The stories became far too frequent to ignore. Emails from folks with allergic or digestive issues to wheat in the United States experienced no symptoms whatsoever when they tried eating pasta on vacation in Italy.
Confused parents wondering why wheat consumption sometimes triggered autoimmune reactions in their children but not at other times.
In my own home, I’ve long pondered why my husband can eat the wheat I prepare at home, but he experiences negative digestive effects eating even a single roll in a restaurant.
There is clearly something going on with wheat that is not well known by the general public. It goes far and beyond organic versus nonorganic, gluten or hybridization because even conventional wheat triggers no symptoms for some who eat wheat in other parts of the world.
What indeed is going on with wheat?
For quite some time, I secretly harbored the notion that wheat in the United States must, in fact, be genetically modified. GMO wheat secretly invading the North American food supply seemed the only thing that made sense and could account for the varied experiences I was hearing about.
I reasoned that it couldn’t be the gluten or wheat hybridization. Gluten and wheat hybrids have been consumed for thousands of years. It just didn’t make sense that this could be the reason for so many people suddenly having problems with wheat and gluten in general in the past 5-10 years.
Finally, the answer came over dinner a couple of months ago with a friend who was well versed in the wheat production process. I started researching the issue for myself, and was, quite frankly, horrified at what I discovered.
The good news is that the reason wheat has become so toxic in the United States is not that it is secretly GMO as I had feared (thank goodness!).
The bad news is that the problem lies with the manner in which wheat is grown and harvested by conventional wheat farmers.
You’re going to want to sit down for this one. I’ve had some folks burst into tears in horror when I passed along this information before.
Common wheat harvest protocol in the United States is to drench the wheat fields with Roundup several days before the combine harvesters work through the fields as the practice allows for an earlier, easier and bigger harvest.
Pre-harvest application of the herbicide Roundup or other herbicides containing the deadly active ingredient glyphosate to wheat and barley as a desiccant was suggested as early as 1980. It has since become routine over the past 15 years and is used as a drying agent 7-10 days before harvest within the conventional farming community.
According to Dr. Stephanie Seneff of MIT who has studied the issue in-depth and who I recently saw present on the subject at a nutritional conference in Indianapolis, desiccating non-organic wheat crops with glyphosate just before harvest came into vogue late in the 1990s with the result that most of the non-organic wheat in the United States is now contaminated with it. Seneff explains that when you expose wheat to a toxic chemical like glyphosate, it actually releases more seeds resulting in a slightly greater yield: “It ‘goes to seed’ as it dies. At its last gasp, it releases the seed” says Dr. Seneff.
According to the US Department of Agriculture, as of 2012, 99% of durum wheat, 97% of spring wheat, and 61% of winter wheat have been treated with herbicides. This is an increase from 88% for durum wheat, 91% for spring wheat and 47% for winter wheat since 1998. Note that bulgur is commonly made from durum.
Here’s what wheat farmer Keith Lewis has to say about the practice:
I have been a wheat farmer for 50 yrs and one wheat production practice that is very common is applying the herbicide Roundup (glyposate) just prior to harvest. Roundup is licensed for preharvest weed control. Monsanto, the manufacturer of Roundup claims that application to plants at over 30% kernel moisture result in roundup uptake by the plant into the kernels. Farmers like this practice because Roundup kills the wheat plant allowing an earlier harvest.
A wheat field often ripens unevenly, thus applying Roundup preharvest evens up the greener parts of the field with the more mature. The result is on the less mature areas Roundup is translocated into the kernels and eventually harvested as such.
This practice is not licensed. Farmers mistakenly call it “desiccation.” Consumers eating products made from wheat flour are undoubtedly consuming minute amounts of Roundup. An interesting aside, malt barley which is made into beer is not acceptable in the marketplace if it has been sprayed with preharvest Roundup. Lentils and peas are not accepted in the market place if it was sprayed with preharvest roundup….. but wheat is ok.. This farming practice greatly concerns me and it should further concern consumers of wheat products.
Here’s what wheat farmer Seth Woodland of Woodland and Wheat in Idaho had to say about the practice of using herbicides for wheat dry down:
That practice is bad . I have fellow farmers around me that do it and it is sad. Lucky for you not all of us farm that way. Being the farmer and also the president of a business, we are proud to say that we do not use round up on our wheat ever!
This practice is not just widespread in the United States either. The Food Standards Agency in the United Kingdom reports that the use of Roundup as a wheat desiccant results in glyphosate residues regularly showing up in bread samples. Other European countries are waking up to the danger, however. In the Netherlands, the use of Roundup is completely banned with France likely soon to follow.
Using Roundup on wheat crops throughout the entire growing season and even as a desiccant just prior to harvest may save the farmer money and increase profits, but it is devastating to the health of the consumer who ultimately consumes the glyphosate residue laden wheat kernels.
The chart below of skyrocketing applications of glyphosate to US wheat crops since 1990 and the incidence of celiac disease is from a December 2013 study published in the Journal Interdisciplinary Toxicology examining glyphosate pathways to autoimmune disease. Remember that wheat is not currently GMO or “Roundup Ready” meaning it is not resistant to its withering effects like GMO corn or GMO soy, so the application of glyphosate to wheat would actually kill it.
While the herbicide industry maintains that glyphosate is minimally toxic to humans, research published in the Journal Entropy strongly argues otherwise by shedding light on exactly how glyphosate disrupts mammalian physiology.
Authored by Anthony Samsel and Stephanie Seneff of MIT, the paper investigates glyphosate’s inhibition of cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes, an overlooked component of lethal toxicity to mammals.
The currently accepted view is that ghyphosate is not harmful to humans or any mammals. This flawed view is so pervasive in the conventional farming community that Roundup salesmen have been known to foolishly drink it during presentations!
However, just because Roundup doesn’t kill you immediately doesn’t make it nontoxic. In fact, the active ingredient in Roundup lethally disrupts the all important shikimate pathway found in beneficial gut microbes which is responsible for the synthesis of critical amino acids.
Friendly gut bacteria, also called probiotics, play a critical role in human health. Gut bacteria aid digestion, prevent permeability of the gastrointestinal tract (which discourages the development of autoimmune disease), synthesize vitamins and provide the foundation for robust immunity. In essence:
Roundup significantly disrupts the functioning of beneficial bacteria in the gut and contributes to permeability of the intestinal wall and consequent expression of autoimmune disease symptoms.
In synergy with disruption of the biosynthesis of important amino acids via the shikimate pathway, glyphosate inhibits the cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes produced by the gut microbiome. CYP enzymes are critical to human biology because they detoxify the multitude of foreign chemical compounds, xenobiotics, that we are exposed to in our modern environment today.
As a result, humans exposed to glyphosate through the use of Roundup in their community or through the ingestion of its residues on industrialized food products become even more vulnerable to the damaging effects of other chemicals and environmental toxins they encounter!
What’s worse is that the negative impact of glyphosate exposure is slow and insidious over months and years as inflammation gradually gains a foothold in the cellular systems of the body.
The consequences of this systemic inflammation are most of the diseases and conditions associated with the Western lifestyle:
- Gastrointestinal disorders
- Obesity
- Diabetes
- Heart Disease
- Depression
- Autism
- Infertility
- Cancer
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Alzheimer’s disease
- And the list goes on and on and on …
In a nutshell, Dr. Seneff’s study of Roundup’s ghastly glyphosate, which much of the wheat crop in the United States is doused with annually, uncovers the manner in which this lethal toxin harms the human body by decimating beneficial gut microbes with the tragic end result of disease, degeneration, and widespread suffering.
Got the picture yet?
Even if you think you have no trouble digesting wheat, it is still very wise to avoid conventional wheat as much as possible in your diet!
You Must Avoid Toxic Wheat No Matter What
The bottom line is that avoidance of conventional wheat in the United States is absolutely imperative even if you don’t currently have a gluten allergy or wheat sensitivity. This includes bypassing food products made with it such as the popular meat substitute seitan also called vital wheat gluten. The increase in the amount of glyphosate applied to wheat closely correlates with the rise of celiac disease and gluten intolerance. Dr. Seneff points out that the increases in these diseases are not just genetic in nature, but also have an environmental cause as not all patient symptoms are alleviated by eliminating gluten from the diet.
The effects of deadly glyphosate on your biology are so insidious that lack of symptoms today means literally nothing.
If you don’t have problems with wheat now, you will in the future if you keep eating conventionally produced, toxic wheat!
How to Eat Wheat Safely
Obviously, if you’ve already developed a sensitivity or allergy to wheat, you must avoid it. Period.
But, if you aren’t celiac or gluten sensitive and would like to consume this ancestral food safely, you can do what we do in our home. We source organic, naturally low in gluten, unhybridized Einkorn wheat for breadmaking, pancakes, cookies, etc. Please note that einkorn is not to be confused with the more general term farro, which includes emmer and spelt, which are both hybridized. You can learn more about the scientific research on the “good” gluten in einkorn in this article.
When we eat out or are purchasing food from the store, conventional wheat products are rejected without exception. This despite the fact that we have no gluten allergies whatsoever in our home – yet.
I am firmly convinced that if we did nothing, our entire family at some point would develop sensitivity to wheat or autoimmune disease in some form due to the toxic manner in which it is processed and the glyphosate residues that are contained in conventional wheat products.
What Are You Going to Do About Toxic Wheat?
How did you react to the news that US wheat farmers are using Roundup, not just to kill weeds, but to dry out the wheat plants to allow for an earlier, easier and bigger harvest and that such a practice causes absorption of toxic glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup and other herbicides, right into the wheat kernels themselves?
Did you feel outraged and violated as I did? How will you implement a conventional wheat-avoidance strategy going forward even if you haven’t yet developed a problem with gluten or wheat sensitivity?
What about other crops where Roundup is used as a pre-harvest desiccant such as barley, sugar cane, rice, seeds, dried beans and peas, sugar cane, sweet potatoes, and sugar beets? Will you only be buying these crops in organic form from now on to avoid this modern, man-made scourge?
UPDATE: The Soil Association in July 2015 called for an immediate ban on the use of glyphosate for wheat ripening and desiccation purposes. The nonprofit reports that glyphosate residues are widely found in nonorganic wheat samples and the use of the herbicide on wheat crops has increased 400% in the past two decades.
Dr. Robin Mesnage of the Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics at Kings College in London, revealed new data analysis showing Roundup, the most common brand of Glyphosate based herbicides, is 1,000 times more toxic than genotoxic glyphosate alone due to the inclusion of other toxic chemicals in its mix.
Peter Melchett, Soil Association policy director said; “If Glyphosate ends up in bread it’s impossible for people to avoid it unless they are eating organic. On the other hand, farmers could easily choose not to use Glyphosate as a spray on wheat crops – just before they are harvested. This is why the Soil Association is calling for the immediate ending of the use of Glyphosate sprays on wheat destined for use in bread.”
References
Glyphosate now commonly found in human urine
Study: Glyphosate, Celiac and Gluten Intolerance
The Glyphosate, Celiac Disease Connection
Pre-harvest Application of Glyphosate to Wheat
Glyphosate’s Suppression of Cytochrome P450 Enzymes and Amino Acid Biosynthesis by the Gut Microbiome: Pathways to Modern Diseases
Yield and quality of wheat seeds as a function of desiccation stages and herbicides
Wheat farmer weighs in on the use of Roundup as a wheat desiccant
More Information
Roundup: Quick Death for Weeds, Slow and Painful Death for You
Hybrid Wheat is Not the Same as GMO Wheat
The Dutch Ban Roundup, France and Brazil to Follow
How to Mix and Use Gluten Free Flour
Can Celiacs Eat Sourdough Bread?
The Dirty Little Secret About Gluten-Free
Kat
I’ve been wanting to tell someone important about my discovery concerning wheat and allergies, but had no idea who would actually listen. Now after reading this I think you might be just the right person!
My wheat related allergies vansished (one year ago after suffering for 30 years) when I stopped eating any “enriched” products. What clued me in was the whole Italian pasta thing as well. I always wondered why I could I eat pasta from Italy but not Canadian pasta? Then came why homemade bread yes, and store brought bread no? Then the big clue came from Imported (and non enriched) Walkers English shortbread I had bought from a tiny British good specialty shop which did not make me sick, but the exact same Walkers English shortbread cookie from Costco that was produced specifically for the Canadian marked which was “enriched” made me terribly ill.
Soon after I made that little discovery and started avoiding ALL “enriched” products: breads, oatmeal, rice, milk etc… my migraines have stopped completely and I am finally healthy for the first time in my life.
Sadly Canada has now stared enriching their organic products as well, where as they used to not. Now I have to buy my flour for baking imported from the United States: Hodgsen Mills or Bobs Red Mill. Hopefully the USA doesn’t follow suit and start enriching their organic flours as well.
I hope this might help someone else out there unravel their health issues, it’s awful being sick every day and having no idea why.
Debbie
Kat
Very interesting post. We live in Canada my husband has been suffering with migraines since he was 12 years old, he is now 50. By chance the doctor told him a couple of years ago to loose some weight by cutting down on carbs (breads, pastas, etc.) After a few weeks he hadn’t had a migraine and he normally had 1 or 2 a week. He has now cut out all wheat products and has no migraines. We just got back from 3 weeks in Florida and the Caribbean and he had no migraines but he ate buns, bread, pasta, you name it he ate it. We cannot figure out why wheat is a problem in Canada and not in the USA. Although in Canada he can eat KFC and it doesn’t bother him at all. Will research the ‘enriched’ products now.
Jaye
Yes, some farmers do spread glyphosate on wheat before harvest. They do this to minimize the growth and spread of fusarium (which causes the grain to be low quality). They only do this when the grain is physiologically mature to prevent translocation of the chemical into the kernels. However, determining when the crop is physiologically mature is an inexact procedure, so unfortunately some grain is sprayed too early and the chemical translocation into the kernels. All crops are held to strict maximum residue limits, and crops sprayed with glyphosate has to be within these limits in order to be sold for a food source. If you’re concerned with chemicals in your food, eat organic. Or you can stop grouping all farmers into the “farmers are evil, money hungry poisoners” category and do something useful, like getting companies to stop using recycled cardboard packaging that leaches chemicals into food that way. There are more chemicals introduced to food after it leaves a farm than the original crop received during growth and harvest.
Another Steve
One important point that was not covered in this article is that here in America, the vast majority of flour used in commercial products is bromated (has potassium bromate added). Many other nations have banned the use of bromated flours, as well as banning the import of products containing potassium bromate, because of health issues, including digestive problems. Because of that, I use only organic non-bromated non-bleached flours. The FDA allows many things here in America that have been banned in other nations. The use of potassium bromate is banned in all of the EU, including the UK, and in Canada, China, Japan, and some nations in South America.
Wayne Gage
Bromated flour has not been available in the US since the 80’s
Bru Doo
I just looked this up and you are VERY wrong, the only US regulation to potassium bromate is in California: they require products containing bromate to have a warning label. Thats it!
Pepper Culpepper
Very informative article. Thank you for writing this. I don’t buy into the “science” that says GMO food or Roundup is safe. I know when I eat it, I feel depressed, my anxiety, anger and depression all come back in full swing. Eliminating grains has helped me to get my Interstitial Cystitis and Fibromyalgia under control without the use of pharmaceutical drugs. Drugs that nearly killed me when I was on them.
james
Having read another comment (there are so many it’s difficult to read more than a few) saying that some pasta made in Italy contains US flour as well as Canadian and Italian. I checked it and found it to be true, so we’re back to square one from a logical point of view. Of course this pasta would contain a lot LESS US flour, but whether that’s enough to sustain the argument i’m sceptical.
james
I just checked and the first pasta i looked at was Barilla, genuine italian brand. To my surprise I found it’s made in Iowa, so presumably with US wheat since Iowa is wheat country, no? this theory makes more sense to me now!
james
I live in UK, not in USA, but here all our pasta is made in Italy; Is that not the case in USA? is US pasta made in USA?
because if it’s made in italy then it would be o.k. to eat pasta in US.
MIke Bumpus
I have grown wheat in SE Illinois for 50 years. I have talked with wheat growers in Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska. NONE of them have ever heard of spraying glyphosate on wheat for ANY purpose, especially not at harvest time. In doing some digging I find this IS a common practice in a small area of the northern great plains. But for the vast majority of the U.S. it is a false claim.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Hmmm. Explain the USDA data then and the skyrocketing use of glyphosate on US wheat? Do you think perhaps many farmers do not want to admit what they are in fact doing?
Sue Zehr
Dear Sarah, I appreciate and applaud the fact that you want to eat healthy. However, I do not appreciate your trying to create a false agenda by saying farmers do not want to admit what they do or do not do. This is NOT how the majority of farmers operate in the USA and I would believe anywhere in the world. Someone who decides to take on the job of farmer is one of the most hardworking, high moral standards for themselves and for their work. To read you saying that farmers lie and hide what they do is totally uncalled for and does not make you look very respectful. In fact you loose mine totally.
Sarah
Well according to other farmers and consumers who live nearby these glyphosate spraying farms, this is exactly what is happening … farmers who use Roundup to desiccate aren’t admitting it and sometimes will even lie about it. Just because it is uncomfortable to contemplate doesn’t mean it’s not true.
Audrey Gregis
I live in South Central PA on three acres surrounded by farmland. The farmer that farms the land next to me sprays his wheat with glyphosate just before harvest. I have photos of the tire tracks that run through the wheat field. I bought my house at an auction in the fall after harvest. I had NO idea that this farmer did no-till, GMO farming, or I would never have bought this house!
J.A. Goramn
WOW! Tire tracks, in a wheat field. I would never imagine such a thing.
Laura
This article makes SO MUCH sense! I read many of the comments as well which corroborate the evidence. I shared this with some friends and a couple are skeptical, calling this article bogus or pointing to snopes.com/food/tainted/roundupwheat.asp. What would you say to that article, especially:
“Additionally, the author’s claim that “According to the US Department of Agriculture, 99% of durum wheat, 97% of spring wheat, and 61% of winter wheat [in the U.S.] has been doused with Roundup as part of the harvesting process” is unsupported by documentation. Although glyphosate has been suggested for pre-harvest application in some places (such as Canada and Europe), the author appears to have confused a chart showing the overall percentage of glyphosate application wheat crops in the U.S. for one specifically detailing pre-harvest glyphosate usage on wheat crops. Those are two very different measurements.”
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Snopes debunks everything that isn’t conventional, big industry and pro-corporations. Snopes is for dopes. Here’s the thing snopes left out … when would you possibly use that much roundup and get that much growth in its use for wheat specifically unless it was to desiccate (kill) it pre-harvest? That much roundup use is far and beyond the little amount used to control weeds here and there as wheat is not round-up ready (GMO) and cannot withstand direct application. That much roundup with that much growth over the years can be indicative of only one thing: direct application.
roger
Yes direct application to wheat stubble after harvest, for no-till or reduced tillage in fallow ground, and in seedbed pre seeding. Very little (-1%) is ever sprayed on wheat pre-harvest. That is the truth from a wheat farmer of 40 plus Years. Thanks
Sarah
Truth maybe for you on your single farm … not for most. Depending on weather conditions, glyphosate spraying is used extensively pre-harvest. The jig is up for wheat farmers!
Roger
Sarah, it is July, and here in the Pacific Northwest ( Washington, Oregon & Idaho) the combines are starting to harvest millions of acres of wheat. It has been 95 degree most days and no roundup is being applied preharvest. Please come and visit, I can introduce you to farmers in 3 states so you can learn of the great, nutritious and safe wheat we produce. Please email me and I can arrange visits for you with farmers. You can ever drive a $400,000 combine to harvest some wheat to take home with you. Thank you. Roger
Sarah
Roger, just because you don’t use it and farms in your area don’t desiccate doesn’t mean it’s not being done! All that means is that dry weather in your area doesn’t warrant it. The latest data from the EPA says that 25% of the crop on the average wheat farm is desiccated with glyphosate with 70% being the maximum. And, all that conventional wheat is mixed together in the silo and at the processing plants contaminating all the unsprayed conventional wheat. Hence the need to buy only organic wheat until this egregious practice is eliminated. See my latest post on this for the EPA charts. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/pre-harvest-roundup-crops-not-just-wheat/
Paul
Dr. Anthony Samsel got hold of the Trade Secret files on Glyphosate from EPA, that had been sealed and protected from public eye for 35 years. He had to sign a legal agreement not to copy or show those documents to anybody, although he is allowed to study the content and talk of his own opinion about them. And express his opinion he did. IN an hour long telephone interview with me, he disclosed how Monsanto used unethical means and unrelated information from other tests, to find an excuse to ignore what their own tests glaringly showed – evidence of harm to the animals exposed to Glyphosate. tonu.org/2015/06/06/glyphosate_tradesecretfiles/