Guest guest Posted May 25, 2004 Report Share Posted May 25, 2004 Here is a report from someone who went to a recent talk by David Wolfe: http://www.americahealth.com/davidwolfe/sevierville051804.html This bit stood out for me: <begin quote> This was the 3rd time I have been to a David Wolfe lecture and once again, the main topic was MINERALS. I summarize it all this way: If your food is DE-MINERALIZED it doesnt matter if you are raw vegan, vegetarian, hallelujah, natural hygienist or whatever. None of that matters because you will still be DE-MINERALIZED. On the other hand if your food is HIGHLY MINERALIZED it doesnt matter if you are raw vegan, vegetarian, hallelujah, natural hygienist or whatever. None of that matters because you will be HIGHLY MINERALIZED. <end quote> I am curious as to whether this is a fair interpretation of what DW has been saying recently. Has anyone here been keeping up to date on that? If it is fair, then the suggestion is that the reason the raw food diet works (when it works) is primarily the mineral balance, rather than enzymes, or avoidance of molecular transformations due to heating, or maintaining some less well defined energy / life force. The " rawness " is secondary at best. Put more bluntly, we could go back to eating junk as long as we're also eating lots of fresh greens (grown in re-mineralized soil) or sea vegetables, and we could rename our group " HighlyMineralizedSeattle " . What do people here think of this as a direction for the movement? -rho PS - I'm treating a serious topic lightly, as always. Please don't assume that means I don't take it seriously. On the subject of minerals, I am convinced there is much to do. I use glacial rock dust in my vegetable garden, together with compost tea (see www.soilsoup.com) to provide the microorganisms that can make the minerals available to the plants. (So much for my few beds, now we just have to remineralize the farmed areas...) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2004 Report Share Posted May 26, 2004 Can you share your resource of glacial rock dust? Where do you get it? Do you use the compost tea brewing system? Seems quite expensive. Does it work well? Helen - " rho_sat " <rho_sat <RawSeattle > Tuesday, May 25, 2004 2:15 PM [RawSeattle] why raw works > Here is a report from someone who went to a recent talk by David > Wolfe: > http://www.americahealth.com/davidwolfe/sevierville051804.html > This bit stood out for me: > <begin quote> > This was the 3rd time I have been to a David Wolfe lecture and once > again, the main topic was MINERALS. I summarize it all this way: > > If your food is DE-MINERALIZED it doesnt matter if you are raw vegan, > vegetarian, hallelujah, natural hygienist or whatever. None of that > matters because you will still be DE-MINERALIZED. On the other hand > if your food is HIGHLY MINERALIZED it doesnt matter if you are raw > vegan, vegetarian, hallelujah, natural hygienist or whatever. None of > that matters because you will be HIGHLY MINERALIZED. > <end quote> > > I am curious as to whether this is a fair interpretation of what DW > has been saying recently. Has anyone here been keeping up to date on > that? > > If it is fair, then the suggestion is that the reason the raw food > diet works (when it works) is primarily the mineral balance, rather > than enzymes, or avoidance of molecular transformations due to > heating, or maintaining some less well defined energy / life force. > The " rawness " is secondary at best. Put more bluntly, we could go > back to eating junk as long as we're also eating lots of fresh greens > (grown in re-mineralized soil) or sea vegetables, and we could rename > our group " HighlyMineralizedSeattle " . What do people here think of > this as a direction for the movement? > > -rho > PS - I'm treating a serious topic lightly, as always. Please don't > assume that means I don't take it seriously. On the subject of > minerals, I am convinced there is much to do. I use glacial rock > dust in my vegetable garden, together with compost tea (see > www.soilsoup.com) to provide the microorganisms that can make the > minerals available to the plants. (So much for my few beds, now we > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2004 Report Share Posted May 26, 2004 Hi, Helen: I'm glad to share! The cheapest source I found for both the tea brewer and the rock dust was Acme Worm Farm - www.acmewormfarm.com. They're still not cheap, but significantly cheaper than the manufacturer's site and they were very friendly to deal with. If anyone knows still better sources, please post. I've been having a fun time brewing up gallons of microorganisms and trying them on all kinds of plants, ornamentals as well as edibles. So far, everything is growing well, but this is my first season doing this so it's really too early to tell. Possibly the plants just like the extra attention! The lettuce tastes great, but the first harvest, straight from the garden, always does. I decided that my life is too full this year to run experiments and confirm for myself that the tea is worth doing, so I am trusting the academics <gasp> and Ann Lovejoy, and applying tea with abandon. Maybe next year I'll show some discipline. -rho RawSeattle , " Helen " <helensy@c...> wrote: > Can you share your resource of glacial rock dust? Where do you get it? Do > you use the compost tea brewing system? Seems quite expensive. Does it work > well? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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