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Pine nuts, Politics and Public Lands
by
Anonymous
All pine trees reproduce through creating a nut in a cone. Some of these pine nuts are tasty and nutritious - others cost more in calories to collect, than they yield. The pinenuts purchased at a grocery, could be from any one of the 28 species, grown in about 7 countries. Each species with a different , shape, texture, flavor
and nutritional value.
The Department of Commerce reports that foreign countries ship us, 8 million pounds of pinenuts each year. China provides most of the imported nuts, with Italy, Pakistan and Portugal, each being a major exporter of pinenuts. Because the shell amounts to 25% of the shipping weight, most nuts are sold with the shells removed.
Once the shell has been removed, the nut must be preserved. Pine nuts are preserved, according to methods of the exporting country. Certain methods of preservation would not be allowed here, like the use of lye as preservative.
Unless you live in the Southwest, or are over the age of 70, chances are you have never had a fresh, unprocessed pinenut. One might compare this to never having eaten a fresh strawberry, but consuming only dried or frozen fruit. Yet, two commercial species domestic pine nuts grow wild on 47 million acres of public land.
It is a native plant, with tremendous range, outstanding nutritional value, and highly
sought after in foreign countries. Why then are we importing so many pine nuts?
The politics of the cattle industry and public land grazing is the primary reason . Before the huge corporations controlled grazing leases, pinenuts were harvested by the box car load and readily available. Those were the days before the chain-saw, bull dozer, and massive herbicide treatments, the American Cattlemen’s
Association and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
Pinyon pinenuts were a major food source sustaining the peoples in the Great Basin of the United States, in excess of 10,000 years. The soft-shelled pinyon pinenut, (p.monophylla) provided primary protein to the Shoshone, Piautes and Washo peoples, containing substantial amounts of the amino acids necessary for human growth. It was a sacred part of the way they lived. Certain treaties and Nevada laws provide harvest rights to Natives. The Native Peoples have never fought
for those rights. The Federal Government cannot be guaranteed economic control of the pinenut harvest. Realizing cattlemen must pay the grazing fees, albeit highly subsidized corporate ranching, corporate cattle won over pinenuts, hands down.
Most public lands managers are educated as range managers, rather than foresters. Range managers see it as their self-imposed duty to create and maintain range, which can also be called pasture. Millions and millions of acres of pinyon forests were bulldozed, chained, poisoned and subjected to prescribed burning to
create pasture land for cattle. Beginning in the 1960 ‘s the pinyon tree were treated as a invasive weed, interfering with the forage available for cattle.
Range managers were never educated about the massive deforestation caused 1800’s mining industry which fueled the silver smelters with pinyon charcoal at a rates up to 450 acres per day. Nor, have they been taught that the
p.monophylla life cycle requires between 100 and 150 years to reach seed bearing maturity, then cones on a 5 year cycle, with three seasons required to produce the nut in the cone. Most have never read the research reports that state pinenut production potential revenues could exceed grazing revenues by 148 to 500 times
over. Or, that pinenuts are 28 times more earth efficient in terms of acreage used to
produce pounds of protein than beef.
The Great Basin was a semi-arid forest and native peoples could always find a harvest of pinenuts, before white settlement. The pinyon never recovered from demands made upon it by the mining industry of the 1800’s. The large, mature
seedstock trees had been depleted from all but the most inaccessible areas of the forest. As the cattlemen came in, the land was manipulated to yield grasses, rather than forest. The grasslands dry out and die, rather than maintain the moisture
content, like trees. The pasture land has become part of the catalyst for huge fires in
Nevada.
Land managers again, rather than looking to long term historical land composition, used faulty logic to justify treatment projects as landscape restoration, creating more grassland and flash fuel. Deforestation. This in turn, dramatically reduced the mature pine nut bearing tree.
One can obtain more information about pinyon pine nuts and public land activism from www.pinenut.com. The owners of that site are environmentalist working to promote wild food as an alternative to cattle grazing.
Penny Frazier is independent environmental advocate, who has spent the last 8 years working
to create change on public lands. She is a former litigation paralegal and the owner of the
www.pinenut.com . She actively participates in public land management NEPA proceedings,
receiving training and encouragement from the Committee for Idaho's High Desert. She
works at respecting the Western Shoshone Nation and supports justice for their Land
Settlement Claims.
This article courtesy of http://www.industrials-supply.com.
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