levitational current - Free Energy
levitational current - Free Energy
levitational current - Free Energy
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Fig. 17.2. Motor-driven mixing device<br />
with golf club-shaped impeller.<br />
of the mixing vessel. A left-hand vortex builds up the positive<br />
energy and the right hand vortex creates a negative energy that<br />
draws in the inseminating O 2 . The alternating energy charge builds<br />
up the inherent energies of the 500 mix. This recalls the alternating<br />
left and right hand bends in a river building up its energy in a<br />
longitudinal vortex (see p. 143).<br />
This method of progressively raising energy is analogous to the<br />
Japanese art of sword making. The base material is heated in the<br />
furnace, and then beaten out or 'structured' with a hammer as it<br />
cools. It is then further heated to incandescence, folded over on<br />
itself, fused together and beaten out again. Each time the heating<br />
partially breaks down the structuring created by the beating. But<br />
with repetition, the structure is cumulatively enhanced and the level<br />
of chaos is diminished, ultimately producing a razor-sharp blade<br />
whose structure is both laminar and flexible. In a similar way, as the<br />
vortices are alternately formed and destroyed in making the fertilizer,<br />
the level of energy rises and the degree of chaos decreases until,<br />
after about an hour, the product is ready for use. This is sprayed on<br />
the fields towards evening within two to three hours of preparation<br />
and before the accumulated energies have dispersed.<br />
In order to produce larger quantities of the 500 mix, motor<br />
driven paddles are used in cylindrical vessels. Viktor's son, Walter,<br />
found that the energies build up more strongly in an egg-shaped<br />
vessel, and he devised one (Fig. 17.2) using a simple blade like a<br />
gold golf club head as an impeller to infuse carbon-dioxide permanently<br />
into water under a partial vacuum. 4<br />
The farmer that Viktor watched also sang into the brew, rising<br />
tones as he stirred to the left and falling tones as he stirred to the<br />
right, adding crumbling pieces of aluminium-bearing clay into the<br />
water. The chanting builds up creative energy in the water's memory<br />
(see p. 108, homeopathy). After about an hour the mixture was<br />
ready to be spread over the fields. The following morning he did this<br />
by dipping a branch with small leaves into the barrel and then flicking<br />
the energized clay-water emulsion over the ground, rather like<br />
holy water is sprinkled with palm fronds on Palm Sunday.<br />
Viktor Schauberger's methods of producing natural fertilizer<br />
were similar to Rudolf Steiner's biodynamics, but they did not<br />
depend on the thousands of cow horns used by Podolinsky, which<br />
are available now only because of the high demand for beef. Ultimately<br />
such a supply is non-sustainable, when you consider that in<br />
HIDDEN NATURE