Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-09 Thread Hugh Lovel
Dear Per,

Not quite. Like cures.

And Bach Flower Remedies are sold everywhere, presumably at your city
organic food place. You put a few drops of this remedy in a bucket of water
and stir like a BD remedy. Use for transplants.

If you want to know specifically what grasses walnut allows to grow, look
under a walnut tree. It inhibits ALL others.

But walnut remedy does not inhibit growth. You use walnut REMEDY to promote
growth. That goes for grapes too.

Precision in language has its desirable side.

Best,
Hugh




Hi Hugh

Opposite cures ?

Interesting, what dilution of remedy's are you suggesting, and can you
recommend a more economic source than the city organic food place. How do
you apply this solution ?
Rescue remedy is English do any one make it the USA ?
Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut who ??
Is it know what grasses walnut remedy promotes ?
Do's walnut remedy inhibit growth of grapes ??

Why would you select a homeopathic remedy's rater than a BD prep 501/or ??
in addition to BD prep ??  (I have not yet understood all BD preps and
function of them,  I'm a slow reader)



Thanks
Per Garp/NH



- Original Message -
From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, December 08, 2002 02:50 PM
Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?


 Hi All
 
 Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
 rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
 I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
 abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
 Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??
 
 Thanks
 Per Garp/NH


 Dear Per,

 You are right on the money that walnut inhibits the growth in almost
 everything except one or two grasses and black raspberries. That is
 precisely why it is used.

 Homeopathy is the treatment of conditions with materials--taken out to
 dilute potencies--that would otherwise cause the same condition in healthy
 organisms. Thus to treat cancer, the usual treatment is homeopathic
Iscador
 (mistletoe) which amounts to a cancerous growth when it occurs naturally
on
 oak trees.

 In this case to get the transplants over their shock, use rescue remedy;
to
 send them off into growth give them walnut, a Bach Flower Remedy.

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


Visit our website at: www.unionag.org




Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-09 Thread Cheryl Kemp
The Bach remedy, Walnut works to support change. Shock from change,
difficulty in adapting, and settling after a major change. So of course
moving a plant would cause shock and disorientation.
I would also use Bach Remedy walnut to settle calves when being separated
from their mothers at weaning, stops nights of howling.
It is also wonderful in our own lives for sudden change of life
circumstances. It just calms and gives acceptance.

Cheryl Kemp
Education and Workshop Coordinator
Biodynamic AgriCulture Australia
Phone /Fax : 02 6657 5322
Home: 02 6657 5306
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web: www.biodynamics.net.au

- Original Message -
From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 09, 2002 9:28 PM
Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?


 Dear Per,

 Not quite. Like cures.

 And Bach Flower Remedies are sold everywhere, presumably at your city
 organic food place. You put a few drops of this remedy in a bucket of
water
 and stir like a BD remedy. Use for transplants.

 If you want to know specifically what grasses walnut allows to grow, look
 under a walnut tree. It inhibits ALL others.

 But walnut remedy does not inhibit growth. You use walnut REMEDY to
promote
 growth. That goes for grapes too.

 Precision in language has its desirable side.

 Best,
 Hugh




 Hi Hugh
 
 Opposite cures ?
 
 Interesting, what dilution of remedy's are you suggesting, and can you
 recommend a more economic source than the city organic food place. How do
 you apply this solution ?
 Rescue remedy is English do any one make it the USA ?
 Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut who ??
 Is it know what grasses walnut remedy promotes ?
 Do's walnut remedy inhibit growth of grapes ??
 
 Why would you select a homeopathic remedy's rater than a BD prep 501/or
??
 in addition to BD prep ??  (I have not yet understood all BD preps and
 function of them,  I'm a slow reader)
 
 
 
 Thanks
 Per Garp/NH
 
 
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Sunday, December 08, 2002 02:50 PM
 Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?
 
 
  Hi All
  
  Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
  rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
  I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
  abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
  Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??
  
  Thanks
  Per Garp/NH
 
 
  Dear Per,
 
  You are right on the money that walnut inhibits the growth in almost
  everything except one or two grasses and black raspberries. That is
  precisely why it is used.
 
  Homeopathy is the treatment of conditions with materials--taken out to
  dilute potencies--that would otherwise cause the same condition in
healthy
  organisms. Thus to treat cancer, the usual treatment is homeopathic
 Iscador
  (mistletoe) which amounts to a cancerous growth when it occurs
naturally
 on
  oak trees.
 
  In this case to get the transplants over their shock, use rescue
remedy;
 to
  send them off into growth give them walnut, a Bach Flower Remedy.
 
  Best,
  Hugh Lovel
  Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
 

 Visit our website at: www.unionag.org





Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-09 Thread Glen Atkinson
Garuda BD Rooting Compound works wonderfully well

I hope top have some pictures of broad beans using rooting comp as
opposed to our combination spray Etherics on the web site very soon.
Most interesting
Glen A

 - Original Message -
 From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, December 09, 2002 9:28 PM
 Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?
 
  Dear Per,
 
  Not quite. Like cures.
 
  And Bach Flower Remedies are sold everywhere, presumably at your city
  organic food place. You put a few drops of this remedy in a bucket of
 water
  and stir like a BD remedy. Use for transplants.
 
  If you want to know specifically what grasses walnut allows to grow, look
  under a walnut tree. It inhibits ALL others.
 
  But walnut remedy does not inhibit growth. You use walnut REMEDY to
 promote
  growth. That goes for grapes too.
 
  Precision in language has its desirable side.
 
  Best,
  Hugh
 
 
 
 
  Hi Hugh
  
  Opposite cures ?
  
  Interesting, what dilution of remedy's are you suggesting, and can you
  recommend a more economic source than the city organic food place. How do
  you apply this solution ?
  Rescue remedy is English do any one make it the USA ?
  Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut who ??
  Is it know what grasses walnut remedy promotes ?
  Do's walnut remedy inhibit growth of grapes ??
  
  Why would you select a homeopathic remedy's rater than a BD prep 501/or
 ??
  in addition to BD prep ??  (I have not yet understood all BD preps and
  function of them,  I'm a slow reader)
  
  
  
  Thanks
  Per Garp/NH
  
  
  
  - Original Message -
  From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Sunday, December 08, 2002 02:50 PM
  Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?
  
  
   Hi All
   
   Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
   rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
   I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
   abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
   Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??
   
   Thanks
   Per Garp/NH
  
  
   Dear Per,
  
   You are right on the money that walnut inhibits the growth in almost
   everything except one or two grasses and black raspberries. That is
   precisely why it is used.
  
   Homeopathy is the treatment of conditions with materials--taken out to
   dilute potencies--that would otherwise cause the same condition in
 healthy
   organisms. Thus to treat cancer, the usual treatment is homeopathic
  Iscador
   (mistletoe) which amounts to a cancerous growth when it occurs
 naturally
  on
   oak trees.
  
   In this case to get the transplants over their shock, use rescue
 remedy;
  to
   send them off into growth give them walnut, a Bach Flower Remedy.
  
   Best,
   Hugh Lovel
   Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
  
 
  Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
 

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




Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-09 Thread Peter Michael Bacchus
Its about letting go of the past and grasping the present and the future.
The way the remedy is made the inhibiting qualities of the strong tannins
are left behind.
Regards,
Peter.
- Original Message -
From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 09, 2002 8:50 AM
Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?


 Hi All
 
 Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
 rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
 I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
 abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
 Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??
 
 Thanks
 Per Garp/NH


 Dear Per,

 You are right on the money that walnut inhibits the growth in almost
 everything except one or two grasses and black raspberries. That is
 precisely why it is used.

 Homeopathy is the treatment of conditions with materials--taken out to
 dilute potencies--that would otherwise cause the same condition in healthy
 organisms. Thus to treat cancer, the usual treatment is homeopathic
Iscador
 (mistletoe) which amounts to a cancerous growth when it occurs naturally
on
 oak trees.

 In this case to get the transplants over their shock, use rescue remedy;
to
 send them off into growth give them walnut, a Bach Flower Remedy.

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





Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-08 Thread COYOTEHILLFARM

Hi All

Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??

Thanks
Per Garp/NH

- Original Message -
From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 08:22 AM
Subject: Transplanting, my best answers


 Dear Will, et. al.,

 Yes the planting of trees, bushes, vines, etc. in the same north-south
 orientation is a key to good transplanting. Lorraine Cahill, who works
with
 me, has also showed me the effectiveness of using homeopathics in the
water
 used to mud the transplants in and give them a good reunion with the
 earth. She uses both rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut.
This
 seems very successful even with transplanting such annuals as pepper,
 tomato and basil.  We run our beds north-south so we know without thinking
 what that orientation is. Tiny seedlings no more than a foot tall tend to
 put their roots out to either side of the tap root, rather like an
 inverted, flat Christmas tree, so how do I determine from looking at the
 plant which way to orient the roots so their original orientation is
 preserved. Actually I haven't paid attention to that yet, so I will start
 looking more closely at this. Possibly the roots allign north-south to
 begin with. That would make their original orientation very easy to see
and
 transplanting must proceed apace. Formerly I transplanted my summer crops
 without concern for this. It is true that some plants did poorly with no
 clear reason why, and some plants did outstandingly well. Since we don't
 hype them up on speed and steroids like the chemical growers who often
seem
 to have a near uniform field all going at the same rate, I ought to be
able
 to tell when I hit the nail on the head.
 I feel sure there is something to this from my experience transplanting
 trees and shrubs.

 Also there are nature spirits acting in union with plants. Call some of
 them elementals if you will. These are Salamanders (fire) and Sylphs (air)
 in the atmosphere, and Undines (water) and Gnomes (earth) in the soil.
Plus
 there are more complex beings that associate themselves with certain trees
 or groups of trees, cultivars, crops, fields, special locations, homes and
 even people such as artists, craftsmen, surgeons, you name it. These seem
 to generally be beneficial, though that's not necessarily true. But the
 hidden world of unseen energies is far and away more highly organized and
 ordered than our science and culture currently acknowledges. We apprehend
 only a small segment of the spectrum with our five senses, and we have to
 learn to use our nervous system as the antenna it was designed to be if we
 are to tune in to these beings and the organization of things which we
 cannot see with our eyes but can only see with our mind's eye. Dowsing is
 one route to doing this, of course. It's pretty easy to dowse. To fast,
 pray and meditate requires a lot more discipline and dedication. And just
 read a biography of Rasputin. I think you'll see that the rules for
 attaining adept status are not necessarily what we may be told or may
 believe. Asceticism isn't key, though the discipline that usually goes
 along with it is. But what is discipline? Certainly it is not punishment
or
 denial. It is something far more profound. Actually asceticism commonly
 involves judging others, rejection, pride, etc. all of which are
hindrances.

 In any event to work with unseen forces so that their joyful, exuberant
 assistance is enlisted in the transplanting of something so important as a
 tree or a field of peppers or wheat might require paying a lot more
 attention to what is really going on beyond the visible, in-the-moment
 phenomena. One might start by dowsing, but some people just do this sort
of
 thing intuitively and subconsciously, so you might keep an eye open for
 such folks and see if you can tune in to what they are doing. There's no
 telling what you may find out. Green thumb? If you don't have one, don't
 despair, you could develop one.

 As for the astrologically best dates, this is quite complex, though it was
 a good question that has been avoided in the responses I've read. First
you
 need to consider what kind of a plant a pear is. It is a fruit, of course.
 Often the trees are grafted, and we chould ask why? To get good fruit
there
 have been centuries of emphasis on the fruiting characteristics of the
 plant while the roots were neglected. We can do a lot for a fruit tree if
 we bring together the fruiting and root sides of the tree to a fuller
 union. The best excample I've seen of doing this was in Mark Fulford's
 nursery and orchard in Maine, where he sprayed compost tea with some
kaolin
 every two or three weeks. Another effort in this direction was Peter
 Escher's biodynamic tree paste, which incorporated such 

Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-08 Thread Hugh Lovel
Hi All

Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??

Thanks
Per Garp/NH


Dear Per,

You are right on the money that walnut inhibits the growth in almost
everything except one or two grasses and black raspberries. That is
precisely why it is used.

Homeopathy is the treatment of conditions with materials--taken out to
dilute potencies--that would otherwise cause the same condition in healthy
organisms. Thus to treat cancer, the usual treatment is homeopathic Iscador
(mistletoe) which amounts to a cancerous growth when it occurs naturally on
oak trees.

In this case to get the transplants over their shock, use rescue remedy; to
send them off into growth give them walnut, a Bach Flower Remedy.

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




Re: Transplanting remedies ?

2002-12-08 Thread COYOTEHILLFARM
Hi Hugh

Opposite cures ?

Interesting, what dilution of remedy's are you suggesting, and can you
recommend a more economic source than the city organic food place. How do
you apply this solution ?
Rescue remedy is English do any one make it the USA ?
Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut who ??
Is it know what grasses walnut remedy promotes ?
Do's walnut remedy inhibit growth of grapes ??

Why would you select a homeopathic remedy's rater than a BD prep 501/or ??
in addition to BD prep ??  (I have not yet understood all BD preps and
function of them,  I'm a slow reader)



Thanks
Per Garp/NH



- Original Message -
From: Hugh Lovel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, December 08, 2002 02:50 PM
Subject: Re: Transplanting remedies ?


 Hi All
 
 Can some one explain the transplanting function of this
 rescue remedy and the Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut
 I'm familiar with rescue remedy, but have no information
 abut :Bach Flower Remedy, Walnut:
 Normally Walnut inhibit growth of other plants ??
 
 Thanks
 Per Garp/NH


 Dear Per,

 You are right on the money that walnut inhibits the growth in almost
 everything except one or two grasses and black raspberries. That is
 precisely why it is used.

 Homeopathy is the treatment of conditions with materials--taken out to
 dilute potencies--that would otherwise cause the same condition in healthy
 organisms. Thus to treat cancer, the usual treatment is homeopathic
Iscador
 (mistletoe) which amounts to a cancerous growth when it occurs naturally
on
 oak trees.

 In this case to get the transplants over their shock, use rescue remedy;
to
 send them off into growth give them walnut, a Bach Flower Remedy.

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