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Christopher Hobbs (herbalist)Christopher Hobbs is a California herbalist and acupuncturist who is known for his prolific writings on medicinal plants, mushrooms and liver herbs. A fourth generation herbalist and botanist, Hobbs has been working in natural medicine for nearly 40 years.[1] He is a Co-Founder and professional member of the American Herbalists Guild, and has served on the admissions review committee from its inception.[2] He has formulated supplement lines, written about a wide variety of herbs, has taught at a variety of schools and lectured widely. Additional recommended knowledge
Life and trainingHobbs grew up in a botanical and herbal family. His dad and great uncle were botany professors in California, and his grandmother and great-grandmother were herbalists. In 1968, Hobbs studied diet and fasting with Paul Bragg in Desert Hot Springs, California. He took up experimenting with herbs from Maud Grieve's herbal and started leading weed walks in 1969. He worked in a natural foods coop in rural Oregon and taught classes in herbs and natural healing, while acquainting himself with the herbs of the Pacific coast. In 1980 he spent a year studying polarity therapy at the Alive Polarity Institute on Orcas Island and in a hot springs center in Calistoga, California. At this point he decided to devote his life to natural healing and herbs. He taught with Rosemary Gladstar from 1980 to 1990 in northern California at the California School of Herbal Studies as a regular guest teacher, before moving to Santa Cruz in 1984 where he spent most of the next two decades. In 1984 he completed two years of pre-med training at Cabrillo College, and opened a herb company, Native Herb Company with his partner, Beth Baugh. The company focussed on producing single tinctures and formulas that incorporated lesser-known pacific coast wild herbs. The company was sold to Rainbow Light Nutritional Systems in 1989. He studied acupuncture at 5 Branches Institute and in the clinic of Michael and Lesley Tierra and was licensed in the State of California. Hobbs ran his own clinical practice on Mission Street in front of Heartwood Spa from 1996 to 1999, when he moved to Williams, Oregon.[3] He moved back to Santa Cruz in 2001, then to Davis in 2002 to complete an undergraduate degree in biological sciences. After graduate in 2006, he began a Ph.D. program at University of California, Berkeley, studying the chemistry, pharmacology, botany, phylogenetics, and ethnobotany of the medicinal genus Artemisia. Consulting to the herbal industryHobbs has consulted with Nature's Way, Yerba Prima and other natural supplement firms. Since 1984, he has been a formulator, herbal, and scientific consultant for Rainbow Light Nutritional Systems in Santa Cruz. Hobbs is a founder of Native Herb Custom Extracts (now Rainbow Light Custom Extracts) and the Institute for Natural Products Research. He is a consultant to the herb industry and has formulated a custom Chinese herbal line for Secara.[1][4] He has reviewed the quality of herbs in a number of large herb companies, and served as a member of the standards committee of the American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) since 1988. He has served as vice president of AHPA, and as a member of the board of trustees for 7 years. LibraryHobbs has been collecting rare herbal books for over 30 years and collected over 8000 books relating to herbal medicine and the history of medicine. He compiled extensive collections in ethnobotany, early American materia medica and medical botany, botany, history of ancient medicine (including a number of 16th and 17th century herbals), European phytotherapy (including Hagers Handbuch) and nearly complete runs of the journals Planta Medica, Herba Hunganca, Herba Polonica, Fitoterapia, The Eclectic Medical Journal, American Journal of Pharmacy (from the early 1800s), Phytotberapy Research and a number of others.[3] TeachingIn 1980 Hobbs started teaching herbal medicine and botany classes a the only resident herbal school on the pacific coast, the California School of Herbal Studies founded by Rosemary Gladstar. The following year Hobbs moved to Santa Cruz, and began teaching the chemistry, pharmacology and botany of herbs full time in the Platonic School of Herbal Studies founded by Dr. Paul Lee along with Michael Tierra, Subhuti Dharmananda and Grace Marroquin, which continued for 4 years. With Michael Tierra, he founded the American School of Herbalism in 1990 to teach training programs in western and Chinese herbal medicine, which is still operating in Santa Cruz.[3] Hobbs has taught or lectured at universities and medical schools such as Yale Medical School, Stanford Medical School, Bastyr University and the National School of Naturopathic Medicine; the University of California, Santa Cruz and the University of California, Davis. He regularly presents at such conferences as the American Herbalist's Guild, Breitenbush Herb Conference, Medicines from the Earth, the Green Nation's Gathering, American Herbalists Guild Annual Conference, and the International Herbal Symposium. He has lectured internationally in Canada, South America, Great Britain and Europe.[1] PublicationsIn addition to a full library of articles on Health World,[5] he has written for Natural Health, Let's Live, HerbalGram, and Pharmacy In History. He is a contributing editor to HerbalGram. Hobbs has also written for the American Herb Association NewsLetter, Business of Herbs, Vegetarian Times, Fine Gardening, Herbs, and Mothering, among others.[3] Hobbs has written a number of books and pamphlets on herbal medicine over the years:
ReferencesCategories: Herbalists | Ethnobiologists | Acupuncturists |
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Christopher_Hobbs_(herbalist)". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |