Re: Cow Horns

2003-07-15 Thread Peter Michael Bacchus
Hi Eric,
   The conformation of cow's horns is related to their diet, the
cosmic forces contained in it. These forces come from the rear of the cow
and are related to Moon, Mercury and Venus
The horn is a reflector that reflects back what enters it. While attached to
the animal this activity is reflected back into the digestive system. Other
things that can change the direction of a growing horn are nicks or cuts
however sustained. The horn usually grows away from the cut.
 When the horn is used for Biodynamic purposes the activity
of the layer of soil they are buried in is reflected back into the material
contained within the horn so supersaturating it with the activity of the
time, usualy either summer or winter. This we are then able to use in the
persuit of our biodynamic method.
Happy travelling.
Peter.
- Original Message -
From: "Eric Myren" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 2:41 PM
Subject: Cow Horns


> In my travels in Southern Alberta this weekend my family and I stayed
> at a small bed and breakfast certified organic farm called The Robins
> Nest. Other than the good hospitality and food we received the most
> remarkable thing about the place was one member of their cattle herd of
> Shetlands. She was 13 years old and had given birth last year. What was
> unusual about her was her horns one was curved up the other was curved
> down. The question I have in my mind is what do members on this list
> think about the capacities for such an animal for tuning in Universal
> forces in balance?
>
> Can anyone else comment on cow horns tuning in Universal forces and
> their relationships to the preps 500 & 501? Drawing of course on your
> years of experience.
>
> PEACE
> Eric
>
>
> "From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> point two:  it was always my impression that the horn wored on the
> silica or
> the manure the same way it wored on the cow.  The refined digestive
> process of
> the cows four stomachs is further enhanced by the chewing of cud and
> during
> that process the earthiness is rayed back in by the horn
> structure[which arises
> from skin, the most sensitive and largest organ on any creature].  It
> is via
> the horn that we get this wonderful manure from the cow and in bd we
> have
> capitalized on this effect for 500/501...sstorch"
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Cow Horns

2003-07-15 Thread Eric Myren
In my travels in Southern Alberta this weekend my family and I stayed 
at a small bed and breakfast certified organic farm called The Robins 
Nest. Other than the good hospitality and food we received the most 
remarkable thing about the place was one member of their cattle herd of 
Shetlands. She was 13 years old and had given birth last year. What was 
unusual about her was her horns one was curved up the other was curved 
down. The question I have in my mind is what do members on this list 
think about the capacities for such an animal for tuning in Universal 
forces in balance?

Can anyone else comment on cow horns tuning in Universal forces and 
their relationships to the preps 500 & 501? Drawing of course on your 
years of experience.

PEACE
Eric
"From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
point two:  it was always my impression that the horn wored on the 
silica or
the manure the same way it wored on the cow.  The refined digestive 
process of
the cows four stomachs is further enhanced by the chewing of cud and 
during
that process the earthiness is rayed back in by the horn 
structure[which arises
from skin, the most sensitive and largest organ on any creature].  It 
is via
the horn that we get this wonderful manure from the cow and in bd we 
have
capitalized on this effect for 500/501...sstorch"
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strawberries and cow horns

2003-07-15 Thread SBruno75
Point one:   here on eastern Long Island we have the only commercial 
bd/organic strawberry patch.  I have just learned that we were the only farm to even 
have strawberries locally.  The chemical guys never had any fruit.  So you can 
take your voodoo to the bank...

point two:  it was always my impression that the horn wored on the silica or 
the manure the same way it wored on the cow.  The refined digestive process of 
the cows four stomachs is further enhanced by the chewing of cud and during 
that process the earthiness is rayed back in by the horn structure[which arises 
from skin, the most sensitive and largest organ on any creature].  It is via 
the horn that we get this wonderful manure from the cow and in bd we have 
capitalized on this effect for 500/501...sstorch
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Re: horns

2003-02-13 Thread SBruno75
They are proably fine to use...sstorch




horns

2003-02-13 Thread flylo
I know the topic came up awhile back, but SStorch's post about 
'sheath material' struck a chord.
Before we moved back to the farm, my neighbor ran some of his 
cows over here. They were old and even once I had my own herd, 
his insisted on coming 'home' to calve. A few, as they aged, died 
here. When I could find them, I'd let the fire ants clean up the 
skulls and I'd haul them to the house. If you've ever handled a cow 
skull, you know the horn sheath is actually just a loose covering 
(after the cow doesn't need it anymore). The horn material inside is 
normally much like a large sponge. When the horn is alive, the 
sponge is blood-filled and actively moving heat and wastes through 
the top of the cow's head, but once the horn is dead, the material 
calcifies and looks like a hardened piece of coral that actually goes 
the length of the cow's sinus cavity. (Or so it seems to me). 
My question is, would 4 - 6 horns from these old, wild (and 
hopefully happy) cows be enough to work with the horn manure? I'd 
prefer them over anything my vet or a slaughterhouse would 
provide, I'd think. And, if I asked my neighbors for their dead cow's 
horns, they'd think I was either doing something highly profitable 
(artistically), or something involving witchcraft. 




Re: 200,000 + horns

2002-02-07 Thread Glen Atkinson

Allan Balliett wrote:
 I
> believe Glenn used to talk about this also.

Yes this is what I have seen in Victoria and heard of other cases as
well.

It has little to do with BD and alot to do with the variety of practise
not too uncommon in the older generation of BDers on this part of the
planet. We had the same ethos and effects infecting NZ thru Proctor for
many years. His followers have made some minor adjustments. They now at
least apply Ca, P and S, however in no organised fashion with little or
no acceptance of Albrecht.
Seeing as though they control Demeter here as well it is all the more
reason 'they' should not get control of the word Biodynamics. Which they
no longer can do in NZ at least. It has been deemed a generic word in NZ
in the process of us trademarking 'Garuda Biodynamics'. 

Glen A




> 
> Thanks again, Lloyd,
> 
> -Allan

-- 
Garuda Biodynamics - for BD Preps, Consultations, Books & Diagrams
See our web site @ http://get.to/garuda




Re: 200,000 + horns

2002-02-07 Thread Allan Balliett

>I have just been informed by one of the AP disciples that the group puts
>down well in excess of 200,000 horns of 500 each year. You can do the sums
>on that lot. He must have some big operators out there somewhere! It seems
>pretty much a secret society deal with AP in total control ( he also OWNS
>the Demeter trade mark for all of Australia) Our BDFGAA (Cheryl Kemp) has
>0ver 600 members - predominantly horticulture and viticulture but gaining
>numbers of broadacre farmers - wheat , sheep and cattle so you would
>probably be able to substantiate the 2 million ??

Thanks for reporting this, Lloyd. Unfortunately, all I can infer from 
this information is that A.P's group buries 200,000 500 horns each 
year. Inferring any thing else from that would be a reach.

I am interested in hearing how many acres Chery's group has under BD 
management.

>Incidentally the informant above says he had three or four wonderful years
>then a gradual decline of productivity and has now (after about 8 years) hit
>the wall, hay cuts down to almost nothing, poor animal health, no feed so
>the cattle are away on someone else's place, soil colour and structure gone,
>its not working anymore! We had some posts from Hugh Lovel on the list about
>this last year ( or maybe further back )
>Hope this is of interest
Lloyd Charles

This, of course, seems like a failure of the overseers and not a 
condemnation of BD itself. I'd like to hear more about this. I 
believe Glenn used to talk about this also.

Thanks again, Lloyd,

-Allan




200,000 + horns

2002-02-07 Thread Lloyd Charles


- Original Message -
From: Allan Balliett

> The A.P. figures are always thrown around as something impressive.
> This is neither here nor there, really, but it does fall on a
> reporter to investigate their facts. It seems that this 2,000,000
> acres of BD in Australia is unsubstantiated.

Allan
I have just been informed by one of the AP disciples that the group puts
down well in excess of 200,000 horns of 500 each year. You can do the sums
on that lot. He must have some big operators out there somewhere! It seems
pretty much a secret society deal with AP in total control ( he also OWNS
the Demeter trade mark for all of Australia) Our BDFGAA (Cheryl Kemp) has
0ver 600 members - predominantly horticulture and viticulture but gaining
numbers of broadacre farmers - wheat , sheep and cattle so you would
probably be able to substantiate the 2 million ??
Incidentally the informant above says he had three or four wonderful years
then a gradual decline of productivity and has now (after about 8 years) hit
the wall, hay cuts down to almost nothing, poor animal health, no feed so
the cattle are away on someone else's place, soil colour and structure gone,
its not working anymore! We had some posts from Hugh Lovel on the list about
this last year ( or maybe further back )
Hope this is of interest
Lloyd Charles





Re: shipping BD horns across borders

2002-02-05 Thread Michael Roboz

>From US to Canada-M.

- Original Message - 
From: Allan Balliett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, February 05, 2002 12:12 PM
Subject: Re: shipping BD horns across borders


> >Dear List,
> >
> >   Has anyone experience with sending bd horns across the border from 
> >US into Canada.?  Is there any restriction?  If so, a way around it?
> >cheers, Michael
> 
> Which way are you going, Michael? -Allan PS I mean 'which way are the 
> HORNS going?'
> 
> 




Re: shipping BD horns across borders

2002-02-05 Thread Allan Balliett

>Dear List,
>
>   Has anyone experience with sending bd horns across the border from 
>US into Canada.?  Is there any restriction?  If so, a way around it?
>cheers, Michael

Which way are you going, Michael? -Allan PS I mean 'which way are the 
HORNS going?'




shipping BD horns across borders

2002-02-05 Thread Michael Roboz



Dear List,
 
  Has anyone experience with sending bd horns across 
the border from US into Canada.?  Is there any restriction?  If so, a 
way around it?
cheers, Michael


Fwd: COW HORNS FOR PREPS

2002-01-30 Thread bdnow

>Status:  U
>Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2002 13:39:46 -0600
>Subject: Jalapeno cow jorns
>From: Mark L Shepard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>
> Available: several hundred range-raised cow horns. These cattle were
>range raised in Montana, and not "finished" in a feedlot. Slaughter occurred
>in Wisconsin and the horns are now being stored in a Certified Organic Dairy
>barn.
> Sizes are mixed... a few suitable for 501, many suitable for 500, many
>suitable for clays and some are so huge that they're only suitable for
>clays.
>
> We're making these available to anyone interested in experiencing the
>process of the "biodynamic" inspired preparations. Since the supply is
>limited, we are offering them according to  "luck of the draw"... Order one
>and it could be any size.
>
> However... If you're seriously interested in doing this yourself, we
>recommend 2 larges, 1 medium and 1 small... for 2 horn clays, a 500 and a
>501. If you order 4 or more horns we will sort them for you, as best we can,
>to ensure that you get the right mix.
>
> Price:  $3.00 each plus shipping.
>
>
>WARNING: COW SHIT STINKS!
>
>
> Mail checks to the:
>
> Viroqua Area Biodynamic Study Group
> 309 E Decker St
> Viroqua, WI 54665
>
>If you have never put a horn in the ground,
>If you have never put your hand in a bucket to spin,
>DO IT!
>...then wonder.
>
>
>In love, light and discovery,...
>
>Your friends in Viroqua.
>
>
>
>
>