WILD
FOODS v PROCESSED FOODS (or Traditional Indigenous Diet v the Modern Industrial
Diet)
An
argument for returning to a part or predominantly bush-tucker
diet by enrichment planting of horticulturally-produced endemic
natives and using Wild Food Nutritionals to help eliminate sickness.
There is
a powerful argument in our on-going concerns over the efficacy of Big-Pharma
and Big-Agri processed foods and medicines, that puts forward the fact that we
humans have evolved over at least 2 million years during which time we have
been hunter-gatherers of Nature’s bounty, i.e. our bodies are intrinsically, inextricably
integrated into absorbing and utilising complex organic whole foods derived
directly from the wild, or to put it another way, natural
selection has metabolically adapted our bodies to wild foods. Modifications of
our food resources by agriculture began only a few thousand years ago and as
Vic Cherikoff, nutritional scientist and wild food expert purports, this is not
enough time for humans to evolve new mechanisms to adjust to these modified
foods. Additionally, even in the last two decades our fresh produce has been
altered to suit our modern food distribution systems; mechanised post-harvest
handling, un-ripe harvesting and artificial ripening for robustness during
transport etc. These ‘innovations’ on the factory farms have led to a falling
nutritional quality of our foods as well as high sugar, low fibre, watery
fruits and vegetables depleted of antioxidants in comparison to the wild
counterparts. In fact, today’s supermarket foods are nutritionally deficient
even by comparison to produce of just 25 years ago.
Vic
Cherikoff points out the situation as it was when Europeans first arrived on
this continent:
The Australian Aborigines have the longest living cultures on the planet
and not just by a few hundred years or even a few thousand years but tens of
thousands! What’s more, Aborigines were living to 60 and 70 years of age with
some living 90 years in less harsh environments. By comparison, their contemporaries
in ‘civilized’ Britain or its colonies were lucky to manage 35 years of age.
Villagers and townsfolk were dying of plagues and viruses spread by close human
contact, unsanitary conditions and living in conditions which fostered large
populations of rats, mice, flies, cockroaches and other pest species.
Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander traditional foods are now revealing their
nutritional secrets and are proving to be the perfect foods for us all as
modern humans.
Pharmaceutical
drugs and vitamin pills may have a place in curative medicine, to give first
aid, an immunity boost or where a specific deficiency has been identified, but
they have serious shortcomings, numerous deleterious side effects and
pharmacological pitfalls, such as the recently widely exposed grapefruit risk.
The very best way to address illness and to replace the complex nutrients and
substances missing in our diets is with preventative means; adding wild foods
wherever possible and avoiding processed foods is the ideal health solution.
Indigenous
communities are particularly well-placed to take full advantage of recent
horticultural developments in regenerating biodiverse native habitats, such as
‘enrichment planting’, but indeed, everyone can grow these native foods and medicines
in their own gardens, and everyone can become health ambassadors with
innovative products such as Vic Cherikoff’s Wildfood Nutritionals.
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