Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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the plants themselves  
25  
John Christopher, and it was a treat to find his standard of excellence at a  
time that many people paid little attention to such details. He insisted on  
using only clean, wild-crafted or organic herbs, processing them in a way  
that retained their vibrancy and quality, much as earlier herbalists had  
done. Pesticides are a fact of modern farming methods, and “poisoned  
herbs” could be found in his day just as they are now. Dr. Christopher  
taught his students to choose carefully the sources from which they  
bought their herbs and to check how they were stored and later prepared.  
For this reason, he liked herbalists to prepare and even pick their own  
herbs, in order to make their own tinctures, ointments, and other  
preparations to a high standard.  
He even went as far as to insist that anything prepared for external use  
should be of the same quality as that for internal use. His legacy of high  
standards lives on with many of his students, now excellent herbalists in  
their own right. To this day, herbal preparations vary in their quality and,  
sadly, I have met people who have not had beneficial experiences from  
some preparations. This is very likely due to the poor quality of the  
original herb or to the way it was prepared.  
Twenty years ago it was hard to find organically grown herbs, so my  
personal choice was to grow my own as much as possible, to seek out  
organic herb growers in Britain, and to import from American wild-  
crafters when I needed to. Nowadays, needs and trends have changed  
dramatically, and access to good-quality herbs has become relatively easy.  
Nevertheless, my own experiences do not necessarily reflect the norm, so  
the whole issue deserves a closer look.  
There is a recognized need for greater control on herb quality. As a  
result, rules and regulations have been put into place in Britain by the  
Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) which is  
addressing the quality, origins, storage, and preparation of herbs grown in  
or imported into Britain. The problem of quality has become more  
pressing in recent years as herbalism’s popularity increased the need for  
herbs. To meet the ever growing demand, a few importers have become  
less fussy, and some herbs have been substituted or adulteratedas has  
been proved by laboratory testing.  
Toxic metals have been found among some imported herbs. Fecal  
matter has been found among some crude herbswhere human feces  
have been used to fertilize fields. Radioactive waste has also been found,  
as some herbs are still collected in and around disaster areas, often by  
poor people who are eager to make a living and for whom herb collecting  
is still a way of life. Medical and other toxic wastes are buried or burned,  
and the fumes and leakages from these can contaminate the herbs in the  
area. Since the 1940s, there has been a thirty-three-fold increase in the  


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