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Raw food power
behind this hike
Advocate tackling Great Divide to spotlight eating style
By
Mikenna Clokey, Longmont Daily Times-Call
April 26, 2005
BOULDER
- Between the sleeping bag, tent and extra socks in Doug Walsh's
backpack, there will be a tiny, 4-ounce food grinder and half-pound
seed sprouter. Not your average backpacker's load.
But
this is not your average backpacking trip, either.
Eating
only raw foods, with a mission to raise awareness for his alternative
diet and money for some of its biggest advocates, Walsh set out
last week on Earth Day to hike the entire Continental Divide Trail
over the next five months, starting in New Mexico and ending in
Canada.
Walsh
has been a raw-foodist, someone who does not eat cooked or heated
foods, for the past 10 years. He is determined to prove that even
the most stringent of regimens can be supplemented with a raw-food
lifestyle.
"There's
no comparison. I feel better at 41 than I did at 24," he
said about his health.
In
addition to raising funds and drawing attention to the benefits
of raw foods, the outdoorsman also will be fueling his love of
the wilderness and passion for exploring it.
"I'm
in love with the Earth," he said. "So I like to eat
food that's full of the Earth's energy."
Walsh
will use his miniature grinder and sprouter to preserve and produce
raw foods that have what he describes as the "life principle."
He used a sunflower seed as an example to explain the concept.
In raw form, the seed can sprout into a plant. After it is cooked,
he argued, the seed won't sprout.
"There's
some kind of information present in raw foods that is no longer
there when we heat it," he said. "It's something that's
essential to our life."
Walsh,
a graduate of the Living Lite Culinary Arts Institute in Fort
Bragg, Calif., a gourmet chef's school for raw foods preparation,
is walking to raise money for the school's new building. He has
raised more than $5,000 and wants to give his alma mater as much
money and attention as he can.
During
the 3,000-mile trek along the trail, Walsh will stop at 30 previously
planned resupply points. His food will be shipped to him at post
offices at those locations.
"I'll
just hitchhike into town and pick up my box of new food,"
he said.
Staples
for the trip include nuts, dried fruits and sprouts.
Walsh
made himself crackers - by mashing nuts and other ingredients
into a paste, spreading them thin and drying them out in a dehydrator
- as well as raw bread and even pizzas.
Walsh
will be carrying a digital camera, cell phone and portable e-mail
device to send updates to sponsors and fans.
Walsh
expects to encounter snow and cold, dehydration and heat, unmarked
trails, numerous stream crossings and other unexpected wilderness
adventures during his time on the divide.
While
he's taking his raw-food diet to the extreme, Walsh said anyone
can enjoy the same without being an adventurer.
Steve
Phillips, a raw-foodist and owner of the Longmont Co-op Market,
has been eating raw foods exclusively for about a year and a half.
He
said they are as appetizing as cooked foods, and better for you.
The
secret is developing proper preparation skills, Phillips said,
noting he and his family made a wonderful pizza recently with
dried tomatoes on top.
"Yes,
it takes a little time, but once you figure out how to make a
few things, you just go from there," he said.
Source:
http://rockymountainnews.com/drmn/local/article/0,1299,DRMN_15_3729702,00.html
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