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"Harvesting Nutrients From The Sea" Above- Susan Domizi and legendary seaweed harvester, |
"We control the quality of our micronutrients all the way from the ocean harvests to the final container in your hands" |
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Domizi purchased seaweeds produced by others. She quickly realized,
however, that she would have to assume production herself in order
to achieve the quality control she wanted. The formula and exact species
used in SOURCE's blend is closely guarded proprietary information.1
SOURCE's main harvesting grounds for seaweeds used in its products are in cold, northern waters...
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| Above - Seaweed harvesters bringing in a load for transport. |
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Once
harvesting begins, time is of the essence as the seaweeds are carefully
harvested, bundled into thousand pound loads and delivered to the
SOURCE MAINE plant manager for processing. From sea to
seaweed meal takes substantially less than 24 hours. The seaweeds
are never summarily dumped in bulk into large trucks for hauling,
Domizi notes. Handled that way, they would begin to heat up and
compost, making them good for little more than fertilizer. Like
making good hay, she points out, post-harvesting handling and timing
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Once at the plant, these bundles the weight of a horse are hung in overhead racks. Strict controls during the dehydration process ensure minimal loss of nutrients. The seaweeds are then ground into a fine meal and packed in bags that resemble huge wheels of green cheese. They are shipped to the North Branford plant where different ingredients are formulated into the unique SOURCE blend and packaged for distribution. |
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| All the ingredients in SOURCE are subjected to extensive independent laboratory testing to assure their exceptional quality. Every container can be traced to the batch it came from, and every seaweed ingredient in every batch can be traced back through processing to its harvest. |
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| While SOURCE
is marketed strictly as a nutritional supplement and makes no medical claims, Domizi
believes that its positive effects are to due replacement of micronutrients no longer
available in our food supplies. Every state has now reported trace mineral deficiencies in
its soils, she notes. Soils lacking in needed nutrients produce foods lacking in them.
Heat processing, poor harvesting, and improper storage can further decrease nutrient
levels...
...Trace elements are held in suspension in the ocean, Domizi continues. As seaweeds filter these nutritious waters, they store the trace elements as bioactive compounds in their tissues. Domizi feels that the best way we could improve our food supply would be to fertilize soils with seaweed. That is simply too expensive, she says, so the alternative is using a supplement that brings these "lost" trace minerals back into the diet.
"We're
always improving [SOURCE] as we learn how to improve harvesting
and processing, and learn more about the analytical profiles of
various macroalgae. We'll never stop until it's perfect." |
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excerpts this
page reprinted from: 2 "Harvesting Nutrients Fom Under The Sea" Click here for more of the story on SOURCE; The Pioneer in Micronutrient Supplementation; Often imitated never duplicated-why? |
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photos on this page used courtesy of SOURCE, INC.,
all rights reserved |
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