I still cannot understand how human beings can view raw broccoli as food.
Iguana, have you ever tried a plant-free diet? Or do you just BELIEVE that you need fruits, vegetables and nuts?
When I visit national parks in Europe I always see tons of animal food but no plant-food except herbs and some berries once in a year.
Löwenherz
Sometimes broccoli stems (the flower has always been bitter to me) are tasty and sometimes not. Every human being has a different history, is different and has varying transient needs.
Even if I had the opportunity to try a plant-free diet for several days (which I never had, even when traveling a few times around the planet) I would not try it, just as would not try an animal food free diet. Both would require the use of conceptual intelligence and of an ideology: animals as well as our far ancestors didn’t care whether a stuff is animal or vegetal, they would not even know where’s the difference. They’ve eaten whatever tastes good enough, without categorizing anything and even most animals considered as pure carnivores eat some plant foods, sometimes in the intestines of their preys.
Categorizing, by delineating artificial limits and borders between things is perhaps one of the biggest error of modern mankind. In nature, most of the things are more or less continuous, with a gradual change.
I avoid beliefs. Perhaps I could survive for some times with animals foods only (what an artificial constraint, again!), but I would not like it and be extremely frustrated.
Our ancestor came to Europe quite recently, once they had advanced hunting weapons and about the time they mastered the fire (even if a few seem to have wandered across before using the fire), as already discussed several times. Still there must have been chestnuts, pine nuts, hazelnuts, mushrooms, various edible wild plants and roots which still exist today. There’s always a close interaction between an animal species and its environment. I think that’s called “coevolution” and it means that animals modify their environment by spreading the seeds of the plants they eat. That’s probably why wild fruits such as cempedak, rambutans and durians were found only in the jungles populated by apes such as orangutans who eat those fruits and spread their seeds.
Cheers,
François