Interview with
Ralph Celebre RH(AHG)
Clinical Herbalist
Owner/Operator of Basil Bandwagon, a retail natural products store in
Flemington, NJ
Ralph
Celebre RH (A.H.G.) has over twenty-five years in the natural foods and
herbal medicine fields. He opened his independent, locally owned
business, Basil Bandwagon, in Flemington, NJ in 1993. He offers
Wellness Consultations, Individualized Herbal Formulas, Custom Tea
Blends and Herb Classes / Internships.
1) How did you
get started in the health food retailing business? What was your
background before that?
I
started with a small family-owned natural foods distributor in 1982.
They hired me, and my 1973 Box Truck to be one of their three delivery
drivers. I had a degree in Environmental Science from Rutgers, and
thought of this as an in-between job. Little did I know it would change
the direction of my career.
2) What motivated
you to take David Winston’s 2-year herbal training program?
I was
always a plant person. I was also a backpacker/camper, so I spent a
fair amount of time around wild plants. I’ve organically gardened since
age seventeen. But it was at the health food distributor that I first
encountered liquid herbal extracts. I was absolutely fascinated by
the notion of capturing a plant’s principles into a solution. I
started bringing home the ones with broken bottle caps or smudged labels
and playing around with them. Then I began reading on the subject.
This was all in 1982. In 1985, there was an article about David Winston
in the Home News newspaper. I called him up.
3) How do you
incorporate that training into the store? How does it enhance your
retail business?
My
major reasons for opening a store were: 1) I had experience in the
wholesale end of things, having seen many stores, and 2) I wanted to
talk to people about herbs on a daily basis! So the training was
essential to that. The training gave me an entire structure, a
framework to build upon; it offered a system (several actually) with
which to utilize herbs. I hope and think it came across to customers
that I had a high degree of training, and that I was sincere about the
faith I put in the plants.
4) Do you think
other natural product retailers should consider herbalist training? What
should they consider when evaluating that option?
Herbalist training can help retailers make a real connection between
some of the bottles they sell and nature. They can benefit from the
energetic, vitalistic approach to health issues. Retailers can bring
more information to what they do every day. They need only consider how
motivated they are, as the course will challenge them.