Dedars,

Listen guys. Horsetail, and even moreso Horn Quartz, can either stop rain
or bring it. Here's why. They both contribute to organization of light and
warmth in the atmosphere. When this is balanced with tone and life in the
soil they bring rain. But of themselves they tend to drive moisture up into
the stratosphere. It goes out the top, organized though it may be. If I
treat for rain and get too much I have to go out to my broadcaster and take
the reagents out of the bottom well so it will only broadcast the 508 and
501, etc. Then it dries up. And I have to watch out and put the bottom well
reagents back in as soon as the desired equilibrium is established.
Otherwise there is a drought to repair. If you broadcast 508 in the
evening, no doubt it will stop the dew. I NEVER broadcast it at night,
however. I don't think it is appropriate at that time. Mornings is the 508
time.

Best,
HGugh




>Hi! Lloyd
>It was Hugh Lovel that introduced the concept of using Horsetail to stop
>perception. He has his Fieldbroadcaster users put the Horsetail in when
>there is
>a risk of frost, as frost is the result of freezing dew, no dew, no frost, at
>least for three or so degrees below freezing. I have made rain when there was
>not reasonable indication of rain and have used Horsetail to stop rain that
>looked like it had set in for forty days and forty nights... When I was
>experimenting with this, I would pick a night with no dew and phone my son who
>at that time lived one hundred miles North of me and Hugh Sangster, who
>lives a
>hundred and thirty miles East of me. When they checked that they also had no
>dew, I would start a broadcast and within an hour would have dew, as would the
>others. I would then put the Horsetail in and within an hour, the dew
>would stop
>falling.
>
>I have been very concerned about the wide and free use of Horsetail on this
>list. I see it as being very potent and potentially the easiest to over do. I
>question if the Dor conditions may be, in at least, part the result of
>over use
>of Horsetail. We have to use the Traditional BD Preps with some degree of
>caution in the Antipodes as they were developed in a very different climate,
>different light conditions, different soils and of importance, a different
>hemisphere, which in turn has energy of a different spin. It is particularly
>important to try and keep the preps off natural, native vegetation, at
>least in
>Oz and NZ. In Oz if you want a local alternative to Horsetail, try your local
>Sheoak. Our "Drooping Sheoak" seems to have the equivalent qualities. I
>have not
>made a card for it as yet, but the direct use of the foliage seems fine.
>
>If you like to email or post a suitable map of your land, with the North Point
>and the Boundary marked, I will broadcast using my Malcolm Rae Instrument and
>Interrupter, coupled to my "Atlantian Bed" Broadcaster. (This goes for anyone
>else in trouble) If you cannot email it, post to: Gil Robertson, P.O. Box 51,
>Port Lincoln SA Australia 5606
>
>I will also broadcast using my own rain making cards.
>
>Gil
>
>Lloyd Charles wrote:
>
>> Dear Gil
>>               As you would be well aware by now most of NSW is in serious
>> drought and I, like many farmers, am about at my wits end. The simple truth
>> is if we dont get some worthwhile rain in the next two weeks we will most
>> likely loose our entire grain crop.
>
>Snip
>
>> I had followed the Hugh Courtney sequential spray idea and
>> just done it via instruments instead of physically spraying out - this was
>> what Hugh Lovel aparently did at first too - the 508 to end the sequence was
>> seen as the trigger for rain

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