Title: Re: Perfect Orchard


Gil  you wrote:
Clay has the ability to cling together and form tough blocks. Great for
making adobe or pise houses. Increased soil carbon and increased soil biota
will help, but in the short term use one to four tonnes of gypsum to the
hectare, will break the clay and allow water penetration and largely break
the pan without ripping. If you trench, you will most likely loose your soil
into the lower regions and bring the clay to the surface. It will also tend
to make a place for water to lay and rot the roots. I would not do it. Try
gypsum first.

I don't have a lot of experience in this area being my bottom lands were never worked with tractors.
But I believe Lute Larson and others have had great Radionic success with hard pan and even standing water using Radionic rates to increase porosity and air circulation. The field broadcaster would be a great device to set these patterns consistently.  

On a slightly different tact I intent this coming year to pay closer attention to light circulation in soil.
Mark Purdey's work and discussions here on the list have touched on Light's relationship to to proper growth and mineral transmutation.

Given my assumed role of CU & ZN in soil's  circulation of light do you think that gypsum would decrease heavy clays tendencies to towards celating these metals.
Gypsum as a "gem" stone has interesting transmissions of laser light with odd effects ie halos and hot spots.

In musing
In Love & Light
Markess

Reply via email to