levitational current - Free Energy
levitational current - Free Energy
levitational current - Free Energy
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would watch the cows on the fertile high Alpine pastures. The grazing<br />
animal gathers the grass stems together in a spiralling movement<br />
with its tongue, cutting them with a jerk of its head so as not<br />
to damage the stalks. It then seals the ends of the stalks with its<br />
moist nose to prevent the loss of moisture and energy.<br />
The Alpine farmers needing as much winter fodder as they<br />
could get, would crop the grass sometimes three times in the summer.<br />
Their implement is the much-cherished scythe that delivers a<br />
long, slicing cut, thereby keeping the wound area to a minimum. But<br />
more than that, their method of sharpening the blade imparts to it<br />
an ionizing energy that draws together the damaged fibres and rapidly<br />
seals the wound.<br />
Those who have lived close to the land for many generations use<br />
Nature as their teacher. These farmers knew that sharpening a<br />
scythe with a stone robs it of its charge of energy. Instead they<br />
would hammer the blade on a block of hardwood which enhanced<br />
the electrical charge. Mounted on a wooden handle, wrapped in<br />
cloth and stored in darkness ensured that it would keep its charge.<br />
Schauberger understood that the Sun's light and heat would discharge<br />
a newly sharpened scythe and, for that reason, these farmers<br />
would do their blade hammering early or late, and their scything<br />
in the early morning or evening. The accumulated energies could be<br />
seen as minute glowing sparks on the blade, leaping from one serration<br />
to another in the growing darkness of a summer evening.<br />
We have lost this knowledge, and today soil fertility and productivity<br />
are in dangerous decline, ironically, because of the heavy use<br />
of artificial fertilizers as well as misguided techniques.<br />
Artificial fertilizers<br />
Contemporary agriculture treats Mother-Earth like a whore and<br />
rapes her. All year round it scrapes away her skin and poisons it with<br />
artificial fertilizer, for which we have to thank a science that has lost<br />
all connection with Nature. Viktor Schauberger 3<br />
The pioneer of modern artificial fertilizers was Justus von Liebig<br />
(1803-1873), a German chemist. His research into the elements and<br />
chemicals required by plants for growth found that four principal<br />
minerals were often deficient in agricultural soils. To increase fertility<br />
he advocated the supplementation of calcium (Ca) in the form of<br />
16. SOIL FERTILITY AND CULTIVATION