Women's Networking and Social Community
Recently I had the opportunity to observe the harvesting and trading of wild
Rhodiola rosea in the Tian Shan mountain range of Xinjiang Autonomous
Region. My traveling partners included two medicinal plant scientists
and two videographers, while disparate others joined us on various
stages of our journey. To reach our destination, we flew from Shanghai
along China’s southeast, to the country’s extreme far northwest, into
the city of Urumqui, which lies on the ancient Asian trading route The
Silk Road. From this post west of Mongolia, we rode further west still
for a couple of days, along the remote Borohora Shan mountain range, to
the small, dusty city of Yining, a quaint outpost of Turkish-descendent
Uigur culture near the border of Kazakhstan.
In Yining we connected with a couple of herbal traders who drove us for several hours out into the beginnings of the vast Tian Shan range,
a sprawling mountain region with snow-capped peaks, unexplored verdant
valleys, and a treasure-trove of medicinal plants, including Rhodiola
rosea. We passed vast herds of sheep, nomadic herders with camels,
Yurts on hillsides, picnics, children playing. For a long time we
traveled a rutted and tortuous construction road for a natural gas
pipeline whose source originates at about 10,000 feet altitude in the
Tian Shan. From the gas pipeline construction camp, we hiked far up
onto precariously steep mountainsides. There, scattered along the steep
slopes we came upon several clusters of harvesters digging wild
Rhodiola rosea root. We had come a long way to see this for ourselves.
Almost every herbalist has a favorite medicinal plant. Mine is unquestionably Rhodiola rosea. I have not only consumed it in various
forms and in a broad number of potions, but have also studied its
science and previously investigated the plant in Siberia. I have a
strong affinity for Rhodiola rosea, and believe that use of
standardized extracts of Rhodiola rosea could radically enhance
people’s mental and physical health.
To meet the demands and pressures of life in today’s fast-paced, high
stress world, Rhodiola appears ideal. In human studies using extracts
of the root, Rhodiola fights fatigue, combats stress, and possesses
both antioxidant and anticancer properties. Rhodiola protects body and
mind against oxygen deprivation, enhances overall immune function, and
promotes healthy sexual function in men and women. According to
published science, these activities are largely attributed to a group
of pharmacologically active compounds in the root called rosavins.
To understand a medicinal plant fully, I like to see as many parts of its chain of trade as possible. Visiting harvesters of Rhodiola
rosea root in the Tian Shan range was a dream come true. It also
afforded me the chance to see one of the most productive areas of wild
Rhodiola harvesting at present. I discovered to my surprise that in
that area Rhodiola rosea is super-abundant. Every few inches you find
another plant. There may be millions of tons of Rhodiola rosea in the
Tian Shan range, but most of it remains inaccessible. Thus nature has
for now put limits on the amount of wild Rhodiola that can be harvested
in that region.
I recall how hunters I met in Siberia prepared Rhodiola. They stuffed fresh root into a bottle, filled the bottle with vodka, and
wait a couple of weeks until the vodka was red. Then they would drink a
small shot every day. This simple method of water and alcohol
extraction is highly effective. Several of the Altay hunters with whom
I spoke said that Rhodiola made their minds very strong. This claim
holds up nicely under scientific scrutiny. In the brain, Rhodiola
extract helps to improve various parameters of brain function including
attention, memory, thought formation, calculating, evaluating,
planning, and overall learning. When you take Rhodiola rosea, you
experience this quickening of mental functions.
After spending several hours with harvesters, our group traveled a couple of hours down onto the plains north of the Tian Shan, to meet
with buyers of Rhodiola. The same harvesters we saw in the mountains
would eventually arrive on motorcycles with sacks of Rhodiola roots
strapped to the back seats. A good digger could bring down as much as
50 kilos of fresh root in a day. I dubbed these men the Rhodiola
Cowboys, for the way they rode in to make a deal. Over the course of a
couple of hours, I witnessed and photographed China’s most remote
Rhodiola trade, while thoroughly enjoying the company of the various
people I met. Like so many medicinal plants in trade, Rhodiola plays an
important role in local and regional economies. In the case of the
harvesters in the Tian Shan region, they told me that they could earn a
year’s living in two months of very hard harvesting. For only two
months, the snow is receded enough for the harvesters to work. Ten
months of the year, the area is blanketed in snow. In that area,
Rhodiola provides many people with income.
Valued highly since the days of the first Chinese emperor, Rhodiola rosea is a first-rate adaptogen. By definition, this means that
Rhodiola demonstrates extraordinary safety, offers broad and diverse
benefits to body and mind, and specifically helps the user to adapt
better to any and all forms of physical and mental stress. This is one
of the hallmark experiences of taking Rhodiola. When you do, you feel
less stress. Things don’t bother you as much. You possess greater
resources to move through challenging times. It is quite remarkable.
Rhodiola also imparts real physical power. In various human studies,
Rhodiola improved strength, endurance, stamina, physical work capacity, recovery
time from exertion, motor coordination, and cardiovascular
measurements. Rhodiola extract decreases fatigue and relieves
exhaustion. This makes Rhodiola extract a superior sports performance
aid. Extract of the root also helped users to reduce work-related
errors.
As if the benefits described so far were insufficient, Rhodiola also improves aspects of sexual health. In one study of women with
amenorrhea Rhodola helped a majority of women to regain proper healthy
menstrual regularity. In another study of 35 middle-aged men with
erectile dysfunction, 25 improved significantly after taking an extract
of Rhodiola.
You can find extracts of Rhodiola rosea in natural food stores and at Whole Foods. Increasingly you may find some of these products in
pharmacies. The majority of human studies show the best results when
Rhodiola rosea extract is taken between 200 – 600 milligrams daily,
standardized to approximately 2 percent rosavin, or a total of
5 percent of the total group of rosavins. Look for the standardized
potency on the label.
Rhodiola rosea offers a dynamic health experience for the herbal user. If take it, you will feel it. Rhodiola is in my estimation the
broadest, most remarkable feel-good botanical in nature’s pharmacy.
This herb has the power to revolutionize people’s experience of their
health, and can be an effective gateway botanical. If people use a good
quality Rhodiola rosea and experience positive results, they will then
feel much greater confidence in trying other herbal remedies.
Chris Kilham is a medicine
hunter who researches natural remedies all over the world, from the
Amazon to Siberia. He teaches ethnobotany at the University of
Massachusetts Amherst, where he is Explorer In Residence. Chris advises
herbal, cosmetic and pharmaceutical companies and is a regular guest on
radio and TV programs worldwide. His field research is largely
sponsored by Naturex of Avignon, France. Read more at
www.MedicineHunter.com
Tags: antioxidant, cancer, China, fatigue, immune function, plant, rhodiola rosea, stress
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