ANFO is ammonium nitrate fertilizer in pellet form soaked in deisel or kerosene and touched off with a stick of dynamite.
I once blasted a drainage ditch for a flooded field using 3 liter soda bottles filled with the mix with a stick of dynamite duct taped to it. Dug a post hole every 8 ft and placed 3 in a row. Couldn't go for more that 3 at a time as the blast always blew the ignition wires off the fourth one. KAWUHMMMP!!!!!!!!!!!! 15ft around by 8 ft deep craters and big stumps flying a quarter mile, sometimes a whole 60 ft tall tree would take a short flight..noxious smoke everywhere Dodge ball is a new game. [sandy soil with no rocks, thank goodness] LOADS of fun in the Southlands!!!!!!!!!! YEEEE HAWWWWW!!!!!!! Ode At 05:59 PM 2/10/2004 -0800, you wrote: >Hi TJ, > >What's ANFO? I don't worry about carnivore. I'm an old fart and that was >55 years or so ago. It was what an investigative kid would do. Of course >they could be so paranoid they might think I'm suspect. One can't tell >these days how far they will go. Nothing is sacrosanct anymore is it? >We're all fair game. > >Trem >----- Original Message ----- >From: "TJ Garland" <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2004 5:48 PM >Subject: [silver_list] RE: CS>Anodes /bombs > > >> Yep- much more likely to damage a reinforced building than a low power >ANFO >> mixture. Hello Carnivore and Echelon!! >> >> >> >> TJ Garland, CMO supplier >> there are no incurable illnesses-only incurable people. >> >> >> >> >> >> >From: Trem <[email protected]> >> >Reply-To: [email protected] >> >To: [email protected] >> >Subject: CS>Anodes in Water heaters >> >Date: Mon, 09 Feb 2004 09:03:03 -0800 >> > >> >Ken, >> > >> >When I was a kid and tried making black powder using sulphur, saltpeter >and >> >charcoal I discovered the magnesium rod and used a file to get a lot of >> >raspings from it. I combined them with the black powder. Whew, does it >> >ever get more powerful! >> > >> >Trem >> > ----- Original Message ----- >> > From: Ode Coyote >> > To: [email protected] >> > Sent: Monday, February 09, 2004 7:10 AM >> > Subject: [silver_list] RE: CS>Gatorade/CS/Candida (Robert)>Anodes in >> >Water heaters >> > >> > >> > COOL! >> > >> > Now I know where to get magnesium rods for nuttin. >> > handy critters! >> > Ode >> > >> > At 07:07 PM 2/8/2004 -0700, you wrote: >> > >>>> >> > >> > All domestic storage water heaters made today have a magnesium rod >> >about 3/4 inch diameter and about 3 feet long suspended vertically from >the >> >top by a pipe fitting (boss). The purpose is to allow any electrochemical >> >currents available to the system to dissolve the magnesium (higher >> >electornegativity than either Iron or copper) instead of the tank or >> >piping, that are the def acto cathode. >> > >> > JOH >> > >> > >> > -----Original Message----- >> > From: Ode Coyote [mailto:[email protected]] >> > Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2004 7:22 AM >> > To: [email protected] >> > Subject: Re: CS>Gatorade/CS/Candida (Robert) >> > >> > Why would a gas water heater have an anode? It's just a tank with >a >> >dimpled exhaust pipe running up the center and a flame underneath. >> > Tanks are glass lined..confirmed. It's a pain in the neck to make >> >other things like wood stoves out of water heater tanks. >> > Having attempted to repair many old copper water pipes, it's not >> >uncommon to find them so thin they have to be replaced. Not sure why. >> >Usually it's good mineral free well water run through them. >> > Mineral high water generally encrusts the inside. >> > >> > ode >> > >> > >> > >> > At 02:38 PM 2/2/2004 -0500, you wrote: >> > >>>> >> > >> > James Holmes wrote: >> > >> > The sacrificial anode in both gas and electric fired water >> >heaters is made of mostly magnesium. >> > >> > True. >> > >> > Being more electrically active, it corrodes in place of the >> >steel tank. >> > >> > But most hot water heaters are glass lined. So I have >understood >> >this. >> > >> > Marshall >> > >> > >> > >> > JOH >> > >> > -----Original Message----- >> > From: Marshall Dudley >> >[<mailto:[email protected]>mailto:[email protected]] >> > Sent: Monday, February 02, 2004 10:09 AM >> > To: [email protected] >> > Subject: Re: CS>Gatorade/CS/Candida (Robert) >> > I believe he is referring to the heater. It has tungsten in >it >> >I believe, but should be fully encased in a ceramic. Since he specifies >> >electric hot water heater, that is the only thing that is there in >addition >> >to what a gas one would have. >> > >> > Marshall >> > >> > James Holmes wrote: >> > >> > Re:"Do not use the hot water from an electric hot water >> >heater for cooking or drinking. It has tungsten."Do your mean magnesium? >If >> >not, where does the tungsten originate?JOH >> > >> > -----Original Message----- >> > From: Ken & Nancy Bagwell >> >[<mailto:[email protected]>mailto:[email protected]] >> > Sent: Friday, January 30, 2004 6:31 PM >> > To: [email protected] >> > Subject: RE: CS>Gatorade/CS/Candida (Robert) >> > Hi Robert, You might have a point there, Ole... "Do not >> >use the hot water from an electric hot water heater for cooking or >> >drinking. It has tungsten. Do not drink water that sits in glazed crock >> >ware (the glaze seeps toxic elements like cadmium) like some water >> >dispensers have. Do not buy water from your health food store that runs >> >through a long plastic hose from their bulk tank (I always see cesium >> >picked up from flexible clear plastic). Also ask them how and when they >> >clean their tank. Best is to observe that it is done with non-toxic >> >methods. >> > >> > If your house is more than 10 years old, change all the >> >galvanized pipe to PVC plastic. Although PVC is a toxic substance, >> >amazingly, the water is free of PVC in three weeks! If your house has >> >copper pipes don't wait for cancer or schizophrenia to claim a family >> >member. Change all the copper pipe to PVC plastic immediately. If the >pipes >> >are not accessible, ask a plumber to lay an extra line, outside the >walls. >> >This is less expensive, too. If you have a water softener, by-pass it >> >immediately and replace the metal pipe on the user side of the softener >> >tank. Softener salts are polluted with strontium and chromate; they are >> >also full of aluminum. The salts corrode the pipes so the pipes begin to >> >seep cadmium into the water. After changing your pipes to plastic, there >> >will be so little iron and hardness left, you may not need a softener. If >> >the water comes from a well, consider changing the well-pipe to PVC to >get >> >rid of iron. While the well is open, have the pump checked for ! PC! BS. >> >Call the Health Department to arrange the testing. If you must have >> >softening after all this, check into the new magnetic varieties of water >> >softener (although they only work well when used with plastic >plumbing)."- >> >><http://www.drclark.net/info/home.htm>http://www.drclark.net/info/home.htm >> >"Dr. Clark started the meeting by stating the she was very happy and that >> >she wanted to share some of her latest findings with us and also that she >> >needed our help. Dr. Clark is very concerned about our municipal water >> >supply in the United States. She has found 5 substances in our water that >> >can inhibit the immune system and feels this contributes largely to >> >diseases such as Cancer and AIDS. Full recovery from either Cancer or >AIDS >> >is likely only with pure, unpolluted water to drink. For those of us not >> >suffering from such conditions, our livers and kidneys can filter out >some >> >of these pollutants for a while, but we would eventually be at risk also. >> > >> > The five substances polluting our water that she is most >> >concerned about are PCBs, benzene, asbestos, azo dyes, and heavy metals. >> >The worst pollutant seems to be azo dyes (there are at least 18 of them). >> >Dr. Clark has not found a way to remove them from the body. The most >likely >> >source for PCBs, benzene and azo dyes may well be common laundry bleach. >> >The main ingredient (sodium hypochlorite) is not the problem. The >additives >> >(brighteners and whiteners) and solvents are the problem. To verify this >> >she needs us to send water samples to her for testing. At the end of this >> >message is a detailed instruction about how to collect water samples. She >> >would also like us to see if there are pumping stations separate from the >> >main water plant and if so take a picture of it and send it with the >water >> >sample. She suspects that the source of the pollution may not be the main >> >facility, but may instead be the outlying pumping stations. I strongly >> >encourage all of you to help Dr. Clark a! nd! send water samples to her! >> > >> > Until the problem can be found and corrected at the >> >source, there are a few procedures you can do to protect yourself if you >> >have municipal water. First boil the tap water (a rolling boil for at >least >> >1 minute) to remove the chlorine, PCBs and benzene and then once cool, >> >filter it using a carbon filter to remove the heavy metals. PCBs can >clog >> >water filters and make contamination worse if boiling is not done. >Drinking >> >bottled water is usually not a good solution either, as bleach or other >> >solvents are often used to clean the bottles and equipment at the plant. >> >Well water may be all right so long as the well is not drilled using >> >laundry bleach to disinfect the drill. Dr. Clark has also found the same >> >immune destroyers present in many of our supplements. Apparently laundry >> >bleach is used to disinfect equipment at the plant too. So it is best to >> >only take supplements that are tested for such pollutants." >> > >> > >> >><http://www.drclark.net/news/ezine030805.htm>http://www.drclark.net/news/ez >ine030805.htmCheers,-Ken >> >Bagwell >> > ---------- >> > Do you Yahoo!? >> > Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free web site building tool. >> ><http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=21608/*http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ps/sb/>Try >> >it! >> > >> > >> > >> > <<<< >> > >> > >> > >> > -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of >colloidal >> >silver. >> > Instructions for unsubscribing may be found at: >> >http://silverlist.org >> > To post, address your message to: [email protected] >> > Silver-list archive: >> >http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html >> > List maintainer: Mike Devour >> > >> > >> > >> > <<<< >> > >> > >> > >> >> _________________________________________________________________ >> Check out the great features of the new MSN 9 Dial-up, with the MSN >Dial-up >> Accelerator. http://click.atdmt.com/AVE/go/onm00200361ave/direct/01/ >> > >

