Our Diet and the Gulf

Most of you may already have seen the video of dolphins and whales dying in the Gulf that was on TV last night (www.oilslick.blogspot.com) (if you haven’t seen it and you don’t want to have your heart broken, don’t go there).

Weston Price in his writings often used the phrase “the animal life of the sea” to describe the creatures that sustained native people living in traditional coastal societies before the coming of modern culture. These people and the sea mammals and fish that touched every aspect of their lives shared a deep spiritual relationship. The people worshiped the animals they hunted for survival, loved them as brothers and sisters in their unified world.

These feelings of oneness with animals and the natural world are still in us, embedded in our collective consciousness, part of our very essence. That is why those of us who are in touch with those feelings are so especially sad now as we watch the horrors unfold.

When I was a little boy, six or seven years old, my mom and grandma got me my first puppy. I named him Flip. A couple of weeks later he got distemper and despite our best efforts, he died in his little bed a few days later. For weeks, I cried in bed every night. One night my mom came in and found me crying and asked me what was wrong.

“Flip died,” I said.

“I know, honey,” she said. “We’ll get you another puppy. I promise.”

And they did, and that puppy lived a long time.

Last night, and this morning, I cried. There is no one to tell me there will be another puppy. A deal with the devil spews black poison from hell, destroying the animal life of the sea and with it our connection with that life.

The madness of the modern world seems unstoppable. But one of the things we can do is to carefully control how we spend our money for food. By refusing to buy corporate food – the packaged products that fill supermarkets, and conventionally raised meat, dairy and produce – we can starve at least some of the corporate monsters who pollute every aspect of our lives. Support small farmers, buy raw milk and natural meats and organic produce. Consume less and save more for the rainy days that the madness makes inevitable. Take control of your health through careful eating and opt out of corporate disease care. Support the people and the organizations you believe in.

Your children’s lives depend on it.

Dr. Ron’s Video Blitz

Welcome Back to Dr. Ron’s Blog

Welcome back to my blog. We have been redesigning the blog for the last few weeks, and making a series of videos (see below). Video subjects include my “primitive” diet, Blue Ice fermented Cod Liver Oil, additive-free supplements and magnesium stearate, organs and glands, Weston Price, my take on the history of nutrition from the 1950s to the present, and much more. We’ve even included “Our Farm Mascot,” in which our feline friend “Mr. Gree” gets into the Organ Delight and feasts! We hope you’ll enjoy.
My original description of my diet from our original blog is in the Archives.


Welcome to my blog!


Dr. Ron discusses nutrition in the 1950’s


Dr. Ron discusses nutrition in the 1960’s


Dr. Ron discusses nutrition in the 1970’s


Dr. Ron discusses nutrition in the 1980’s


Dr. Ron discusses nutrition in the 1990’s


Dr. Ron discusses nutrition in the 2000’s


Dr. Ron discusses women’s & children’s health


Dr. Ron discusses the role of nutrition and supplements
in endurance sports – PART I


Dr. Ron discusses the role of nutrition and supplements
in endurance sports – PART II


Dr. Ron discusses cod liver oil and x-factor butter oil


Dr. Ron discusses supplements


Our Farm Mascot “Gree” Eats Organ Delight

My First Blog Post

The purpose of this blog is to share my ideas about how to restore and maintain health through optimal nutrition. Over the years I have evolved a diet that works very well for me and for most of the people who are willing to follow it. The way I eat is quite simple, though radical in that I’ve eliminated many foods

I eat only animal foods, vegetables, and occasionally a little wild or brown rice, or toasted buckwheat. My animal foods include grassfed meat, wild seafood, eggs, as well as raw milk, cream and butter from grassfed animals. My vegetables are mostly big green salads with onions, olives, dulse (seaweed) and some cooked greens. I use olive oil and raw apple cider vinegar on my salads, and lots of raw butter on everything else. Most of my food is raw or very lightly cooked (including eggs, which are a great source of raw fat and protein). I braise my meat on a grill, but it’s raw most of the way through.

That’s really about it. In the summer I have some berries, but aside from that, no other fruit. I include no bread or any other flour products, sweets of any kind, or nightshades (potatoes, peppers, eggplants or tomatoes). Nothing except what I have described above, and food supplements I will begin discussing below.

I do this because when I eat anything else, my body gives me disagreeable and unmistakable signals. I’m not alone; like me, many of my patients over the years have recovered and maintained their health only with this simple program.

I believe the reason this works so well is because my diet closely mimics the primitive, pre-civilization hunter-gatherer diet to which human beings adapted over the long course of evolution. While raw milk, cream and butter were not a part of that diet, I’ve found that these foods work well for me and for most people, and provide essential fats hard to get enough of in most animal foods available today.

I complement the diet with several food supplements of critical importance. These include our organ and gland supplements and cod liver oil on a daily basis, in addition to others I’ll discuss over time.

When people follow this program carefully, most health problems “mysteriously” disappear. This is really no mystery. Humans are designed to function in health when the natural human diet is carefully followed.

I’m interested in your comments, but I don’t wish to debate what constitutes a good diet and what doesn’t. This blog really is for people who are interested in what I have learned in a lifetime of studying health and diet and would like to build their health using the disciplined regime of diet and supplements I have followed for many years.

Here are a few examples of how I eat. In the morning, I might have six or eight eggs – “shooters,” one at a time, raw in a glass, Rocky style.  An alternative might be a couple of glasses of raw milk, or eggs and milk blended together. Around midday, celery and carrot sticks and pemmican; or cooked greens and leftover lightly baked salmon. In the evening, a big green salad, followed in an hour or so by a big steak with butter and a couple of ounces of raw cream for dessert.

A lot of people reading this will think raw meat and raw eggs are both dangerous and unappetizing, which is certainly the conventional wisdom. I do my best to secure my food from the best naturally raised sources, but there is always a certain risk when eating raw food, whether it is sushi, an undercooked steak, or lettuce or spinach. I believe the benefits are well worth the risk, which I consider minimal. As for unappetizing – well, one gets used to things. I’m willing to go to any length to maintain my health.

In future postings, I’ll respond to some of your comments and elaborate on my diet and supplements. I’ll write more about the ideas behind my diet and why I’ve learned to avoid many common foods and eat most of my food raw. Eating this way requires a certain attitude and frame of mind, and I may write about that too, and why I think food provides the building blocks the rest of life is built upon.

Coming soon!