Dear Michelle,

There's no doubt you have really got the restorational bug. When I was at
your place and you showed me the corn ears from back in the anhydrous days
as compared to the corn ears from the post turn around days, everyone could
see how night and day the differences were.

Of course, the big issue is making money. You are already using BD preps on
your fields because you are field broadcasting. Now you are making BC and
considering how to get the remedies in your irrigation sprays. This is
do-able by radionically treating your tea and spray waters. It is another
learning gradient, but at the scale you are working with this kind of
learning is cheap. That's actually to your advantage.

You are working towards turning more of your land over into grazing. Well,
that's what went on there before the Europeans came. It's a good idea. But
one of my questions is, considering the nitrate contamination of your
Oglalla Aquifer, how much salt nitrogen does your irrigation water contain?
If it is high enough, and I don't know right offhand how high is too high,
irrigation will suppress the all-important azotobacter activity you need in
your soil to pull your nitrogen out of the air.

What would be cheapest, and most productive, is to get regular, reliable
rainfall. Out in the Palouse country on the Washington/Idaho border is some
of the world's richest wheat land. I can't help remember what a beautiful
wheat crop you had in one of your circles. But out in the Palouse they get
about 20+ inches a year rainfall and 120 bushels an acre of 14 to 16 %
protein wheat. Can you believe that? No irrigation, because the rainfall is
timely almost every year. They are on the edges of forest and desert.
Something speciasl is happening there.

Is your annual rainfall any less? Do you think your abundant aquifer got so
charged up, despite the sandy soil, without adequate rainfall? What if you
had adequate rainfall when you needed it? Where would you sell your
irrigation equipment? Well, if it's paid for, don't sell it until you've
had a dozen or so years of success without using it. But you get my drift.

Would you be interested in taking my rain making course if I give one in
Wisconsin?
Would you have any neighbors who haven't totally written you off as cracked
who would join you in taking the course?

And don't take it too hard if people think you are beyond salvage. It is a
badge of courage if anything. Hopefully they will find out before it is too
late, but they may go down the tubes and you can hardly help it.

But let's talk sense to them. I'm a scientist. I don't know everything. In
fact there are enormous vistas I know too little about. But I do know
making rain is practical, and it on the same order of practical that
getting all your carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, sulfur and, most importantly,
nitrogen out of the air for free. Everyone should be getting all these five
out of the air for free. We should be fine tuning our operations until we
achieve this.  And we should get the rain we need for free and no longer
depend on irrigation except for serious emergencies. Some say, the best
things in life are free. In my reality this is true. I think you and Jack
might share my reality with just a little encouragement. My next thought is
how might others?

Best,
Hugh Lovel




>Hello-
>I am new here and writing on this site makes my palms sweat, but I would
>like to say that I came from Nebraska to go to Allan's BD Conference in
>October.  I felt pulled to it from the time I saw it offered in Acres USA
>and it was wonderful.  I come from a "checkered past" of very conventional
>production agriculture and until 6 years ago believed this was the only way.
>When our field no longer grew decent crops even with massive doses of
>chemical inputs, we began our "quest" for a better way.  It has been the
>most wonderful and difficult thing I have ever been involved with and we
>have fought an uphill battle all the way-personally and economically.  I
>personally feel that my brains have been put in a Waring Blender and
>thoroughly scrambled.  Nothing that I believed in belongs anymore.  What I
>find is that I believe with all my heart and soul there is a better way.  I
>am pulled so very hard towards the spirituality and connectedness of the bd
>concepts.  But how to get there?!?!?  I came home from the conference and
>made my own batch of barrel compost.  I am on my way out now to our small
>greenhouse to stir a batch of bc using the preps that I bought at the
>conference for my own vegetables. Most everyone here thinks I have short
>circuited somewhere.  I guess what I wanted to say here is thank you for all
>of your thoughts on this site.  I feel so strongly that I am supposed to be
>learning these things. Allan spoke in a recent post about creating "sparks"
>from your thoughts and I think you have helped me here.  Much goes right
>over my head, but some I grasp on a deeper level than even I can really
>understand or explain.  I am on a journey to find and support my intuitive
>nature (which is the real me) and disconnect  from the logical side that I
>have had to learn to function in in my role here.  Hard to do.    My dream
>is to be able to bring our farm to a place that you can just feel the
>positive beautiful growing energy on when you come here.  We like to call it
>"regenerational" farming.  Then to be able to share that with anyone that is
>interested to help them make changes and avoid some of the mistakes we have
>made.  There isn't much room for mistakes economically any more.  Is there a
>place for bd concepts in larger scale agriculture?? or do those two concepts
>totally oppose one another? See, here again confusion reigns.  I agree with
>all of you that our earth desperately needs healing.  Is it possible to use
>bd on larger operations?  I am thinking of use of preps in our compost tea
>brewing process.  We made and put on about 90000 gallons of tea this past
>summer. I feel it could be a wonderful way to address larger operations.
>Not that I feel large operations are necessarily the correct approach, but
>to face the facts, that is what is going on in our world.  And if there is a
>way to bring even a fraction of those folks towards healing the soil instead
>of destroying it, then there has to be someone to help show them that it can
>work.  Well, once again thank you for your thoughts.  I hope the spiritual
>world understands and helps those that struggle and are confused, because
>then there is hope for me!
>Michelle Wendell
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Allan Balliett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Sunday, November 10, 2002 6:18 AM
>Subject: Re: What is Magic?
>
>
>>
>> >"Have a meeting for farmer on how to organize cooperative markets &
>> >2 people will come.
>> >Have a "class" on how to get 2 blades of grass instead of one & you
>> >had better rent a huge hall."
>>
>> Maybe I missed the point of the above, Markess, but in our area, tell
>> farmers how to make money fast (Joel Salatin, for example) and you'll
>> fill the hall. Offer to tell people how to heal the earth and create
>> foods of higher quality at the same time and very few are interested.
>> Take the BIODYNAMIC CONFERENCE for example: right down the road from
>> the BD Conference were TWO of the most famous organic farms in
>> northern Virginia. Both heavily attended Salatin (i.e. one has 5
>> interns, the other 14 interns- almost all came for Joel), NONE
>> attended the BD Conference. Like Merla, these folks were offered free
>> passes so there would be no easy excuse to not attend at least
>> portions of the conference. Although they all implied that they would
>> be at the conference (heaven's - they didn't even have to cross the
>> street!), none attended. We had a similar response to the Sustainable
>> Ag video/discussion series. Very few interested in the philosophy and
>> principles behind growing food in cooperation with Nature. A few of
>> the big market people attended one of the presentations, but clearly
>> just so they could find out who I was and what I could do for them in
>> the short run.
>>
>> We got excellent exposure to the local farm community for all of
>> these events. We have a N. VA farmer's discussion list, to which
>> invitations and reminders were posted. I know the big mouths in local
>> fruit and vegetable growing. No one attended, although the head of
>> the market did make a reservation but eventually backed out.
>>
>> I'm talking market gardeners in the US' 3rd richest county. Little
>> interest in a larger crop. Little interest in better produce but a
>> lot of interest in selling more at better prices.
>>
>> My remarks above are in no way intended to malign Joel Salatin. His
>> is the great synthesis: a way of farming that makes the land better
>> and makes people more healthy while making more money for the farmer
>> in a 9month work year. Catch him at ACRES this year, if you can.
>>
>> Later
>>
>> -Allan
>>
>>

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