From: owner-rawlife-digest@rawtimes.com (rawlife-digest)
To: rawlife-digest@rawtimes.com
Subject: rawlife-digest V1 #1055
Reply-To: rawlife@rawtimes.com
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rawlife-digest        Friday, August 30 2002        Volume 01 : Number 1055




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Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2002 16:53:56 -0400
From: "www.pinenut.com" <penny@pinenut.com> (by way of JR Ellis <jrellis@rawtimes.com>)
Subject: [rawlife] wild foods public lands

   hello,
I am penny frazier and for the last 8 years, I have been an advocate for 
public lands change. I work with wild pine nuts and wrote an article about 
pine nuts, that I would like
to share with those who would be interested.  I am not a rawfooder, and 
would not impose upon your groups.  I would like all the help I can get, in 
changing public lands policy.  here is the article, and my site, is 
<http://www.pinenut.comPenny>www.pinenut.com Any help or feedback or 
comments, are very welcome
Penny

Pine nuts, Politics and Public Lands

Last year we imported 5 million pounds of pine nuts from seven countries. 
Prior to World War II, millions of pounds of fresh American pine nuts were 
harvested here and available to U.S. consumers. What happen to our own pine 
nut harvest?

All pine trees reproduce through creating a nut in a cone. Some of these 
pine nuts are tasty and nutritious - others cost more in calories to 
collect, than they yield. The pinenuts purchased at a grocery, could be 
from any one of the 28 species, grown in about 7 countries. Each species 
with a different , shape, texture, flavor
and nutritional value.
The Department of Commerce reports that foreign countries ship us, 5 
million pounds of pinenuts each year. China provides most of the imported 
nuts, with Italy, Pakistan and Portugal, each being a major exporter of 
pinenuts. Because the shell amounts to 25% of the shipping weight, most 
nuts are sold with the shells removed. Once the shell has been removed, the 
nut must be preserved. Pine nuts are preserved, according to methods of the 
exporting country. Certain methods of preservation would not be allowed 
here, like the use of lye as preservative. Unless you live in the 
Southwest, or are over the age of 70, chances are you have never had a 
fresh, unprocessed pinenut. One might compare this to never having eaten a 
fresh strawberry, but consuming only dried or frozen fruit. Yet, two 
American species of pine nuts grow wild on 47 million acres of public land. 
It is a native plant, with tremendous range, outstanding nutritional value, 
and highly sought after in foreign countries. Why then are we importing so 
many pine nuts?
The politics of the Western cattle industry and public land grazing is the 
primary reason From 1950-72 the USFS and BLM cleared ("chained") over 
3,211,000 acres of pinion-juniper to create grazing land. Before the huge 
corporations controlled grazing permits, pine nuts were harvested by the 
box car load and readily available. Those were the days before the 
chain-saw, bull dozer, massive herbicide treatments, the American Cattle s 
Association and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The days before large 
expanses of maturing pine nut trees were destroyed to grow grass for cattle 
- --- at taxpayer expense.
Pinyon pinenuts sustained the native peoples of the Great Basin for over 
10,000 years. The soft-shelled pinyon pinenut, (p.monophylla) provided 
primary protein to the Shoshone, Piautes and Washo peoples, containing 
substantial amounts of the amino acids necessary for human growth. It was a 
sacred part of the way they lived. Between 1865 to 1877, Native lands had 
been overrun with cattle and sheep. The pinion pines, which they depended 
upon for a pine nut crop each fall, were rapidly being cut down for fuel 
for the mine smelters. Smelting a ton of ore required from twenty-five to 
thirty-five bushels of charcoal. The mills at Eureka consumed as much as 
1.25 million bushels of charcoal a year, destroying the Indians' pine nut 
groves .

Certain treaties and Nevada laws provide harvest rights to Natives. The 
Native Peoples have never fought for those rights. The Federal Government 
cannot be guaranteed economic control of the pinenut harvest. Corporate 
cattlemen pay minimal grazing fees and the taxpayers subsidize the land 
treatment, to create the gazing lands, yet cattle won, hands down, over 
pinenuts as a public land use.
Most public lands managers are educated as range managers, rather than 
foresters. Range managers see it as their self-imposed duty to create and 
maintain range, which can also be called pasture. Millions and millions of 
acres of pinyon forests were bulldozed, chained, poisoned and subjected to 
prescribed burning to create pasture land for cattle. Beginning in the 1960 
s the pinyon tree were treated as a invasive weed, interfering with the 
forage available for cattle.
Range managers were never educated about the massive deforestation caused 
1800 s mining industry which fueled the silver smelters with pinyon 
charcoal at a rates up to 450 acres per day. Nor, have they been taught 
that the p.monophylla life cycle requires between 100 and 150 years to 
reach seed bearing maturity, then cones on a 5 year cycle, with three 
seasons required to produce the nut in the cone. Most have never read the 
research reports that state pinenut production potential revenues could 
exceed grazing revenues by 148 to 500 times over. Or, that pinenuts are 28 
times more earth efficient in terms of acreage used to produce pounds of 
protein than beef.
The Great Basin was a semi-arid forest and native peoples could always find 
a harvest of pinenuts, before white settlement. The pinyon never recovered 
from demands made upon it by the mining industry of the 1800 s. The large, 
mature seedstock trees had been depleted from all but the most inaccessible 
areas of the forest. As the cattlemen came in, the land was manipulated to 
yield grasses, rather than forest. The grasslands dry out and die, rather 
than maintain the moisture content, like trees. The pasture land has become 
part of the catalyst for huge fires in Nevada.
Land managers again, rather than looking to long term historical land 
composition, used faulty logic to justify treatment projects as landscape 
restoration, creating more grassland and flash fuel. Deforestation. One can 
obtain more information about pinyon pine nuts and public land activism 
from www.pinenut.com. The owners of that site are environmentalist working 
to promote wild food as an alternative to cattle grazing.


Penny Frazier is independent environmental advocate, who has spent the last 
8 years working to create change on public lands. She is a former 
litigation paralegal and the owner of the www.pinenut.com . She actively 
participates in public land management NEPA proceedings, receiving training 
and encouragement from the Committee for Idaho's High Desert (www.CIHD.org) 
. She works at respecting the Western Shoshone Nation and supports justice 
for their Land Settlement Claims.

Penny Frazier

penny@pinenut.com

573.674.4567




- -- rawlife - http://www.rawtimes.com/rawlife.html

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Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2002 22:31:41 -0400
From: Carolfacella@yahoo.com (Dr. Carol Kummins) (by way of JR Ellis <jrellis@rawtimes.com>)
Subject: [rawlife] Entry to Guestbook

You have a new entry in your guestbook:

- ------------------------------------------------------
Love any and all info your'e willing to share!  I own and operate The 
Center for Natural Healing in Kittey Maine...My focus, the medicinal uses 
of raw foods and juices.  The clinic is set up for overnight stays. Our 
services include juice fasts colon hydrotherapy body work raw foods living 
life style and much more.  I do have a book coming out.  Love to hear from you
Carol
Dr. Carol Kummins <Carolfacella@yahoo.com>
Portsmouth, N.H. USA - Wednesday, August 28, 2002 at 22:03:13 (EDT)
- ------------------------------------------------------


- -- rawlife - http://www.rawtimes.com/rawlife.html

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Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2002 22:01:58 EDT
From: GMCoffey@aol.com
Subject: [rawlife] Re: rawlife-digest V1 #1039

In a message dated 8/4/02 9:43:23 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
owner-rawlife-digest@rawtimes.com writes:

 > Any thoughts on anything in particular that might be responsible for your
 > improved eyesight?  If anything, mine is somewhat worse after 9+ years
 > raw.
 >
 > Bob Avery
 >

Bob, it could well be all the eyestrain from the computer. Been there, done
that, doing that;-(

g
Also too much avocado, nuts and seeds?

g
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter."
- - Martin Luther King, Jr.


- -- rawlife - http://www.rawtimes.com/rawlife.html

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End of rawlife-digest V1 #1055
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