CSCS and marijuana cultivation

2009-06-17 Thread Alchemysa

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannabis_(drug)_cultivation

Under the section called Feminized Seeds.

Spraying selected leaves, branches and, in cases where large amount  
of seed desired, whole plants with colloidal silver solution has  
become a preferred method since the colloidal silver suppresses  
ethylene production in bud sites, stimulating male characteristics


This leads me to think that when gardeners spray CS on their plants  
they may be doing more than just fighting plant diseases.



David




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CShow to make silver ointment

2009-06-17 Thread dan mckee


Hello silver friends.I would like to know what ingredients I need to make 
colloidal silver gel-ointment and the proper procedure.Can it be made in 
different ways with different natural ingredients?
Thanks  Dan
Dan Anubuddha McKee 
Destiny Wellness Center 
Valencia,Negros Oriental-Philippines 

Love who you are 
Live what you love 

Email: anu...@hotmail.com 
Web : www.anubuddha.com 
www.destinydetox.com   



RE: CSCS and marijuana cultivation

2009-06-17 Thread Dianne France

I couldn't find what you were referring to.
 
 From: da...@alchemysa.com.au
 Date: Wed, 17 Jun 2009 15:44:56 +0930
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Subject: CSCS and marijuana cultivation
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannabis_(drug)_cultivation
 
 Under the section called Feminized Seeds.
 
 Spraying selected leaves, branches and, in cases where large amount 
 of seed desired, whole plants with colloidal silver solution has 
 become a preferred method since the colloidal silver suppresses 
 ethylene production in bud sites, stimulating male characteristics
 
 This leads me to think that when gardeners spray CS on their plants 
 they may be doing more than just fighting plant diseases.
 
 
 David
 
 
 
 
 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
 
 Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org
 
 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
 
 Address Off-Topic messages to: silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com
 
 The Silver List and Off Topic List archives are currently down...
 
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Re: CSHow do I successfully create CS? Shelf-life of CS My very first Batch

2009-06-17 Thread Ode Coyote



  With polarity shifting there are a few seconds per cycle that don't do 
much as the electrochemistry reverses.
If I recall, the current stays constant, but the voltage makes a swing, so 
the EIS chemistry shifting may be delivering current like a battery for a 
few seconds.
If the shift frequency is one minute, 10 or 20 seconds out of that cycle 
doing nearly nothing could make a huge error in the calculations.


Ode



At 09:44 PM 6/16/2009 -0500, you wrote:

The point is, in this case, electrode size doesn't matter.  If you are
conducting at the rate of 1ma and the volume of water is 1 cup, then
you release enough silver into the water in 1 hour hour to have an
equivalent of 17 ppm.  This gives you a rule by which you can get a
ballpark idea of what may be going on in your brewing cell.  You can
use it to estimate.  Just adjust for the variables.  (For current
values before you reach 1 ma, Hint: measure the current vs time and
calculate an average.)

I submit, that with polarity switching, the ppm of the product is
exactly what is calculated by Faradays Law of Electrolysis.  Until you
have any fallout.  And this is more accurate than measuring with a
meter...

Dan



On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 5:32 AM, Ode Coyoteodecoy...@windstream.net wrote:
 At 12:56 PM 6/15/2009 -0500, you wrote:

 Missed something...

 That is in a time period of 1 hour.

 Dan

 On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Dan Navebhangcha...@gmail.com wrote:
  Two gallons is probably too much to brew at one time with most of the
  home generators we see.
  You would be better off starting out with a pint or a quart. (approx.
  500 to 1000ml)
 
  My rule of thumb is that the maximum amount of silver released into 1
  cup of water at 1 milliamp current in 1 hour is equivalent to
  approximately
  17ppm.  You can extrapolate from this rule.  Just use your reasoning
  abilities, if you have any...  (I assume you do)
 
  Dan

 ##  Using how much electrode, at what distance and assuming that the first
 few hours were actually running at 1 milliamp when that's not very 
likely if

 the water is good.

 Ode



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Re: CSCS and marijuana cultivation

2009-06-17 Thread Gayla Roberts
So this would encourage squashes and tomatoes, for instance, to be more 
prolific?

Gayla
Bob and Gayla Roberts
Always Enough Ranch
Acampo, CA
- Original Message - 
From: Alchemysa da...@alchemysa.com.au

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 11:14 PM
Subject: CSCS and marijuana cultivation



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannabis_(drug)_cultivation

Under the section called Feminized Seeds.

Spraying selected leaves, branches and, in cases where large amount  of 
seed desired, whole plants with colloidal silver 



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Re: CSHow do I successfully create CS? Shelf-life of CS My very first Batch

2009-06-17 Thread Marshall Dudley
That may be true for batch processing, but for my flow system, the 
efficiency is about 1/4 of that.  That is with stirring and polarity 
reversal. The exact stats are 1.5 gallon per hour, 20 mA and 20 ppm. 
This is probably due to the higher concentration tending to plate back 
out during the brewing.


Marshall


Dan Nave wrote:

The point is, in this case, electrode size doesn't matter.  If you are
conducting at the rate of 1ma and the volume of water is 1 cup, then
you release enough silver into the water in 1 hour hour to have an
equivalent of 17 ppm.  This gives you a rule by which you can get a
ballpark idea of what may be going on in your brewing cell.  You can
use it to estimate.  Just adjust for the variables.  (For current
values before you reach 1 ma, Hint: measure the current vs time and
calculate an average.)

I submit, that with polarity switching, the ppm of the product is
exactly what is calculated by Faradays Law of Electrolysis.  Until you
have any fallout.  And this is more accurate than measuring with a
meter...

Dan



On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 5:32 AM, Ode Coyoteodecoy...@windstream.net wrote:
  

At 12:56 PM 6/15/2009 -0500, you wrote:


Missed something...

That is in a time period of 1 hour.

Dan

On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Dan Navebhangcha...@gmail.com wrote:
  

Two gallons is probably too much to brew at one time with most of the
home generators we see.
You would be better off starting out with a pint or a quart. (approx.
500 to 1000ml)

My rule of thumb is that the maximum amount of silver released into 1
cup of water at 1 milliamp current in 1 hour is equivalent to
approximately
17ppm.  You can extrapolate from this rule.  Just use your reasoning
abilities, if you have any...  (I assume you do)

Dan


##  Using how much electrode, at what distance and assuming that the first
few hours were actually running at 1 milliamp when that's not very likely if
the water is good.

Ode



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CSDistilled water is good for you

2009-06-17 Thread Norton, Steve


 The issue of the safety of drinking distilled water came up once and I
 really don't have a position on the subject except that I know it is
 not harmful. I ran across the  following that says that drinking
 distilled water is good for you. 
  - Steve N
 
 
 Is Distilled Water Healthy?
 by Suzanne M. Skinner, Ph.D.
 Dear Dr. Skinner:
 Our church group has been having beated argurments over what type of
 water is safe to drink. I have been drinking distilled water for over
 two years, and I am now getting scared I may be doing myself great
 harm. Some say distilled water is the only health water. Others say
 distilled water is not only devoid of the minerals our bodies need,
 but that it leaches out the minerals that are already in our body. Who
 is right? What shall I do?
 You are correct. Distilled water is the purest we can drink as it
 contains only hydrogen and oxygen. Of course, we must include fresh
 raw fruit and vegetable juices everyday, as they are loaded with
 organic mineral elements the only kind our body can use.
 Natural water contains inorganic inactive minerals that are
 incompatible with our body and cause great harm over time. Natural
 water is lifeless, gross and incompatible with our cells, and does not
 contain enzymes ( the essence of life).
 A lifetime accumulation of inorganic calcium (found in natural water)
 clogs our veins and arteries, which can result in coronary thrombosis,
 arterial occlusion (obstruction of the blood vessels), aterosclerosis.
 Many times this results in a fatal heart attack.
 Natural water comes from springs, wells, lakes, rivers and faucets.
 Its inorganic mineral elements have been collected by contact with
 rocks, earth and soil.
 This unhealthy water goes from the esophagus to the stomach, to the
 small intestine, and then is either transported to the liver for
 distribution into the system, or if unable to disintegrated (because
 of inorganic minerals), is passed into the colon. (Liquids pass
 through blood vessels in the small intestine's walls). Whatever is in
 colloidal form (a stateof very fine suspended particles), goes along
 with the liquid into the liver. Now the liver begins to clog with
 minute inorganic minerals such as calcium (limestone) and magnesium
 Our bodies are composed of the same minerals, but they are in an
 organic form, not an inorgamc form. The minerals that our bodies need
 for replenishment, regeneration and survival, must come to us through
 raw vegetables and fruit, fresh juices, nuts and seeds. We can only
 use, assimilate, digest and absorb minerals in their organic form.
 With fresh, raw vegetables and fruit juices, the
 plant's roots go deep into the soil and pick up the inorganic minerals
 and change them to usable organic minerals for us.
 With natural water, however, our cells are called upon to reject the
 debris cells from it's inherent inorganic minerals. The kidneys and
 orher secreting organs attempt to throw off all this accumulated
 debris, however, a large part stays in our bodies, contributing to
 rigidity, ossification, so-called old age stiffness and early death.
 Distilled water leaches out the unusable inorganic limestone, rock
 residue, etc. It acts like a magnet, to pick up discarded cells,
 rejected minerals and debris. With the help of the blood and lymph
 system this waste is then carried to the kidneys for elimination from
 our body. The only water the blood and Iymph can actually use is pure
 distilled water, or fresh fruit and vegetable juices.
 There is a belief that distilled water leaches out minerals from the
 body. This is not true. It only collects and removes inorganic
 minerals that have already been refused and rejected by the cells.
 More than twenty years ago, Norman Walker, D.Sc., suggested an
 experiment everyone can do at home. Before you start, do a urine
 inspection to see how clear it is. Then use only distilled water for
 three weeks (make sure you cook with distilled water also). At the end
 of this time period, you will be astonished with the amount of
 sediment and debris found in your urine.*
 Filtering tap water is useless-- it only removes what is floating or
 mixed with the water-the smaller matter remains in solution. And of
 course, I need not mention the abundance of poisonous, cancer-causing
 material added to the water toprotect us from harmful bacteria and
 germs. Pesticides and metals in the water compound the problem.
 I will now not drink from a $5,000 water system I had installed years
 ago, before I knew better.
 Spring water looks clear and transparent, however, it is loaded with
 sold inorganic minerals- not to mention parasitic. Bottled mountain
 spring water is loaded with chemicals to make it taste good and look
 clear. Bottled drinking. water is water from a tap sold to unknowing,
 unsuspecting people.
 * Note:
 No liquid or water can leach organic minerals out, once they have
 become intergrated in the body; only inorganic minerals rejected by
 the 

CSRE: silver-digest Digest V2009 #286

2009-06-17 Thread Joyce Grace
Hi,

 

Thank you for the info that you forwarded to me.  Can anyone tell me how to
make CS?

 

Thank you,

Joyce

 

  _  

From: silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
[mailto:silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 8:25 PM
To: silver-dig...@eskimo.com
Subject: silver-digest Digest V2009 #286

 

 



CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

2009-06-17 Thread Annie B Smythe

Am I just paranoid?

This came today via ProMed email...


George Martin Baer, 1936-2009
-
Dr George Martin Baer, a former CDC employee in the Division of Viral 
 Rickettsial Diseases, died on 2 Jun 2009, in Mexico City, Mexico, 
at the age of 73. He was an eminent virologist, veterinarian, and 
public health scientist.


Dr Baer was born in 1936 in London, England. He grew up in New 
Rochelle, New York, where he became an accomplished equestrian, and 
began a lifelong love of animals. He attended Cornell University, 
where he obtained an undergraduate degree in agricultural sciences in 
1954, and a degree in veterinary medicine in 1959. He earned a 
Master's degree in Public Health from the University of Michigan at 
Ann Arbor during 1961.


Thereafter, Dr Baer started his career in public health with CDC via 
the EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service], and was assigned to the New 
York State Health Department in Albany, where he focused upon 
brucellosis, psittacosis, and rabies. In 1964, he worked at CDC's 
Southwest Rabies Investigations Laboratory in Las Cruces New Mexico 
on bat rabies. From 1966 to 1969, he was a consultant to the Pan 
American Health Organization in Mexico. Based upon his efforts, he 
helped to lay the groundwork for Mexico's public health programs 
against rabies, an effort he continued throughout the rest of his 
professional life.


In 1969, he returned to Atlanta, and became head of the CDC Rabies 
Laboratory. With his team of researchers, he developed a method for 
the immunization of wildlife, for which he was credited as the 
Father of Oral Rabies Vaccination. His considerable expertise made 
him one of the foremost international experts in this arena. Of his 
more than 100 publications, his 1991 book, The Natural History of 
Rabies, remains a definitive reference in the field.


After retirement from CDC, he founded a diagnostic laboratory in 
Mexico City, and was a member of the Mexican International Steering 
Committee for the Rabies in the Americas Conference. At the time of 
his death, he was working on a new vaccine for influenza, a timely 
project given the recent outbreak of the H1N1 virus. Clearly, Dr. 
Baer acted from a deeply held belief in the power of preventive 
medicine, within the One Health concept to combat disease both in 
humans and other animals.


He is survived by his wife, Maria Olga Baer, 3 daughters, Katherine 
Baer, of Washington, DC, Alexandra Baer, of New Paltz, New York, and 
Isabella Baer, of Mexico City, and 4 granddaughters. Funeral services 
were held in Mexico City at the Iglesia de Santa Rosa de Lima on 4 
Jun 2009.







Annie



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To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com

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Re: CSHow do I successfully create CS? Shelf-life of CS My very first Batch

2009-06-17 Thread Marshall Dudley

Marshall Dudley wrote:
That may be true for batch processing, but for my flow system, the 
efficiency is about 1/4 of that.  That is with stirring and polarity 
reversal. The exact stats are 1.5 gallon per hour, 20 mA and 20 ppm. 
This is probably due to the higher concentration tending to plate back 
out during the brewing.


Sorry, there is a typo there. It should have been 80 mA, not 20.

Marshall



Marshall


Dan Nave wrote:

The point is, in this case, electrode size doesn't matter.  If you are
conducting at the rate of 1ma and the volume of water is 1 cup, then
you release enough silver into the water in 1 hour hour to have an
equivalent of 17 ppm.  This gives you a rule by which you can get a
ballpark idea of what may be going on in your brewing cell.  You can
use it to estimate.  Just adjust for the variables.  (For current
values before you reach 1 ma, Hint: measure the current vs time and
calculate an average.)

I submit, that with polarity switching, the ppm of the product is
exactly what is calculated by Faradays Law of Electrolysis.  Until you
have any fallout.  And this is more accurate than measuring with a
meter...

Dan



On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 5:32 AM, Ode Coyoteodecoy...@windstream.net

wrote:
 

At 12:56 PM 6/15/2009 -0500, you wrote:
   

Missed something...

That is in a time period of 1 hour.

Dan

On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Dan Navebhangcha...@gmail.com 
wrote:
 

Two gallons is probably too much to brew at one time with most of the
home generators we see.
You would be better off starting out with a pint or a quart. (approx.
500 to 1000ml)

My rule of thumb is that the maximum amount of silver released into 1
cup of water at 1 milliamp current in 1 hour is equivalent to
approximately
17ppm.  You can extrapolate from this rule.  Just use your reasoning
abilities, if you have any...  (I assume you do)

Dan


##  Using how much electrode, at what distance and assuming that the

first
few hours were actually running at 1 milliamp when that's not very 
likely

if

the water is good.

Ode



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Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org

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Re: CSHow do I successfully create CS? Shelf-life of CS My very first Batch

2009-06-17 Thread Dan Nave
Plugging those numbers into my Excel Faraday calculator I get about
14ppm - not 20ppm.

Dan

On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 9:54 AM, Marshall Dudleymdud...@king-cart.com wrote:
 That may be true for batch processing, but for my flow system, the
 efficiency is about 1/4 of that.  That is with stirring and polarity
 reversal. The exact stats are 1.5 gallon per hour, 20 mA and 20 ppm. This is
 probably due to the higher concentration tending to plate back out during
 the brewing.

 Marshall


 Dan Nave wrote:

 The point is, in this case, electrode size doesn't matter.  If you are
 conducting at the rate of 1ma and the volume of water is 1 cup, then
 you release enough silver into the water in 1 hour hour to have an
 equivalent of 17 ppm.  This gives you a rule by which you can get a
 ballpark idea of what may be going on in your brewing cell.  You can
 use it to estimate.  Just adjust for the variables.  (For current
 values before you reach 1 ma, Hint: measure the current vs time and
 calculate an average.)

 I submit, that with polarity switching, the ppm of the product is
 exactly what is calculated by Faradays Law of Electrolysis.  Until you
 have any fallout.  And this is more accurate than measuring with a
 meter...

 Dan



 On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 5:32 AM, Ode Coyoteodecoy...@windstream.net
 wrote:


 At 12:56 PM 6/15/2009 -0500, you wrote:


 Missed something...

 That is in a time period of 1 hour.

 Dan

 On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Dan Navebhangcha...@gmail.com wrote:


 Two gallons is probably too much to brew at one time with most of the
 home generators we see.
 You would be better off starting out with a pint or a quart. (approx.
 500 to 1000ml)

 My rule of thumb is that the maximum amount of silver released into 1
 cup of water at 1 milliamp current in 1 hour is equivalent to
 approximately
 17ppm.  You can extrapolate from this rule.  Just use your reasoning
 abilities, if you have any...  (I assume you do)

 Dan


 ##  Using how much electrode, at what distance and assuming that the
 first
 few hours were actually running at 1 milliamp when that's not very likely
 if
 the water is good.

 Ode



 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.

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 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com

 Address Off-Topic messages to: silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com

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 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com














Re: CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

2009-06-17 Thread Dan Nave
Yes, you are paranoid.

He was 73 years old, after all.

Dan

On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 11:59 AM, Annie B Smythe anniebsmy...@gmail.comwrote:

 Am I just paranoid?

 This came today via ProMed email...


 George Martin Baer, 1936-2009
 -
 Dr George Martin Baer, a former CDC employee in the Division of Viral 
 Rickettsial Diseases, died on 2 Jun 2009, in Mexico City, Mexico, at the age
 of 73. He was an eminent virologist, veterinarian, and public health
 scientist.

 Dr Baer was born in 1936 in London, England. He grew up in New Rochelle,
 New York, where he became an accomplished equestrian, and began a lifelong
 love of animals. He attended Cornell University, where he obtained an
 undergraduate degree in agricultural sciences in 1954, and a degree in
 veterinary medicine in 1959. He earned a Master's degree in Public Health
 from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor during 1961.

 Thereafter, Dr Baer started his career in public health with CDC via the
 EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service], and was assigned to the New York State
 Health Department in Albany, where he focused upon brucellosis, psittacosis,
 and rabies. In 1964, he worked at CDC's Southwest Rabies Investigations
 Laboratory in Las Cruces New Mexico on bat rabies. From 1966 to 1969, he was
 a consultant to the Pan American Health Organization in Mexico. Based upon
 his efforts, he helped to lay the groundwork for Mexico's public health
 programs against rabies, an effort he continued throughout the rest of his
 professional life.

 In 1969, he returned to Atlanta, and became head of the CDC Rabies
 Laboratory. With his team of researchers, he developed a method for the
 immunization of wildlife, for which he was credited as the Father of Oral
 Rabies Vaccination. His considerable expertise made him one of the foremost
 international experts in this arena. Of his more than 100 publications, his
 1991 book, The Natural History of Rabies, remains a definitive reference in
 the field.

 After retirement from CDC, he founded a diagnostic laboratory in Mexico
 City, and was a member of the Mexican International Steering Committee for
 the Rabies in the Americas Conference. At the time of his death, he was
 working on a new vaccine for influenza, a timely project given the recent
 outbreak of the H1N1 virus. Clearly, Dr. Baer acted from a deeply held
 belief in the power of preventive medicine, within the One Health concept
 to combat disease both in humans and other animals.

 He is survived by his wife, Maria Olga Baer, 3 daughters, Katherine Baer,
 of Washington, DC, Alexandra Baer, of New Paltz, New York, and Isabella
 Baer, of Mexico City, and 4 granddaughters. Funeral services were held in
 Mexico City at the Iglesia de Santa Rosa de Lima on 4 Jun 2009.






 Annie



 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.

 Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org

 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com

 Address Off-Topic messages to: silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com

 The Silver List and Off Topic List archives are currently down...

 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com




Re: CSHow do I successfully create CS? Shelf-life of CS My very first Batch

2009-06-17 Thread Dan Nave
On the other hand, it is possible that any silver that collects on the
negative electrode may require, after polarity has been switched, that
the same amount of current be used to release it from the electrode as
if it had been originally part of that electrode...

Dan

On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 12:19 PM, Marshall Dudleymdud...@king-cart.com wrote:
 Marshall Dudley wrote:

 That may be true for batch processing, but for my flow system, the
 efficiency is about 1/4 of that.  That is with stirring and polarity
 reversal. The exact stats are 1.5 gallon per hour, 20 mA and 20 ppm. This is
 probably due to the higher concentration tending to plate back out during
 the brewing.

 Sorry, there is a typo there. It should have been 80 mA, not 20.

 Marshall


 Marshall


 Dan Nave wrote:

 The point is, in this case, electrode size doesn't matter.  If you are
 conducting at the rate of 1ma and the volume of water is 1 cup, then
 you release enough silver into the water in 1 hour hour to have an
 equivalent of 17 ppm.  This gives you a rule by which you can get a
 ballpark idea of what may be going on in your brewing cell.  You can
 use it to estimate.  Just adjust for the variables.  (For current
 values before you reach 1 ma, Hint: measure the current vs time and
 calculate an average.)

 I submit, that with polarity switching, the ppm of the product is
 exactly what is calculated by Faradays Law of Electrolysis.  Until you
 have any fallout.  And this is more accurate than measuring with a
 meter...

 Dan



 On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 5:32 AM, Ode Coyoteodecoy...@windstream.net

 wrote:



 At 12:56 PM 6/15/2009 -0500, you wrote:


 Missed something...

 That is in a time period of 1 hour.

 Dan

 On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Dan Navebhangcha...@gmail.com
 wrote:


 Two gallons is probably too much to brew at one time with most of the
 home generators we see.
 You would be better off starting out with a pint or a quart. (approx.
 500 to 1000ml)

 My rule of thumb is that the maximum amount of silver released into 1
 cup of water at 1 milliamp current in 1 hour is equivalent to
 approximately
 17ppm.  You can extrapolate from this rule.  Just use your reasoning
 abilities, if you have any...  (I assume you do)

 Dan


 ##  Using how much electrode, at what distance and assuming that the

 first

 few hours were actually running at 1 milliamp when that's not very
 likely

 if

 the water is good.

 Ode



 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.

 Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org

 To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com

 Address Off-Topic messages to: silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com

 The Silver List and Off Topic List archives are currently down...

 List maintainer: Mike Devour mdev...@eskimo.com




















Re: CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

2009-06-17 Thread cking001

Paranoid about what?

A man died at 73... happens every day.

Chuck
See what happens when you don't eat your broccoli! 


On 6/17/2009 12:59:18 PM, Annie B Smythe (anniebsmy...@gmail.com)
wrote:
 Am I just paranoid?
 
 This came today via ProMed email...
 
 
 George Martin Baer, 1936-2009
 -
 Dr George Martin Baer, a former CDC employee in the Division of Viral
  Rickettsial Diseases, died on 2 Jun 2009, in Mexico City, Mexico,
 at the age of 73. He was an eminent virologist, veterinarian, and
 public health scientist.
 
 Dr Baer was born in 1936 in London, England. He grew up in New
 Rochelle, New York, where he became an accomplished equestrian, and
 began a lifelong love of animals. He attended Cornell University,
 where he obtained an undergraduate degree in agricultural sciences in
 1954, and a degree in veterinary medicine in 1959. He earned a
 Master's degree in Public Health from the University of Michigan at
 Ann Arbor during 1961.
 
 Thereafter, Dr Baer started his career in public health with CDC via
 the EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service], and was assigned to the New
 York State Health Department in Albany, where he focused upon
 brucellosis, psittacosis, and rabies. In 1964, he worked at CDC's
 
 Southwest Rabies Investigations Laboratory in Las Cruces New Mexico
 on bat rabies. From 1966 to 1969, he was a consultant to the Pan
 Ame
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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
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05:53:00


RE: CSCS and marijuana cultivation

2009-06-17 Thread Terry
Large amount of seed is not usually desired.

-Original Message-
From: Alchemysa [mailto:da...@alchemysa.com.au] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 11:15 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CSCS and marijuana cultivation


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannabis_(drug)_cultivation

Under the section called Feminized Seeds.

Spraying selected leaves, branches and, in cases where large amount  
of seed desired, whole plants with colloidal silver solution has  
become a preferred method since the colloidal silver suppresses  
ethylene production in bud sites, stimulating male characteristics

This leads me to think that when gardeners spray CS on their plants  
they may be doing more than just fighting plant diseases.


David




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Re: CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

2009-06-17 Thread Day Sutton
I''m 74; good thing I take my vitamins and CS!

On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 6:23 PM, cking...@nycap.rr.com wrote:


 Paranoid about what?

 A man died at 73... happens every day.

Chuck
 See what happens when you don't eat your broccoli!


 On 6/17/2009 12:59:18 PM, Annie B Smythe (anniebsmy...@gmail.com)
 wrote:
  Am I just paranoid?
 
  This came today via ProMed email...
 
 
  George Martin Baer, 1936-2009
  -
  Dr George Martin Baer, a former CDC employee in the Division of Viral
   Rickettsial Diseases, died on 2 Jun 2009, in Mexico City, Mexico,
  at the age of 73. He was an eminent virologist, veterinarian, and
  public health scientist.
 
  Dr Baer was born in 1936 in London, England. He grew up in New
  Rochelle, New York, where he became an accomplished equestrian, and
  began a lifelong love of animals. He attended Cornell University,
  where he obtained an undergraduate degree in agricultural sciences in
  1954, and a degree in veterinary medicine in 1959. He earned a
  Master's degree in Public Health from the University of Michigan at
  Ann Arbor during 1961.
 
  Thereafter, Dr Baer started his career in public health with CDC via
  the EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service], and was assigned to the New
  York State Health Department in Albany, where he focused upon
  brucellosis, psittacosis, and rabies. In 1964, he worked at CDC's
 
  Southwest Rabies Investigations Laboratory in Las Cruces New Mexico
  on bat rabies. From 1966 to 1969, he was a consultant to the Pan
  Ame


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 Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
 Version: 8.5.339 / Virus Database: 270.12.76/2183 - Release Date: 06/17/09
 05:53:00




-- 
Day Sutton
day.sut...@gmail.com


Re: CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

2009-06-17 Thread MaryAnn Helland
You go, girl!!!  :-)   MA





From: Day Sutton day.sut...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2009 7:30:13 PM
Subject: Re: CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

I''m 74; good thing I take my vitamins and CS!


On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 6:23 PM, cking...@nycap.rr.com wrote:


Paranoid about what?

A man died at 73... happens every day.

                                               Chuck
See what happens when you don't eat your broccoli!


On 6/17/2009 12:59:18 PM, Annie B Smythe (anniebsmy...@gmail.com)

wrote:
 Am I just paranoid?

 This came today via ProMed email...


 George Martin Baer, 1936-2009
 -
 Dr George Martin Baer, a former CDC employee in the Division of Viral
  Rickettsial Diseases, died on 2 Jun 2009, in Mexico City, Mexico,
 at the age of 73. He was an eminent virologist, veterinarian, and
 public health scientist.

 Dr Baer was born in 1936 in London, England. He grew up in New
 Rochelle, New York, where he became an accomplished equestrian, and
 began a lifelong love of animals. He attended Cornell University,
 where he obtained an undergraduate degree in agricultural sciences in
 1954, and a degree in veterinary medicine in 1959. He earned a
 Master's degree in Public Health from the University of Michigan at
 Ann Arbor during 1961.

 Thereafter, Dr Baer started his career in public health with CDC via
 the EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service], and was assigned to the New
 York State Health Department in Albany, where he focused upon
 brucellosis, psittacosis, and rabies. In 1964, he worked at CDC's

 Southwest Rabies Investigations Laboratory in Las Cruces New Mexico
 on bat rabies. From 1966 to 1969, he was a consultant to the Pan
 Ame

No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.339 / Virus Database: 270.12.76/2183 - Release Date: 06/17/09 
05:53:00




-- 
Day Sutton
day.sut...@gmail.com


Re: CSVirologist dies in Mexico?

2009-06-17 Thread Hanneke
Considering that he, at the time of his death was working on a 
vaccine for influenza, and in the light of the long list of prominent 
virologists who had inexplicable deaths,  or sudden deaths (the list 
is roughly 84 I believe, could be longer by now),  I wouldn't be too 
concerned about being paranoid. Being paranoid means:  paying attention!


Unless there are more details available surrounding his death, I 
suspect that this scientist's death will be viewed as perhaps another 
one who bit the dust because of the work he was doing.


At 02:29 AM 18/06/2009, you wrote:

Am I just paranoid?

This came today via ProMed email...


George Martin Baer, 1936-2009
-
Dr George Martin Baer, a former CDC employee in the Division of 
Viral  Rickettsial Diseases, died on 2 Jun 2009, in Mexico City, 
Mexico, at the age of 73. He was an eminent virologist, 
veterinarian, and public health scientist.


Dr Baer was born in 1936 in London, England. He grew up in New 
Rochelle, New York, where he became an accomplished equestrian, and 
began a lifelong love of animals. He attended Cornell University, 
where he obtained an undergraduate degree in agricultural sciences 
in 1954, and a degree in veterinary medicine in 1959. He earned a 
Master's degree in Public Health from the University of Michigan at 
Ann Arbor during 1961.


Thereafter, Dr Baer started his career in public health with CDC via 
the EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service], and was assigned to the New 
York State Health Department in Albany, where he focused upon 
brucellosis, psittacosis, and rabies. In 1964, he worked at CDC's 
Southwest Rabies Investigations Laboratory in Las Cruces New Mexico 
on bat rabies. From 1966 to 1969, he was a consultant to the Pan 
American Health Organization in Mexico. Based upon his efforts, he 
helped to lay the groundwork for Mexico's public health programs 
against rabies, an effort he continued throughout the rest of his 
professional life.


In 1969, he returned to Atlanta, and became head of the CDC Rabies 
Laboratory. With his team of researchers, he developed a method for 
the immunization of wildlife, for which he was credited as the 
Father of Oral Rabies Vaccination. His considerable expertise made 
him one of the foremost international experts in this arena. Of his 
more than 100 publications, his 1991 book, The Natural History of 
Rabies, remains a definitive reference in the field.


After retirement from CDC, he founded a diagnostic laboratory in 
Mexico City, and was a member of the Mexican International Steering 
Committee for the Rabies in the Americas Conference. At the time of 
his death, he was working on a new vaccine for influenza, a timely 
project given the recent outbreak of the H1N1 virus. Clearly, Dr. 
Baer acted from a deeply held belief in the power of preventive 
medicine, within the One Health concept to combat disease both in 
humans and other animals.


He is survived by his wife, Maria Olga Baer, 3 daughters, Katherine 
Baer, of Washington, DC, Alexandra Baer, of New Paltz, New York, and 
Isabella Baer, of Mexico City, and 4 granddaughters. Funeral 
services were held in Mexico City at the Iglesia de Santa Rosa de 
Lima on 4 Jun 2009.







Annie



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