Re: Freezing preps

2002-12-05 Thread Gil Robertson


Nancy Geffken wrote:

> (Dumb question hour.) Can the preps freeze and retain their forces? I've read not - 
>but you can  freeze seeds with no loss of vitality. What is the difference?

If you wos freezed, wot would your vitality be like.

Preps are active life forces = vibrations.

Seeds are life in limbo. Thus some can stand many different situations
and still come to life, when the time is right, while others will not.

In broad terms, the harder the seed, the more resistant to conditions
and the longer lasting it is. Example; some acasia seeds and other Oz
seeds need fire or at
least smoke water, i.e. rain after a bush fire, to promote germination.
At the other end, some seeds must be planted within two weeks of
maturity, or too late.
Gil

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Re: Freezing preps

2002-12-05 Thread Hugh Lovel
Michael,

For sure there's plenty of places where horn manure does not freeze. Parts
of California, Texas, Florida, etc.  the ground never freezes at all. And
there's India, New Zealand, much of Australia, Egypt--lots of places. If
you buried it deep enough it wouldn't even freeze in your northern
lattitudes. I question if it ever has frozen a foot deep here in any year
that I've buried horn manure.

Best,
Hugh

>Hugh-you mean that the horn manure does not freeze in parts of the USA?!
>Michael
>- Original Message - >
>>__
>> >The NEW Netscape 7.0 browser is now available. Upgrade now!
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>> >>
>> It is not uncommon for the horn manure to freeze in the ground in places
>> like Canada, Germany and Sweden. If anything it may help in bringing the
>> earth forces into the manure, since the life ether/earth element forces
>are
>> characteristic of the crystal-lattice structures of solids.
>>
>> Best,
>> Hugh Lovel
>> Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
>>
>>

Visit our website at: www.unionag.org




Re: Freezing preps

2002-12-05 Thread mroboz
Hugh-you mean that the horn manure does not freeze in parts of the USA?!
Michael
- Original Message - >
>__
> >The NEW Netscape 7.0 browser is now available. Upgrade now!
> >http://channels.netscape.com/ns/browsers/download.jsp
> >
> >>
> It is not uncommon for the horn manure to freeze in the ground in places
> like Canada, Germany and Sweden. If anything it may help in bringing the
> earth forces into the manure, since the life ether/earth element forces
are
> characteristic of the crystal-lattice structures of solids.
>
> Best,
> Hugh Lovel
> Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
>
>




Re: Freezing preps

2002-12-05 Thread Hugh Lovel
>(Dumb question hour.) Can the preps freeze and retain their forces? I've
>read not - but you can  freeze seeds with no loss of vitality. What is the
>difference?
>
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Dear Nancy,

It is not uncommon for the horn manure to freeze in the ground in places
like Canada, Germany and Sweden. If anything it may help in bringing the
earth forces into the manure, since the life ether/earth element forces are
characteristic of the crystal-lattice structures of solids.

Best,
Hugh Lovel
Visit our website at: www.unionag.org




Freezing preps

2002-12-05 Thread Nancy Geffken
(Dumb question hour.) Can the preps freeze and retain their forces? I've read not - 
but you can  freeze seeds with no loss of vitality. What is the difference?

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