What Is IT?
NIH Celebrates Earth Day 2008
Left: The IT plant is known as a caudex in this phase, when it is very young. Right: The leaves of the IT plant can be consumed as a tea and as a nutritious substitute for milk. |
The mystery plants in previous Earth Day contests were sources of potentially important medicines and were threatened in their native lands because of habitat destruction, over-harvesting, poaching and other challenges stemming from human activities. This year’s mystery plant also has important medicinal properties but is not endangered. In fact, perhaps like no other single species, this plant has the potential to help reverse multiple major environmental problems and provide for many unmet human needs. Here are some clues for contestants:
Unlike the plants in previous contests that came from Africa, IT originally came from Tamil Nadu. But you can now find IT grown in many tropical areas of the world.
IT comes from a small family, but many of its closest relatives have very big trunks. ITs is only big when IT is very young, as in the photo above. At that stage IT is called a caudex.
Like the Jathropa (a member of another much bigger family), IT can easily be grown in drought, on poor, damaged soils and can also help to reclaim them. ITs seeds also contain oil that can be used as a source of renewable energy. But Jathropa is toxic and really overrated because IT can be:
- Eaten—all parts. ITs high-quality oil can be used in cooking and ITs leaves (see photo) can be consumed as a tea and as a nutritious substitute for milk. They are an excellent source of protein and iron—you won’t find that in many other plants. Here’s how IT compares with other foods: 7 times the vitamin C of oranges; 4 times the calcium of milk and twice the protein of yogurt. Many other vitamins and minerals are present—literally from A to zinc, and all the essential amino acids.
- Grown in all countries of the world that have significant percentages of their population malnourished. IT could save millions of lives.
- Used to purify polluted water, working as both a coagulant (for removal of turbidity) and as an anti-microbial. Extracts from its seeds can be used on a small or large scale as a low-cost, locally available alternative for water treatment chemicals.
- Used as medicine by native peoples to prevent or treat over 300 diseases. Additional scientific studies are needed to confirm its effectiveness for these traditional uses.
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As any Zijan knows, just plug in 'moringa oleifera' everywhere it says 'IT' above: RIGHT ON!
September, 2008 issue finds the Earth Day winners:
Perhaps the day’s brightest star was Moringa oleifera (also known as the horseradish tree or drumstick tree), the third annual “IT,” with 300 known medicinal uses. Two of the contest entrants who correctly identified “IT” were local high school students. It’s so cool being green.
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Hmmmm, that was SIX years ago and 99.9% of the people who live around you have still never heard the words 'moringa oleifera'.
Our work is cut out for us, people! SPREAD THE WORD.
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THE CALIFORNIA DROUGHT is nothing to scoff at: it is serious and grocery prices are already on the rise. I can no longer find the 2 lb. packs of almonds that we love: the 1lb. is selling for what the 2 lbs. used to. A local almond grower is letting 1,000 acres of his trees die for lack of water. So, this is serious.
Thank God for our Zija mix! With one green sleeve in the morning we are getting all our daily's green requirements so it's not as if we must have lettuce, broccoli, kale, strawberries to survive. For the Zija nation, lack of fresh produce is a matter of preference, not necessity.
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TEAM CROWNE ELITE PROJECT 5000 CALLS TODAY:
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TODAYS P5K Calls!
10am cst-TJ Soto
12pm cst-Lori Wilson
2pm cst-Kevin Brassell (Noon PST)
4pm cst-Joel McNinch (2 PST)Call: 605-475-4000
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TONIGHT, come to Marie Callender's, Shaw @ Cedar, Fresno, Ca 7pm
BRING GUEST! Zija Information/Exploration
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