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Thank you Mu2143 for the thread, even though this subject was in the forum around 2 months ago and I even posted one or two Markus' videos.
I find the subject fascinating but realistically very hard to commit to the idea 100% about raw food. What I liked the most was the part about herbs and natural healing which I see as the medicine of the future, you know it's an irony after being the medicine in the past for so long but in the world we live in, many wonderful things have to come back, the knowledge about food and health is one of the most important ones.
Having pain or any illness is not a fun ride! Clear mind and a loving heart can do wonders.
Unfortunately, it may become necessary for those of us who wish to survive Earth changes, to study up on natural foods. All the information we need will be given.
I so regret not paying attention and showing so little interest when my Native American Grand Father tried to teach me. Now that he has passed that oportunity is lost and I am now unable to pass it to my children breaking a cycle and family tradition that goes back countless generations. It really makes me blue to think about. Maybe some people that have some more detailed videos for this kind of training can post them? It would be appreciated.
Hey GoodeTXSG,
Why don't you search for someone with the same knowledge that your grandfather had and ask that person to teach you all about it, so you can restore this cycle?
Take your children with you while you're at it.
I bet your grandfather would be smiling upon you from where he dwells now!
Thanks for the link and the reminder Mu :)
Look up Wildcrafting for more info too guys.
I used to get right into this, being into Ethnobotany and home-schooled some kids for a short while.This was one of the subjects I got them into.
It's amazing when you start looking around at those annoying "weeds", look them up and find medicinal and or cullinary uses for them.Also been into Mycology for a long time too and they are a great source of wild food.
This area needs very close study and understanding as there are a lot of poisonous lookalikes,same with some weeds/plants as they can be medicinal, but also toxic or irritating if mishandled or applied.
Cool thread :)
This is outstanding information. Thank you for bringing this to our attention.
I wish some one would make some plant identification dvds with mention of their uses based on climate zones.
Up where I am, zone three, I've seen the native people harvesting a moss that they use of diabetes.
My neighbor makes dandilion jelly. I wonder if dandilion wine is any good for you?
Just drying and grinding the root and puttin into capsules is excellent tonic for your liver. We take it often.
Or you could make tea but it tastes pretty bad.
another root that is an excellent tonic is burdock root, dried and in caps or tea or you can eat the root like carrots.
the root is hard to harvest as it can be several feet long but if you dig down and break it off it will come back next year.
it is an incredible healer
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