Dear Hugh
We have Cheryl working on this and I am really looking
forward to your visit if it can be organised - so we'll keep our fingers
crossed - she usually manages to get things to happen. I would have thought
you'd get a group in Santa Fe easy - maybe the title scared them off?
(from your reply to Michelle).> As for
> rainmaking, if anyone can put together a class, I'd like to see at least
> 30 attendees and go two days.
> One of the frustrations I feel is that most people are so plugged into
> advertising and the pictures and totally engineered sales pitches in the
> major farm magazines. The corn you showed me from in the past compared to
the
> recent higher quality shows the true story, while, as you say the elevator
> doesn't pay any extra for the quality. That's pretty discouraging, knowing
> that if you grow responsibly you don't get(m)any breaks.
I have been heartened by the fact that out here several animal feeder
operations are
sniffing around - looking to source grain grown on re mineralised soil
programs at a bit of a premium - this is outside of organic certified -
these feedlot operations keep meticulous records and do their sums and
aparently have found that they are getting a better result for less grain -
they are sharks for sure and are not doing this out of any sense of moral
responsibility.
> We've got the tools. Our homeopathic remedies and means for applying them
> are good enough already, though they may improve. We can create the
> conditions in virtually any soils to fix nitrogen out of the air and
dispense with
> nitrogen fertilizers.
The 'how to " of this would make a good after dinner discussion for February
in Aus!
>-- it is a win to
> KNOW we can do a different agriculture with homeopathics and radionics,
> despite the fact that the market doesn't give us much advantage. Our
slight
> advantage is that we know we can get our nitrogen out of the air and can
> make rain in timely fashion.
I am really looking forward to learning more of this
Cheers
Lloyd Charles