The 20th Annual Conference of the Weston A. Price Foundation

Wise Traditions 2019

The 20th Annual Conference of the Weston A. Price Foundation

Ancestral Health Meets Modern Science

 

November 15-17 * north of Dallas, Texas

 

wisetraditions.org

 

All registered by July 31st will be entered into our drawing for $100 refund on your registration.

 

Join us in Texas to meet and learn from these impressive speakers:

 

Informative practical talks:

Sally Fallon Morell, MA, author of Nourishing Traditions

Becky Plotner, ND, expert on GAPS

Janine Farzin, expert on school lunches

Esther Gokhale, author of 8 Steps to a Pain-free Back

Leslie Bobb and Lyndsay Gutierrez, fermentation experts

Monica Corrado, MA, CNC, traditional food chef

Sandeep Agarwal, expert on ghee & Indian cuisine

Andrew Gardner, expert on animal fat skin care

Bloggers panel with Carrie Vitt, Kelly Moeggenborg & Mandy Blume

 

Interesting science-based talks:

Peter Ballerstedt, PhD, expert on ruminant agriculture
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Natalie Campbell, vaccine researcher

Tom Cowan, MD, author of Human Heart, Cosmic Heart

David Diamond, MD, expert on cardiovascular disease

Ben Edwards, MD, of the Root Cause Protocol

Anthony Jay, PhD, author of Estrogeneration

Kiran Krishnan, expert on intestinal flora

Robert Quinn, DAOM, LAc, founder of Kamut International

Karen Randall, DO, emergency medicine physician

Pam Schoenfeld, RD, co-director Healthy Nation Coalition

Stephanie Seneff, PhD, expert on glyphosate

Joseph Tarantolo, MD, existential psychiatrist

Jerry Tenant, MD, author of Healing is Voltage

Timothy Weeks, DC, author of Whole Body Health

Louisa Williams, MS, DC, ND, author of Radical Medicine

Lindsea Willon, expert on insulin resistance

Will Winter, DVM, expert on pastured livestock

Nasha Winters, ND, LAc, co-author The Metabolic Approach to Cancer

 

For further information: wisetraditions.org or phone (540) 722-7104

 

 

Work exchange application deadline July 31st * Early bird discount until September * Membership discount for registrants

 

Wise Traditions 2011 (Lisa) Friday

Friday

Wise Traditions 2011, the 12th Annual, Weston A. Price Foundation Conference.  November 11th to 14th, 2011.  The theme of this conference was “Mythbusters”.

Visit Sponsors

Oatmeal Bar Breakfast

The conference began on Friday with an “Oatmeal Bar”.  Breakfast was not included in the conference registration fee but was provided as a fundraiser for the Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund.  I know from experience that I don’t do well with oatmeal for breakfast, even when it is properly prepared.  So I bought two boiled free-range eggs and the sausage and biscuits.   There were also blueberries, crispy nuts, butter, and cream for the oatmeal, and tea, kefir, local grass-fed milk, fruit and other items for sale.

Tracks

The conference was broken into several “tracks” that were all running at the same time.  This made choosing which one to attend difficult.  On Friday the tracks were:

I. TRADITIONAL DIETS
Part 1, 2, & 3 by Sally Fallon Morell
II. GUT & PSYCHOLOGY
Part 1, 2, & 3 by Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride
III. NUTRITION & METABOLISM:
Part 1, 2, & 3  by Stephanie Seneff, PhD
IV. BIODYNAMIC FARMING:
Part 1 – The Biodynamic Preps by Hugh Lovell
Part 2 – Biodynamic Bovine Care by Michael Schmidt
Part 3 – Biodynamic and Practical Bee Care by Christy Hemenway
V. FOOD PREPARATION
Part 1 – Traditional Cooking by Tara Rayburn
Part 2 – Broth Based Soups and Stews by Jessica Prentice
Part 3 – Gluten-Free Sourdough by Sharon Kane

During the first session I was so excited about being at the conference, that I found I couldn’t sit still to listen to any one speaker, so wandered the sponsor’s tables and peeked in on all the talks.

Traditional Diets by Sally Fallon Morell

Sally’s six-hour presentation is well worth attending.  You owe it to your self to see it at least once.  We have shown a version of this presentation at our Popcorn Review DVD showings, and will show it again sometime in the future.

Gut And Psychology Syndrome (GAPS) by Natasha Campbell-McBride, MD, HMC, CCH

Gut & Psychology Syndrome - Natasha Campbell-McBride, MD

When I attended my first Wise Traditions conference in 2007, hearing Dr. Natasha speak was the highlight of my trip.   The basis of her talk is that the brain is intimately connected to what is going on in the gut, and that healing the digestive system can clear up many so-called psychiatric or neurological (and physical) disorders. We have shown her presentations at our Popcorn Review in the past, and will probably show this presentation, as  I understand that there was new information presented that was not available a couple years ago.

Nutrition and Metabolism by Stephanie Seneff, PhD

Nutrition and Metabolism - Stephanie Seneff, PhD

Stephanie’s presentations are very in-depth and interesting.   We have shown two of Stephanie’s presentations at our Popcorn Review.  She makes a clear biological case for needing such nutrients as cholesterol, fat and sulfur in the diet.

Biodynamic Preps - Hugh Lovell

Farming Track

This year I didn’t stay in any of the Farming track presentations.  In 2009 I spent most of one day in the farming track.  I find the farming tracks very interesting even though I am not a farmer.  I like to know what good farmers are doing, and what I, as a consumer of farm products should be looking for.  I would love to show some of the DVDs from this track to local farmers and consumers.

I mostly attended the Food Preparation track.

Lunch

Friday Lunch

Friday Lunch featured some very interesting coconut wraps, cheese, veggies, salsa, chicken and baked apples for desert.

View the conference menu.

Broth Based Soups and Stews

Broth Based Soups and Stews - Jessica Prentice

After lunch I attended Broth Based Soups and Stews.  Jessica Prentice, owner of Three Stone Hearth in California and author of Full Moon Feast, is a wonderful speaker.  She has a great way of grouping together different recipes so that you can see the patterns behind them.  In this presentation she talked about how traditional cultures all over the world used similar techniques to make soups and stews.  She gave examples of recipes that fell into different categories of cooking techniques.  This gave us the opportunity to look at recipes that we decide to make not simply as instructions to follow, but allows us to see the pattern it fits into, and this gives us flexibility to modify the recipe.

Gluten-Free Sourdough

Gluten -Free Sourdough - Sharon Kane

For the third session of the day I continued with the food preparation track and attended Gluten-Free Sourdough. Sharon Kane described her experience of learning to make traditional sourdough breads only to discover that she was severely gluten intolerant.  She was told on all the sourdough-making sites that gluten-free sourdough was not possible.  Through her own perseverance she discovered the process needed to work with gluten-free grains and seeds.  She uses kefir (?) to start each batch in order to get the fermentation process going quickly enough to work with these alternative grains.  She does not keep a sourdough starter going at all times, but instead usually starts each batch with fresh starter.

Gluten -Free Sourdough - Sharon Kane

At the end of the session Sharon Kane gave us all samples of her Teff-Carob bread.  Yummy!  She had helpers toasting pieces in the back of the room and the smell was simply wonderful.

I bought her book and hope to be able to teach these recipes sometime in the future.

Friday Dinner

Friday Dinner

Pork sausages, pulled pork, baked beans, garlic sauerkraut, potato chips fried lard, bread and lots of butter.  For a sweet treat there was watermelon slices drizzled with balsamic vinegar.  The sausages were a little too dry by the time I got any, but otherwise fairly good food.  I thought the balsamic vinegar on watermelon was a strange combination, but it was nice.

The meals are all eaten at large round tables that hold at least I had a lovely conversation with someone I met at the table.  She said she was going to blog about it.  I took a picture of her “butter with a little bread”.

We WAPFers like our butter! This was my neighbor's bread & butter

Evening Activities

Sally said that at previous events they used to wonder what people wanted to do in the evening, and tried organizing social events.  When conference reviews came back, they found that what attendees wanted was more education!

So in the evening we had the choice of five more activities:

Radical Medicine: “Removing the Obstacles to Cure” by Louisa Williams
Film: The Greater Good by Leslie (Bradshaw) Manooklan
Obesity Myths by Ben Pratt
Cod Liver Oil by David Wetzel
Real Food – Bloggers Panel

Cod Liver Oil

The History of Cod Liver Oil - David Wetzel

I attended the presentation on Cod Liver Oil.  David Wetzel is the owner of Green Pasture, the first cod liver oil bottler in modern times to make cod liver oil through the original technique of fermentation.

His presentation covered the history of cod liver oil including many photos of original packaging and advertisements for cod liver oil.  He outlined the change that occurred when industrial processes of refining, bleaching, deodorizing the oil took over the market.  Instead of the advertising focusing on the health benefits of cod liver oil (that were well known at that time) they focused on the tastelessness of the product.  They claimed how easy it would be to get your children to take it.  They didn’t seem to know or maybe care, that the tasteless product lost most of its nutritional value.

I thought it was a great talk.  Unfortunately this presentation was not recorded.  I spoke to David Wetzel after his talk and found out that he is willing to come to Eugene (from Nebraska) to give this presentation to us if we have 25 people who are interested in hearing it.  Please let me know if you would be interested in hearing this talk.

Traveling Light

This was the first year I attended the conference without my son along.  He went to his first conference in Virginia, when he was just barely two, and slept through most of it in a carrier on my chest.  He is six now, and had a great time spending the weekend with his grandparents, aunt and cousin.  The conference provides childcare and activities for children for a reasonable extra fee.  My son did fine in childcare,  but  I enjoyed “traveling light” this time.

Stay tuned to the Eugene Chapter Newsletters for more highlights from the Wise Traditions 2011 conference.

Wise Traditions 2012

It is not too early to start planning to attend the 2012 conference, which will be in California!  Several of us from Eugene will be attending, and I am sure there will be opportunities to carpool, caravan, travel by air, or share rooms together.

May 14th: DVD “Cholesterol, Statins and the Brain”

Note Special day and time for this DVD!

Due to some scheduling conflicts at the Market of choice, this DVD will be shown on a Saturday.  Hopefully some of you who normally can’t come to our Friday DVDs will be able to make this special day and time.

Cholesterol, Statins and the Brain
by Stephanie Seneff, PhD
A Presentation from Wise Traditions 2010, 11th Annual Conference

Saturday, May 14th, 2011
DVD begins at 4:30
Discussion time before and after movie – 4:00 to 7:00 PM

Location:
Market of Choice
67 West 29th, Eugene
Upstairs in the Community Room

Cholesterol, Statins and the Brain? In this session, I will develop a theory that Alzheimer’s risk is significantly increased by insufficient supply of cholesterol and fats to the brain. I will first describe all the ways in which cholesterol plays an important role in the proper functioning of neurons. I will then discuss the series of progressive stages of Alzheimer’s, beginning with oxidative damage, followed by mitochondrial dysfunction, defective signal transmission, insulin resistance, amyloid-beta deposits, and ultimately apoptosis and cell death. I will end with a discussion of multiple biological effects of statin therapy that plausibly increase risk to Alzheimer’s.

Stephanie Seneff, PhD received her Bachelor’s degree in Biology with a minor in Food and Nutrition in 1968 from MIT.  She received her Master’s and PhD degrees in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in 1979 and 1985, respectively, also from MIT. Since then, she has been a researcher at MIT, where she is currently a Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and a Principal Investigator in the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. Throughout her career, Dr. Seneff has conducted research in diverse areas including human auditory modeling, spoken dialogue systems, natural language processing, human language acquisition, information retrieval and summarization, computational biology, and marine mammal socialization.  She has published over 150 refereed articles on these subjects, and has been invited to give keynote speeches at several international conferences. She has also supervised numerous Master’s and PhD theses at MIT.  She has recently become interested in the effect of drugs and diet on health and nutrition, and she has written several essays on the web articulating her view on these topics. She is the first author of a paper on the metabolic syndrome which will appear in the journal, “Archives of Medical Science,” and on two other papers on nutrition currently under review.

RSVP:
Please RSVP if you think you will be attending. If your plans change, always feel free to just show up.

Cost:
Donations of $5-10 donation to the Eugene Chapter are suggested and appreciated.
Sliding scale for low-income people is $1-4 or volunteer to help the Eugene Chapter.
(No one should miss a showing because of cost. Please join us).

Discussion:
We have had such interesting conversations before and after recent DVDs that we now offer time for discussion.

Dinner and a Movie:
You are welcome to buy food downstairs in Market of Choice or (shh, don’t tell them I told you this) bring something from home to eat in the room.

Links:
Purchase your own DVDs from Fleetwood Onsite Conference Recording
Download Conference speaker’s Handouts
View our “Popcorn Review” pages (here and here) for information on past showings.

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April 29th: DVD Re-run "Fat: An Endocrine Organ"

We had technical difficulties during our last DVD showing (pictures but virtually no sound).  After trying everything we could at the Market of Choice, without success, we moved our showing to a local member’s house.  Many of us stayed late to watch the DVD, but we all agreed to show this excellent DVD again.

If you missed it the first time, here’s your second chance to join us!

Fat: An Endocrine Organ
by Stephanie Seneff, PhD
A Presentation from Wise Traditions 2010, 11th Annual Conference

Friday, April 29, 2011
DVD begins at 6:30 (ends approximately at 8:30 PM)
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Location:
Market of Choice
67 West 29th, Eugene
Upstairs in the Community Room

Read full DVD description >>

Next month we plan to show Dr. Seneff’s other presentation “Cholesterol, Statins and the Brain”.

March 25th: DVD “Fat: An Endocrine Organ”

Fat: An Endocrine Organ
by Stephanie Seneff, PhD
A Presentation from Wise Traditions 2010, 11th Annual Conference

Friday, March 25, 2011
DVD begins at 6:30 (ends approximately at 8:30 PM)
Discussion time before and after movie – 6:00 to 9:00 PM

Location:
Market of Choice
67 West 29th, Eugene
Upstairs in the Community Room

In January we asked for feedback on which of the presentations the Eugene Chapter should show in upcoming months.  This was one of the winners.  Please continue to review the presentations and send in your votes.

Body Fat is an Endocrine Organ That Modulates Appetite Based on Nutritional Deficiencies While fat (adipose) tissue had originally been viewed as a passive storage containers for fats, it has increasingly become apparent that it plays an active role in modulating appetite, as well as liver, and pancreatic function, to maintain homeostasis and assure adequate supplies of fuel sources in the blood stream. Fat cells release several peptides that play powerful regulatory roles, such as leptin and adiponectin. Fat tissue also releases cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-alpha in response to stress, as part of the inflammatory response. I will explain how adipose tissue orchestrates energy management in skeletal muscle cells based on the nutritional profile, and how the distribution of fats and carbohydrates in the diet can powerfully influence body mass index.

I will also develop a theory that obesity and the metabolic syndrome arise from nutritional deficiencies of four principal nutrients: cholesterol, fatty acids, calcium, and vitamin D, in conjunction with excessive high-glycemic index carbohydrates in the diet. I will show how a high-carb, low fat diet, along with excessive sun avoidance, leads to a cascade of events ultimately culminating in atherosclerosis and heart disease.

Stephanie Seneff, PhD received her Bachelor’s degree in Biology with a minor in Food and Nutrition in 1968 from MIT.  She received her Master’s and PhD degrees in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in 1979 and 1985, respectively, also from MIT. Since then, she has been a researcher at MIT, where she is currently a Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and a Principal Investigator in the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. Throughout her career, Dr. Seneff has conducted research in diverse areas including human auditory modeling, spoken dialogue systems, natural language processing, human language acquisition, information retrieval and summarization, computational biology, and marine mammal socialization.  She has published over 150 refereed articles on these subjects, and has been invited to give keynote speeches at several international conferences. She has also supervised numerous Master’s and PhD theses at MIT.  She has recently become interested in the effect of drugs and diet on health and nutrition, and she has written several essays on the web articulating her view on these topics. She is the first author of a paper on the metabolic syndrome which will appear in the journal, “Archives of Medical Science,” and on two other papers on nutrition currently under review.

RSVP:
Please RSVP if you think you will be attending. If your plans change, always feel free to just show up.

Cost:
Donations of $5-10 donation to the Eugene Chapter are suggested and appreciated.
Sliding scale for low-income people is $0-4 or volunteer to help the Eugene Chapter.
(No one should miss a showing because of cost. Please join us).

Discussion:
We have had such interesting conversations before and after recent DVDs that we now offer time for discussion. We will have the room available from 6:00 until closing.

Dinner and a Movie:
You are welcome to buy food downstairs in Market of Choice or (shh, don’t tell them I told you this) bring something from home to eat in the room.