Page 47 - Tracy Anderson Magazine | Spring 2021 Issue
P. 47

ther of wildlife ecology, once wrote: “There are two spir- “SMALL CHANGES
                Aldo Leopold, who is considered by many to be the fa-
                itual dangers in not owning a farm. One is the danger of   ADD UP AND IF
                supposing that breakfast comes from the grocery, and the
                other that heat comes from the furnace.”       EVERYONE CHOOSES
                What Leopold was referring to is our great and growing   TO PARTICIPATE, A BIG
                they no longer hold the same value to humans that they  CHANGE WILL BE
                disconnect from the planet, especially all things wild, for
                the seasons and followed along with the migrations of the  SEEN AND FELT.”
                once had. We were a people who moved and shifted with
                herds of animals and flocks of birds, but with the advent   everyone, but still, we’d do better to find a way to connect
                of agriculture around 10,000 or more years ago, came the   and to participate in getting our protein another way. This
                demise of the hunter-and-gatherer societies. This marked   falls into the hardworking hands of the farmer and the
                the beginning of the above mentioned disconnect with   rancher and to how they raise and treat their herd, their
                our food, the land, and with ourselves. Suddenly, humans   grasslands, and the soils. It’s simple to look at the cuts of
                as a society were being provided for—strangers were now   meat at your local butcher shop to try and find the best
                cultivating the food, doing the work, and tending to the   cut, but even more important to ask yourself, “How was
                new crop. Around that same time, we began domesticat-  that animal raised?” It starts with grazing practices and
                ing animals and building cities. This was a new revolution.   the regeneration and health of the pasture or range’s soil;
                                                               it’s really a bottom-up approach. You fix the soils with
                I point out this sudden change because for nearly 2 million   sound grazing practices, and the pasture will be abuzz
                years human beings have been hunters. In fact, “hunting”   with both flora and fauna. We can literally have our cake
                defines us as being human. There are debates on how our   and eat it, too.
                brains evolved to be significantly larger than that of the
                mountain gorilla and chimpanzee, but most concur that it   In the end, you can gain back your connection to your
                was due to the hunting and scavenging of meat, and even   protein by getting to know your neighbors and buying lo-
                more importantly, the cooking of the meat that acted as   cal. Find out who’s doing it the right way, buy from them,
                our evolutionary catalyst. Imagine what our fitness and   and vote with your dollars (or even better, volunteer with
                understanding of the wilds must have been like to be able   them and actually get your hands dirty). Your dinners will
                to survive in those times? We were truly warriors.  never be the same.
                Now more than ever we’re living in a mechanized world—  Small changes add up and if everyone chooses to partici-
                others provide for us, the blood and soil erosion rest in the   pate, a big change will be seen and felt. Think about that
                hands of the people who deliver our food to the market-  the next time you catch yourself mindlessly shopping or
                place and now, in some circumstances, right to our own   eating. Really look around. Take inventory. I promise you
                front doors. Unfortunately, this is now the trend of our   can  discover better,  more  nutrient  protein,  and  experi-
                species, and so we continue to exponentially cultivate dis-  ence a greater connection to your food because the closer
                ease, obesity, and worst of all, overpopulation.  we get to a subject, the more interesting it becomes.

                I write all of this because it’s important to understand our   My friends Taylor Collins and his wife Katie always say,
                beginning and even more important to realize the vast   “Feed people as you wish to be fed.” To that I would add,
                disconnect that Leopold was warning us about in his writ-  buy food from people who care about the soils, the wind,
                ings. However, even with that said, there’s still hope in   and the water. We can make a difference, but it’s one that
                change. We can be an active participant in the sourcing of   comes with being connected and taking responsibility. ■
 WHERE THE WILD   our meat by making important decisions as to where we   Driven by nature, Donnie Vincent has consistently let the outdoors and
                go, and how we acquire it, whether that be by hunting for
                it ourselves or making sure we shop only from farms and
                                                                his passion for adventure be the compass for his life. The wide open
 THINGS ARE  Sicmanta . Courtesy Donnie Vincent  ranches with the best practices.  expanses of the world’s most remote territories dominate his thoughts and
                                                                conversations. Deep in the heart of the wildest of terrain is where Vincent
                                                                thrives. On his expeditions into remote wilds, in the lands where seemingly
                Hunting is not only vital to us, it is to the animals we hunt
                                                                no one lives, he finds a wilderness and peacefulness that is all his own.
                as well. This is not our planet. We don’t own the animals
 Stripping it all back to nature, by Donnie Vincent.  or the land; we’re merely part of the ecosystem, no matter   The premier example of explorer, biologist, and conservationist, Vincent
                                                                takes a wider view of the topics he tackles in the field, because to him, this is
                how heavy-handed our species has become.
                                                                all a story worth telling. It’s a story of ancestral heritage, native respect, and
                                                                the desire to live strongly, empowering us to open our minds and inspiring us
                So, what if you don’t want to hunt? It’s certainly not for
                                                                to find our own adventure. For more info, please visit donnievincent.com.
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