Ah, I am sure the TMO will run and claim the monks used to do TM years ago or 
that the places the trees are blossoming are all in areas populated with many 
purusha and other yogic flyers. Or if they don't claim it, Buck and Nabby will. 
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On Sat, 4/12/14, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Cosmic cherry tree mystery
 To: [email protected]
 Date: Saturday, April 12, 2014, 4:17 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
     
       
       
       Tokyo (AFP) -
 A cosmic mystery is uniting monks and scientists in Japan
 after a cherry tree grown from a seed that orbited the Earth
 for eight months bloomed years earlier than expected -- and
 with very surprising flowers.
 The
 four-year-old sapling -- grown from a cherry stone that
 spent time aboard the International Space Station (ISS) --
 burst into blossom on April 1, possibly a full six years
 ahead of Mother Nature's normal
 schedule.
 Its early
 blooming baffled Buddhist brothers at the ancient temple in
 central Japan where the tree is
 growing.
 "We
 are amazed to see how fast it has grown," Masahiro
 Kajita, chief priest at the Ganjoji temple in Gifu, told AFP
 by telephone.
 "A
 stone from the original tree had never sprouted before. We
 are very happy because it will succeed the old tree, which
 is said to be 1,250 years old."
 The wonder
 pip was among 265 harvested from the celebrated
 "Chujo-hime-seigan-zakura" tree, selected as part
 of a project to gather seeds from different kinds of cherry
 trees at 14 locations across Japan.
 The stones
 were sent to the ISS in November 2008 and came back to Earth
 in July the following year with Japanese astronaut Koichi
 Wakata, after circling the globe 4,100
 times.
 Some were
 sent for laboratory tests, but most were ferried back to
 their places of origin, and a selection were planted at
 nurseries near the Ganjoji temple.
 By April
 this year, the "space cherry tree" had grown to
 around four metres (13 feet) tall, and suddenly produced
 nine flowers -- each with just five petals, compared with
 about 30 on flowers of the parent
 tree.
 It
 normally takes about 10 years for a cherry tree of the
 similar variety to bear its first
 buds.
 The
 Ganjoji temple sapling is not the only early-flowering space
 cherry tree.
 Of the 14
 locations in which the pits were replanted, blossoms have
 been spotted at four places.
 Two years
 ago, a young tree bore 11 flowers in Hokuto, a mountain
 region 115 kilometres (70 miles) west of Tokyo, around two
 years after it was planted.
 It was of
 a variety that normally only comes into flower at the age of
 eight.
 Cosmic
 rays
 The seeds
 were sent to the ISS as part of "an educational and
 cultural project to let children gather the stones and learn
 how they grow into trees and live on after returning from
 space," said Miho Tomioka, a spokeswoman for the
 project's organiser, Japan Manned Space Systems
 (JAMSS).
 "We
 had expected the (Ganjoji) tree to blossom about 10 years
 after planting, when the children come of age," she
 added.
 Kaori
 Tomita-Yokotani, a researcher at the University of Tsukuba
 who took part in the project, told AFP she was stumped by
 the extra-terrestrial mystery.
 "We
 still cannot rule out the possibility that it has been
 somewhat influenced by its exposure to the space
 environment," she said.
 Read
 
more:http://news.yahoo.com/cherry-tree-space-mystery-baffles-japan-085044593.html
 
 
     
      
 
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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