James Headly wrote: >Dear Lloyd, >That certainly would be something to break the drought over eastern >Australia wouldn't it. Just a quick note on rainmaking. >When that front was moving through NSW during the last AGM and you asked >that everyone should hold their focus on making rain. Well everybody held >their focus on what was wanted. >It was a great result. It didn't stop raining in Ballina for weeks >afterwards. >If 100 people can break the drought around Ballina I'm sure that if we get >our order right it may just be possible to squeeze a litle bit of juice out >of the gods. It could be an Association venture organised by Cheryl. It >should not be too hard to muster up a couple of hundred members to hold a >particular thought for rain over Eastern Australia at the same time.. Maybe >we could create the rain that we all need. >It seems that there is some correlation between what happens in the northern >hemisphere and what happens down under. seems as if it is not that long ago >that our friends in the central portion of the USA were having their own >problems with drought and high temperatures. >James
Dear James, The US had its worst drought year since the thirties Dust Bowl days, when in 1936 it was much worse than in 2002. Most of Georgia was in its fifth straight year of summer drought, though for Florida and far southern Georgia this was broken. In my area we failed to put up our hay as much and as well as we might have because of too much rain. An anomaly? All around us there was too little, and the darned stuff has to go somewhere. It didn't take too much radionic work to get too much rain. Several times it looked like drought was setting in, however, and twice I had to do five consecutive days of treatment before rain occurred. So I suspect it will be best if there are rain workshops in as widespread an area as possible so you don't get just a couple pockets of flooding with everyone else not getting enough. Farmers in such places as Southern Tamaulipas (Mexico) and Southern North Dakota that followed my rainmaking procedures got abundant rain, though in Southern Ontario a farmer there had difficulty making rain and is visiting me in this regard next weekend. I've got one of the best manufacturers of variable capacitance type radionic equipment an hour and a half's drive away, Peter Kelly. His basic beginner's instruments ($1,000 US) are designed as orgone accumulators and his newer developments (Silver Sephora amplifiers and pyramid style Phase Array Antenna output plates) really add power to the process. In the words of Gary Kahout, a Minnesota farmer using Kelly's instruments with the new upgrades, "Oh Boy! Now when I treat things they STAY treated." (Kelly can be reached at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) Best, Hugh Lovel Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
