Getting to the Root of Ginseng
Questions about the herb's health benefits haven't cooled the red-hot market in wild American ginseng
- By David Taylor
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2002, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Albright takes the “sanging hoe” and scrapes the earth gently on either side ofthe delicate stem to keep the fragile root hairs intact. The six-inch root is oddlytwisted and bent. It will soon embark on a journey of thousands of miles. U.S.Fish and Wildlife Service inspectors may count its rings to make sure it is oldenough before it ends up in a shop in Chungking, China, or San Francisco’sChinatown. By then, it will command several hundred dollars.Albright grins, not only because he’s found the root but also because heplanted its seed eight years ago. Wild sang does grow around here, but thisparticular plant represents his first efforts in the hottest sector of the markettoday: simulated wild ginseng. Albright says he must harvest this patch soon.Poachers stalk his forest, and, he confides, “somebody already knows thatit’s here.” Some growers are going hightech, using handheld GPS receivers tomark ginseng patches, thus avoiding using the flags or paint marks on treesthat might attract poachers’ interest.
Raw ginseng tastes like a bitterradish, and I can do without it. I’ve never felt the herb’s restorative powers,either, whether it was raw, pickled, dried or powdered. Others certainlyhave—or think they have. In 1713, Pierre Jartoux, a Jesuit missionary in China,wrote in a letter that after eating ginseng, “I found my Pulse much fullerand quicker, I had an Appetite, and found myself much more vigorous.”Four days later, so tired he could hardly stay in his saddle, he chewed somemore. After an hour, he reported feeling like a new man. In his letter, almostas an afterthought, he noted that ginseng might well grow in similar environments,such as Canada.
By chance, Jartoux’s letter came to the attention of a Jesuit brother visitingQuebec. An amateur medical botanist, Joseph Francois Lafitau soon after discovereda Canadian specimen that matched the plant in Jartoux’s drawing.A short time later, Canadian suppliersbegan shipping tons of it to China, resultingin overharvesting within a fewdecades. The Chinese began looking tothe South for an alternate source.
They found it in southern Appalachia,where the Cherokee were alreadyusing ginseng medicinally. TheIndians believed that it was sentient,able to make itself invisible to peopleunworthy of it. They so valued ginsengthat they dug up only one in fourplants and replenished each harvestedroot with a bead, a prayer and a newseed. When the Canadian supply faltered,the Cherokee stepped up production.By the 1750s, ports in Virginiaand South Carolina were doing a brisktrade in the Cherokee’s Appalachianginseng. Shipped to China, it eclipsedCanadian varieties.
George Washington, conducting asurvey of his lands in the autumn of1784, made note of the trend. “I metnumbers of Persons & Pack horses goingin with Ginsang; & for salt & otherarticles at the Markets below,” hewrote. The United States had no tradeagreements with the Far East or evenconsulates there, so ginseng traderswent through British middlemen.
Nonetheless, two American investorsfinanced a trading ship to sail aroundSouth Africa’s Cape of Good Hope, ahuge gamble at the time for investorand sailor alike. The investors hired avessel out of Boston, renamed it Empress of China and outfitted it to the tuneof $120,000, roughly ten times the costof a cargo ship bound for Europe.
As the copper-bottomed ship lay anchoredin New YorkHarbor, workers packed its hold with 242 casks of ginseng(nearly 30 tons), collected by theship’s surgeon in the mountainous“back park of Virginia.” In addition,every officer brought along his own privatesupply of ginseng to sell in Canton(now Guangzhou).
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Comments (1)
This story has way to many words that run together. For instance: thisrunstogether.
Posted by Jeff on December 25,2012 | 12:49 AM