Dave Robison wrote:
Also what's this about alfalfa being 509? Without doubt it is an important herb, but what do you do? Do you prepare it?I didn't say I personally did anything with it, the suggestion is just a theory that seems logical to me that each of the preps plus one or two missing ones fits in with the plant growth cycle.
The things I know about alfalfa (lucerne in Oz) are that it is a legume which contains every known mineral and vitamin, is a valuable forage plant/stock feed/mulch, is an alkaliser and detoxicant, is harvested dried and pelletised and sold as cat and rabbit litter, has considerable medical uses.
When newly pelletised it is highly hydroscopic; put 100 milligrams in an empty 500gram coffee tin, add 100 ml of water, and the resultant bulk will fill the can. In this form it can be dug into the top layer of soil and used as a wetting agent but make sure the area is mulched. Dry, its energy is 350 pys; water releases the nutrients and multiplies the energy.
Other news -- we had a weekend meeting with Ruth Zinniker to discuss prep making. She is probably the "oldest" prep maker in terms of being in the "chain of transmission" from the original lectures. She is a very practical person and basically just told us to keep doing it and stay off the head trips. She wouldn't let us just sit around talking; we had to go out and do some chores with her! Ruth has some reluctance about flow forms, feels they have the lemniscate but not enough vortex. Hence they tend to bring in whatever the natural forces are and fail to gather the farmer's individuality. She likes stirring machines better because they have a strong vortex; she was interested to hear about Steve's egg-shaped machine. Ruth stirs for her farm by hand in a 50-gal barrel, so maybe 25 acres worth each time. So spraying occurs over several days each time.Whilst I agree that the contribution of farmers or farm managers is an important part of BD, I could argue that the energising of the water itself in any sort of device, be it stirring or flowform or recirculating stream, in combination with the energising of BD500 or 501, would be more than enough for the growing of crops and feed. Take pasture grasses, for instance. Generally their energy is around 490 pys. BD500 vortex-mixed in rainwater with manure concentrate for sixty minutes has an off-the-flowform rating of several thousand. The recommendation is it be sprayed out after 3pm (or in the cool of the evening in very hot areas or regions with prolonged sunshine) and within 24 hours of mixing. By that time its energy will have dropped to a residual charge of 100.
roger
