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The joys of being a vegetarian

  • Sebastian Pole
    Sebastian Pole

    I am a registered member of the Ayurvedic Professionals Association, Register of Chinese Herbal Medicine and a Fellow of the Unified Register of Herbal Practitioners. I qualified as a herbalist with the aim of using the principles of Ayurveda (the ancient art of living wisely) and the Herbal tradition to help transform health. I have been in clinical practice since 1998.

    Having co-founded Pukka Herbs in 2001 I have become experienced in organic herb growing, practitioner grade quality and sustainable value chains. I am a Trustee of the FairWild Foundation, a Director of The Betonica School of Herbal Medicine and an Advisor to The American Herbal Pharmacopoeia and The Sustainable Herbs Project. Fluent in Hindi, a qualified Yoga therapist and passionate about projects with a higher purpose, I am on a mission to bring the incredible power of plants into peopleā€™s life. And that is why I started Herbal Reality and what it is all about.

    I live in a forest garden farm in Somerset growing over 100 species of medicinal plants and trees. And a lot of weeds!

    Author of Ayurvedic Medicine, The Principles of Traditional Practice (Elsevier 2006), A Pukka Life (Quadrille 2011), Celebrating 10 Pukka years (2012) and Cleanse, Nurture, Restore with Herbal Tea (Frances Lincoln 2016).

    Listen to our Herbcast podcast with Sebastian as the host.

  • 12:06 reading time (ish)
  • Cleansing & Metabolising Digestion & Nutrition Mobility & Fitness Western Herbal Medicine
The joys of being a vegetarian

The vegetarian world is a colourful, nutritious and exciting place; perhaps more than you might think. Read on to discover more.

Although not for everyone, the vegetarian world is a colourful, nutritious and exciting place; perhaps more than you might think. Read on to discover more.

I love being vegetarian. It tastes good, makes me feel good and helps me feel a part of a caring world. Its in my blood. My grandparents were pacifist vegetarian Quakers. My Mum had a brief relapse which meant I did too but then, after visiting India and living in America for a while I fell back within the fold. I am not saying it is the right choice for everyone but secretly believe it is. In my early days of recently converted over-zealous youthful enthusiasm I verged on the side of extremist. I even asked my most red-blooded Alpha male friend to not cook bacon in his own house. Not a good move! I am more accepting now. A bitā€¦

When I am asked why am I vegetarian I say ā€˜for every reason that there is to beā€™; environmental, moral, health, financial, spiritual and (now I know how to cook) because it’s so utterly delicious.

Environmental reasons to be vegetarian

Environmentally vegetarianism is more sustainable Its that simple. The livestock industry is one of the largest contributors to environmental damage. It takes 7 Kg of grain to produce 1 Kg of red meat and 2 Kg grain to produce 1Kg of poultry. One quarter of the earthā€™s surface is now pastureland to support livestock.  Ā¾ of all grains and beans grown in the US are destined for animal feed which would feed 800million people. The livestock industry uses 50% of all US water resources. These easily could be used to satisfy humans nutritional needs.

It is estimated that 50% of the worldā€™s rainforests have been cleared to support livestock for the meat industry. And 70% of the worldā€™s fish populations are threatened by over fishing.  The livestock industry (meat, dairy, poultry, fisheries) contributes towards 17% of greenhouse gases (Transportation is 13.5%). All these figures means that it takes ten times more resources to get our nutrition from meat as from grains. Whilst not an absolute answer to the earthā€™s environmental problems (as modern farming techniques as a whole need to be addressed) becoming a vegetarian is THE single most influential impact that an individual can have on the environment.

Sebastian Pole

I am a registered member of the Ayurvedic Professionals Association, Register of Chinese Herbal Medicine and a Fellow of the Unified Register of Herbal Practitioners. I qualified as a herbalist with... Read more

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