I agree with GS, Van and Sabertooth--interesting thread! I appreciate the effort that aem42290 and others have put into it. I hope no one minds my lengthy response; there is so much to respond to from Sabertooth, Van, Tyler and Edmon171.
I believe that there is no such thing as a zero carb diet. Even predatory animals eat some carbs from organ meats.
Bingo! Excellent post, Sabertooth. And when meats are fresh and eaten raw, or raw fermented, or fresh-frozen, one can get some carbs from the meat, blood, connective tissues (skin, ligaments and tendons) and even blubber as well:
"Eskimos actually consume more carbohydrates than most nutritionists have assumed. Because Eskimos frequently eat their meat raw and frozen, they take in more glycogen than a person purchasing meat with a lower glycogen content in a grocery store. The Eskimo practice of preserving a whole seal or bird carcass under an intact whole skin with a thick layer of blubber also permits some proteins to ferment into carbohydrates."
From: Principles and Issues in Nutrition, Yiu H. Hui, Ph. D., 1985, p. 91, http://books.google.com/books?id=ospqAAAAMAAJ
See also:
http://freetheanimal.com/2014/03/disrupting-carbs-prebiotics.htmlhttp://caloriesproper.com/?p=4488Unfortunately, the carbs and prebiotics get more depleted in the modern food system, so aem42290's point about getting some carbs from other sources when freshly-killed meat is not a significant part of the diet makes sense. Maybe the fact that you raise, butcher and eat fresh some of your meat and eat all of it raw is one reason you seem to have fared better than some other carnivore dieters, especially the cooked carnivores.
Aem- I think that in order to fully gain a wider perspective on the evolutionary history behind the ketogenic diet you must go back much further into our evolutionary past. Before we had evolved into herbivorous apes, our proto primate ancestors once lived as carnivorous insectivorian tree weasels.
In addition to insects, the shrew-like and lemur-like ancestors of the first primitive primates (called Plesiadapiforms), are believed to have also consumed fruits and fermented tree nectars and saps:
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2008/07/29/tiny-tree-shrews-live-on-alcohol-but-never-get-drunk/#.U36mQvk7ttghttp://www.livescience.com/7540-tree-shrew-sober-drinking-day.htmlhttp://www.scientificamerican.com/article/animals-like-to-get-drunkhttp://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070201-primates.html---
how did you first hear about ZC?
If you're asking me, I don't remember, it was probably 8-9 years ago.
OK, so we have an unknown source along with Bear Stanley and Charles Washington as the sources of the ZC notions. Stanley and Washington were influenced by Vilhjalmur Stefansson. Stefansson didn't tell people to eat truly ZC (it would have greatly hindered the popularity of his diet, for one thing), but he is the most cited source of evidence by them. Does anyone know of any other sources? I'd be especially interested in any scientific ones.
Given that Dr. Rosedale recommends 20% carbs, we know the ZC diet doesn't come from him. I suspect that some people assume he recommends lower than 20% carbs, which may help explain some of the confusion around ZC and VLC topics.
And, again, I'm not interested in all the gurus, but what works, and any science that backs it up.
I'm interested in the science too, so if you have any science re: ZC, please do share it. I hope you'll appreciate that I shared some science articles above.
You seem to appreciate at least one guru--Dr. Rosedale--and I also don't mind discussing his views and info. I told him before that I liked how he debated Paul Jaminet in a civil and scientific manner, unlike so many who railed against Jaminet.
I don't know anyone in this forum that is promoting an actual ZC diet,
It did seem like it had come to that until edmon171 spoke up. I welcome his input.
so I'm still puzzled why you're so fastidious with proclamations about the danger of ZC.
My posts were aimed not to anyone who doesn't think warnings are necessary or are not interested in the topic, but to folks like aem42290 and anyone else who is. Edmon171 also doesn't seem to mind the discussion. It wouldn't be much of a discussion if we were only allowed to hear from defenders of ZC, would it?
And again, there are several regular posters here that seemingly do just fine if not excel with going low carb.
Are you aware that my diet is LC? If not, it might help explain why you interpreted some of my posts in ways that were not intended.
And again, can we please simply describe what foods work well for any of us while maintaining a low carb diet. That is what most likely will help the most with those interested in it, vs. all the repetitious fear posts.
If that's what you wish to discuss, why not make a thread with that topic? I think there's room for both discussions and don't believe in silencing dissent from folks like aem42290, and I like what Iguana, Eric, Alive and Sabertooth contributed to the discussion and don't consider it all "repetitious fear posts". I also welcome the perspective of you, edmon171, Inger and others.
---
The fact is that there are plenty of people doing RZC, some of them not eating any raw plant foods at all.
We have heard from one. Like GS, I'm glad he spoke up and I'd be interested in hearing from others.
In fact, in the past, we were so dominated by pro-RZC advocates that I felt I had to stop them from overwhelming less popular dietary genres like raw omnivore by my refusing to allow the raw omnivore forum from being removed as it was claimed, at the time, to be "pointless since hardly anyone is raw omnivore any more".
Interesting. Thanks for your efforts.
Point is we cannot exclude one dietary path simply because a tiny handful of people here do not want it around.
I'm certainly not calling for the "banning" of the Carnivore subforum and don't want it to be banned. Like GS, I want to share and learn. I do agree with aem42290, Eric, Alive and Iguana that all civil perspectives should be allowed in all subforums, including dissent. That's the opposite of a ban.
---
There is no account for the glycerol that is released on fat breakdown being easily converted to glucose. There is no account for glycogen consumed in muscle and organ meats converting easily to glucose.
So you agree with Sabertooth, aem42290 and me that fresh raw animal carcasses obtained by Paleo HG's were not truly zero carb?
I've never in my life indulged in fresh vegetation myself
I too am interested in your input. Do you mean you've never eaten any fresh veggies for your entire life? What about non-fresh?
What's your take on these "carnivore diet" rules of Bear Stanley?
> "2) Eat nothing from the vegetable world whatsoever. (Very small amounts of flavourings such as garlic/chillies/spices/herbs which may be added, are not ‘food’)."
> "5) Eat liver and brains only very infrequently- they are full of carbs." [This appears to be the source of using the term "zero carb" instead of carnivore.]
http://www.rawpaleodietforum.com/hot-topics/raw-paleolithic-diet-for-humans/msg7678/#msg7678Interesting to see how Tyler responded to the article back then:
Nicola, could you PLEASE only post these absurd articles in the Hot Topics forum where they belong?! I'll move them there now.
What would you guess was the % of calories as carbs in the diets of coastal northern Alaska Eskimos in the early 1970's, while they were still getting most of their food from hunting/fishing and before they moved into villages and started eating much more modern foods?