Is there a way to download Alan York's talk so that I can listen to it
without interruption?

Peter Young
Bennett Valley Vineyards

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of Allan Balliett
Sent: Saturday, February 01, 2003 4:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: COMPOST TEA was Re: Perry's recnt posts


>My apologies to Mr York! I guess too that I need reminding
occassionally
>that radionics only works well in the hands of a skilled and talented
>operator, there are'nt many around, count em on your fingers probably
in
>your country as well as here!

Lloyd - I can't do justice to this because I do not have verbatim 
notes, but I noticed over and over again that as I asked Mr. York or 
Mr. Brinton about the effectiveness of one dynamic approach to 
another - - from Heinz Groetzke's 100% chicken manure tea to radionic 
application, each of them in their own way and own words asked 'Why 
would a person need that? There must be something fairly basic that 
is not right or you wouldn't be looking for something so extreme.' on 
top of that, Alan York said a couple of times (maybe even on the tape 
that I've published at www.gardeningforthefuture.com) 'I think this 
is all much easier than we are making it.' Which is to say, good 
farming practices are enough to produce a good farm; the preps are 
what are needed to produce food fit for human development. (And the 
development of real soil structure, I'd have to add from the recent 
AP readings!)

Going ahead, because Alan York uses the preps whereever he works (all 
of the preps), I asked him about horn clay. I told him that it is 
widely believed that the preps won't work well unless they were 
mediated through the use of horn clay. He said 'Well, I must be 
remiss. I've never noticed that the preps were not working.'

Again: this is not presented as 'the Truth' or to contradict someone 
else's experience. I'm putting this man's extensive and effective 
biodynamic experiences out here for less experienced growers to 
factor into their decisions for their own approaches.

-Allan



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