HOW COULD ROOTCROPS POSSIBLY SAVE US FROM HUNGER AND EVEN FAMINE?
HOW COULD ROOTCROPS POSSIBLY SAVE US FROM HUNGER AND EVEN FAMINE? We often think of rice, corn, and wheat as the pillars of human survival. In countries like the Philippines, rice is not just food—it is identity. But history, science, and even common sense are quietly telling us something uncomfortable: depending too much on a single staple is a dangerous gamble. Consider a story from 1770. When Captain James Cook’s ship, the HMS Endeavour , struck the Great Barrier Reef, his crew was stranded for weeks along the Australian coast. Their survival did not depend on imported seeds or stored grain. Instead, it hinged on what nature had already prepared for them—root crops like wild taro and yams. These humble plants, growing quietly in swampy ground, provided the starch, nutrients, and resilience that kept the crew alive long enough to repair their ship. That story is not just history. It is a warning—and perhaps a blueprint. Root crops—cassava, sweet potato, taro, yam, even lesser-known o...