sufficient quantities or whatever (vs perhaps other undesirable salts or mineral concentrations). Sorry.




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How do you get salt in a survival situation?

Survivalists today know that boiling hickory roots will result in a black tar-like substance that is full of edible salts. Likewise, wild carrot and parsnip are good boiled salt sources. Coltsfoot, a common weed, can be burned for salt. The leaves are first dried, and then tightly rolled.

Can you extract salt from plants?

Inland sources of salt were well known to our ancestors, but most of that knowledge is long gone. Beyond natural deposits, it's also possible to extract salt from plants. Some plants, especially salt-tolerant plants, can bioaccumulate salt in their tissues.

How can you get salt naturally?

There are three methods used to produce salt: solar, evaporation and rock mining.
  • Solar Evaporation Method. This is the oldest method of salt production. ...
  • Rock Salt Mining Method. Morton also uses the second oldest method of producing salt \u2013 underground mining. ...
  • Vacuum Evaporation Method.


  • How did pioneers get salt?

    Settlers reported that Native Americans made salt at Kanawha, West Virginia before 1755 by boiling brine from salt springs. Large-scale salt production from brine springs was underway by 1800, and the process of drilling for more concentrated brine began within a few years.



    Primitive Technology: Make Salt




    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Stefanie Klenner, Pok Rie, Jonas Von Werne, Yoss Traore