Winning Shenanigans
Kava Curious
So I was wondering which country drinks the most Kava (by amount of people)... I figured this is the best place to ask that questions and I appreciate any and everyone who takes the time to answer BULA
But I heard that Fijans don't take their kava as seriously as Vanuatuatans.I would have thought kava drinking per capita would be Vanuatu hands down, but since Fiji has over 3x the population as Vanuatu, if it's kava per country per year, then Fiji might just take it?
I don't have the numbers, but I agree with Nabanga's take on it. I think per capita is the best way to judge and Vanuatu must be the most/biggest drinkers in that case. They've domesticated at least 50-70 different cultivars, where as other island coutries have between 5 to 15. They drink the strongest mix, they drink the most frequently...nearly every man there drinks it, excluding some 7th Day Adventist's. They have what seems like 100's of kava bars, other countries have a few to zero.
In Lebot's book, he mentions that Fiji technically grows and sells more kava by tonnage, but that's mostly because they have a bigger international import/export system set up. If you were to judge biggest kava drinking country simply on the number of people who have consumed it, then hypothetically the US could be answer in the not too distant future, simply because of the enormous population relative to Vanuatu. Vanuatu has about 252,000 people total, let's say half are men and they all drink kava, now there's only 126,000 people to make 100% of the country's male kava drinkers.
The US has about 319,000,000 people in, that means only 0.04% of the US population would have to drink kava to have more kava drinkers by number, than Vanuatu. (If I calculated that correctly) Being that the US includes Hawai'i, has a growing number of kava bars and a growing awareness of kava, it doesn't sound unreasonable. If you include American Samoa and Guam, then there's even more.
In comparison, here's some American alcohol consumption stats:
86.8 percent of people ages 18 or older reported that they drank alcohol at some point in their lifetime; 70.7 percent reported that they drank in the past year; 56.4 percent reported that they drank in the past month.
In my view, the list should probably look something like this:
1) Vanuatu
2) Fiji
3) Tonga
4) Samoa
5) Hawai'i/US ? New Caledonia ? Pohnpei ? Tokelau ? Marquesas ? Kiribati ? Niue ? Solomon ?
NZ also has a growing number of Polynesian kava drinkers, but again, a relatively small population compared the US.
Are there really that many Americans consuming kava? I have a hard time believing that. Even in Hawaii I'd assume that only a very small minority drinks kava regularly.
Keep in mind we're talking here about kava as defined in the Codex Alimentarius: a water extract of the root and/or rhizome of Piper methysticum. All those capsules and extracts don't count.
That's an interesting stat, thanks. Apparently there are approx 310,000 non-Maori Pacific Islanders in NZ, and around 60k Indo-Fijians.In NZ we estimate than on an average Friday night apx 20,000 people drink traditional kava. Not a huge number, but it's def growing.
There definitely is huge potential in the US, but from what I've heard, not so much from this population of Islanders. They largely prefer beer, and regular consumption of kava is cost-prohibitive. As you know, Islanders very rarely drink kava alone, using it mainly as a social drink. The US is just too damn big and spread out and it's not easy to get a group of people together for a kava session on a regular basis.In the US for example, there are about 540,000 pacific islanders (mostly in california, nevada, hawaii, utah, alaska, texas, oregon & washington)
There's ~1,225,195 if include mixed race.
I even read that there are 4 times as many Samoans living in the US mainland than there are in the entirety of American Samoa.
So there's definitely a huge potential for a big number of kava drinkers here (relative to the entire population of Vanuatu), but like I said, our whole population is so incredibly large in comparison and the size of the country is so vast, it seems more like a drop in the bucket....or should I say Tanoa.