Re: Dallas C.S.A.?
Title: FW: [globalnews] Drought Parches One Third of the Nation Do any Members of this list know of any good B.D.or organic food going into Dallas. My partner has a daughter living there and she would love to get some real food again for her family including to young boys. Regards, Peter.
Re: BD 501 (5x)
Dr Nichoaus Remer, when he was the consultant for the Northern Group in the late 1960's worked on this issue. I was present at some of the taste tests on carrots that were sprayed with various potencies of 501. all the taste pannel were unanamous that the seventh was the best. This might vary with different tintures, time and places so why not try it out for yourselves. Regards, Peter. - Original Message - From: Lloyd Charles [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 2:48 PM Subject: Re: BD 501 (5x) - Original Message - From: Allan Bballiett [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sunday, July 21, 2002 10:13 PM Subject: BD 501 (5x) Anyone know what this means on a JPI label? How do you use it? -Allan Allan I believe its been potentised to 5x cause they ran out of the real stuff (happens occasionally) - seems this is ok if you belong to the official annointed movement but frowned upon if you want to do it outside the system (like in a cosmic pipe or spraying all the preps potentised) It should work at least as well as the original (Kolisko's work supports this) and is a fair bet that its been prepared so the material you have is used as per normal practice. Better check it out with JPI tho. Cheers Stirrer from downunder LCharles
Re: greg willis 60 min. for 500, 501
I believe that Greg has now embraced the potential of homoeopathy as well. Steiner asked the Kolisko's to investigate homoeopathic agriculture as early as 1919, Comended them for their work thus far during theAgricultural Course in 1924 and encouraged them to be active in further research work after the Agricultural Course. I believe we still have plenty to learn. Greetings, Peter. - Original Message - From: mroboz To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 4:16 PM Subject: greg willis 60 min. for 500, 501 Hugh-I remember Greg telling me that after exactly 60 min. he saw energy waves emanating from the stirring bucket. Not before 60, but at 60. I think that is why he is so keen on the 60 min., 20 min. for BC, etc. Michael
Re: BD 501 (5x)
The reason for me right now, Peter, is that I'm serving 163 CSA shares with the help of 4 interns. That means that I've been hopping for so long I can't think on my own and my hands will hardly flex to type. it's joyful for me to be able to write BD Now! and ask about other people's experiences and seek their advice. I can hardly afford to 'trial' carrots just as I can hardly afford to wait for WEEKS to find out whether I improved them or bolted them. I get your larger message. Right now, I'm looking for conservative, practical answers or for reminders for the things I've forgotten due to the fury and flury of CSA farming. -Allan Dr Nichoaus Remer, when he was the consultant for the Northern Group in the late 1960's worked on this issue. I was present at some of the taste tests on carrots that were sprayed with various potencies of 501. all the taste pannel were unanamous that the seventh was the best. This might vary with different tintures, time and places so why not try it out for yourselves. Regards, Peter.
Re: greg willis 60 min. for 500, 501
Title: Re: greg willis 60 min. for 500, 501 Peter - Does their work remain out-of-print in English worldwide? -Allan believe that Greg has now embraced the potential of homoeopathy as well. Steiner asked the Kolisko's to investigate homoeopathic agriculture as early as 1919, Comended them for their work thus far during theAgricultural Course in 1924 and encouraged them to be active in further research work after the Agricultural Course. I believe we still have plenty to learn. Greetings, Peter. - Original Message - From: mroboz To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 4:16 PM Subject: greg willis 60 min. for 500, 501 Hugh-I remember Greg telling me that after exactly 60 min. he saw energy waves emanating from the stirring bucket. Not before 60, but at 60. I think that is why he is so keen on the 60 min., 20 min. for BC, etc. Michael
Rattailed maggot and 501-5x
Allan-- On the 501, x and D are used interchangeably for a 1:10 potentization. I don't know where the 20 minutes of stirring comes from, it's Hugh Cortney's recommendation from JPI. On the bugs, Tony wrote: They could be rats tail larvae It belongs to one of the fly family not sure which one Could be one of your insect predator flies. I recall reading in Wolf Storl Book Culture and Horticulture that such larvae in compost teas is a good sign that they are ready to be used. I have them in my brews all the time during the summer months. Here's a bit from Ohio extension brochure Rattailed maggots, known as the larval or immature stage of Syrphid flies, are about 1-1/4 inches long. The body portion is about three fourth inch long and the tail portion (breathing tube) one half inch long. These maggots are white-colored with the body portion an elongated, oval, cylindrical shape, which is wrinkled and semitransparent, protracting into a long breathing tube (tail). These larvae of the Syrphid fly live in highly polluted water such as livestock lagoons, polluted abandoned fish pools, foul pools and streams associated with barnyards, etc. Maggots are able to live in the water, if sufficient solids are present as food. The adult flies resemble honey bees in appearance and are often seen hovering near the ground in the barnyard vicinity. These flies do not bite or sting humans, and are considered beneficial because they are predaceous on aphids, etc. I get these maggots in nettle tea etc altho with a much longer breathing tube. They are really gross looking but not harmful, just means it's time to get the tea out. As it says above, the adults are beneficials. The same maggots show up in the compost pile if there is too much wet, sloppy foodstuff -- I get them if I add a lot of apple pomace without sufficient aeration/heat. Once again, I don't consider them harmful, they break down the material and prepare it for digestion in the pile. == Dave Robison
RE: [globalnews] Drought Parches One Third of the Nation
Title: FW: [globalnews] Drought Parches One Third of the Nation Please unsubscribe me from the list. Regards TaChung Huang -Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Jane SherrySent: Sunday, July 21, 2002 5:50 AMTo: BdnowSubject: FW: [globalnews] Drought Parches One Third of the Nation Environmental News ServiceAmeriScan: July 19, 2002 * * * Drought Parches One Third of the Nation WASHINGTON, DC, July 19, 2002 (ENS) - By the end of June, 36 percent of the contiguous United States was in severe to extreme drought, according to the National Climatic Data Center. Above normal temperatures and drier than normal conditions led to a worsening drought situation across more than one third of the United States last month, based on a common measure of drought severity, the Palmer Drought Index. The average temperature for the contiguous United States was 71.6 Fahrenheit (22.0 C) in June, 2.3 F greater than the 1895-2001 long term mean for the month, making it the fifth warmest June on record. Colorado and Nebraska had their second warmest June since statewide records began in 1895, while New Mexico and Nevada had their fifth warmest June. The above average warmth coincided with dry conditions in many areas. Fourteen states from the West Coast to the mid-Atlantic had below average precipitation totals and four states - Arizona, Utah, Wyoming and Nebraska - were much drier than average. In the East, drought conditions were most severe in an area stretching from central Virginia to central Georgia. The past 12 months were the driest July through June on record for North Carolina and South Carolina, and drought has affected parts of the region for much of the past four years. Severe to extreme drought continued throughout large parts of the western United States from Arizona to Montana, affecting farming and the risk of wildfires. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, more than 80 percent of range and pastures were classified as poor to very poor in New Mexico, Arizona and Colorado in early July, with conditions worsening during June and early July in California, Wyoming, Nebraska and the Dakotas. The drought, combined with last winter's mild weather, has boosted populations of grasshoppers and Mormon crickets, which are now devouring crops and rangelands across the West, the "Associated Press" reports. In some areas, between 50 and 200 grasshoppers can be found in every square yard of cropland - or about one million grasshoppers per acre. Wildfires are also causing problems for western residents. By the end of June 2002, almost 2.8 million acres had burned in the United States, much of it in the west, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. This acreage is almost twice the total burned during the same period in 2000, one of the worst wildfire seasons in the past 50 years. In 2000, severe to extreme drought affected 19 percent of the nation at the end of June compared with 36 percent affected in 2002. In the Dust Bowl year of 1934, July saw severe to extreme drought covering 63 percent of the contiguous United States. Near average temperatures covered much of the south and northeast, and Maine and New Hampshire had cooler than average temperatures for the month. --Be the change you want to see in the world.--GandhiYahoo! Groups Sponsor ADVERTISEMENThttp://rd.yahoo.com/M=228862.2128520.3581629.1829184/D=egroupweb/S=1705060682:HM/A=1155067/R=0/*http://adfarm.mediaplex.com/ad/ck/990-1736-1039-302 Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ .-- End of Forwarded Message
Re: Rattailed maggot and 501-5x
Dave- immature larvae of syrphid fllies are not aquatic. Those aquatic larvae in your nettles are therefore not syrphid flies. Michael - Original Message - From: Dave Robison [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 10:08 AM Subject: Rattailed maggot and 501-5x Allan-- On the 501, x and D are used interchangeably for a 1:10 potentization. I don't know where the 20 minutes of stirring comes from, it's Hugh Cortney's recommendation from JPI. On the bugs, Tony wrote: They could be rats tail larvae It belongs to one of the fly family not sure which one Could be one of your insect predator flies. I recall reading in Wolf Storl Book Culture and Horticulture that such larvae in compost teas is a good sign that they are ready to be used. I have them in my brews all the time during the summer months. Here's a bit from Ohio extension brochure Rattailed maggots, known as the larval or immature stage of Syrphid flies, are about 1-1/4 inches long. The body portion is about three fourth inch long and the tail portion (breathing tube) one half inch long. These maggots are white-colored with the body portion an elongated, oval, cylindrical shape, which is wrinkled and semitransparent, protracting into a long breathing tube (tail). These larvae of the Syrphid fly live in highly polluted water such as livestock lagoons, polluted abandoned fish pools, foul pools and streams associated with barnyards, etc. Maggots are able to live in the water, if sufficient solids are present as food. The adult flies resemble honey bees in appearance and are often seen hovering near the ground in the barnyard vicinity. These flies do not bite or sting humans, and are considered beneficial because they are predaceous on aphids, etc. I get these maggots in nettle tea etc altho with a much longer breathing tube. They are really gross looking but not harmful, just means it's time to get the tea out. As it says above, the adults are beneficials. The same maggots show up in the compost pile if there is too much wet, sloppy foodstuff -- I get them if I add a lot of apple pomace without sufficient aeration/heat. Once again, I don't consider them harmful, they break down the material and prepare it for digestion in the pile. == Dave Robison
Re: Nettle water: its proper use length of fermentation
- Original Message - From: Allan Bballiett [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 8:52 AM Subject: Re: Nettle water: its proper use length of fermentation Thanks much for this info, Tony. I've still got them in the black brew. At Chris' encouragement, I started a fresh 5-gallon bkt of nettles yesterday. Last batch was 50 gal. Only have enough nettles for 5 gallons right now. Hi Allan If you are able too spray this over your flowers 3 times over a period of several hours in an evening when the brew is about 24-48hrs old. It should be a thickish syrupy mix. Use a very fine nozzle. When mix looses its syrupy state after about 2-3days leave brew for afurther1- 4weeks until all but the stems have broken down and use as a folair spray at the rate of 1-9. i try to spray 3evening in arow. During full moon week it is even better. I have been using this infomation from Maris Thun books for a number of years. Cheers Tony Robinson
Re: Purchasing BD Preps
In a message dated 7/21/02 11:24:50 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Hi Bruno (or Storch?), Would you be so kind as to help me out reaching the fellows at JPI? I need 2000 units of 500, 2000 units of 501 200 units of 502-507 Will need to know price, availability (in stock?, if not how long until they have them), weight and transportation costs to Quito, Ecuador. It would be great if you could pass this along to them. Sincerely, Juan Escobar Ecotropic/Manantial P. O. Box 17/07/9300 Quito, Ecuador Hi Juan, I made the contact at JPI and gave them the information. They have price information and will be in touch if not already. Let me know. How do you plan on stirring all those preparations??? I ask because I make hydraulically driven stirring machines. Do you have proper spray set up???, or just lots of labor??? Stay in touch, good luck, Steve Storch
Hawaiian BD
My sister-in-law in Kauai is having trouble with insects and disease in her garden. I told her I would try to connect her with some BD practitioners out there. Anyone on the list out there? Lance