Thank you for replying about the pyramids! I'm always happy to find someone
interested in this subject. I read books about this in the 70's and have
had no one to communicate with about it. I dabbled in this off and on over
the years and used the dimensions and angles that were given in the book
(they have to be exact, you know) and made me a cardboard pyramid. Can't
tell you exactly how big it was but I would guess at least a foot and a
half high. I was so fascinated by the claims made in the books about the
strange things that happened to items placed in a pyramid that I just had
to find out for myself if it was true.

At the time of my experimenting, we were living in a small log cabin in the
north woods in Michigan. The cabin had an open ceiling except for the
bathroom which was the only room in the place that actually had an ordinary
ceiling. Because I had 4 young children who could knock things over and 2
or 3 cats who were fond of jumping up on things, I decided to use the top
of the bathroom ceiling as my "lab" (ha ha) No one would disturb anything
up there.

I decided that I must do this right and have a "control" box. Now, figuring
out the square inches in a pyramid, I found, is a matter left to the
experts. So I used a cardboard box that looked as though it would be about
the same size overall. (as you can see, this was a very delicately done
experiment!) (grin)

I kept a record of all my experiments but over the years what with moving
many times and all I, unfortunately, lost it. But the results were
impressive enough that I recall much of what happened. I just don't
remember in what order I did these things or exactly how many days went by.

One of the experiments was using store bought milk right out of the bottle.
I used quart mayo type jars, sterilized, and used milk from the same
container in both of my jars. I carefully checked these every few days and
at the end of an undetermined (don't recall) number of days, the milk under
the control box had spoiled and was completely separated, watery on the
bottom and solid floating on top and STUNK! However, I was shocked to find
that the milk under the pyramid had turned to what looked, smelled and
tasted EXACTLY like yogurt. Not one of us in the family could believe our
eyes. We were all afraid to taste any of it but finally got up our courage.
I had no way to prove it was actually yogurt but whatever it was, it must
have been a friendly bacteria such as yogurt would be. Not the kind that
causes spoilage.

Around this time I tried sharpening a razor blade. My husband used an
electric razor but I found a friend that used a blade. He was kind enough
to "loan" me a used blade and I tried it under the pyramid for the required
length of time (about 2 weeks maybe?) and gave it back to him. He tried it
but reluctantly said it had not improved. So I didn't have good luck with
that.

I also did an experiment using 2 eggs. I simply broke the eggs into
identical small bowls. One under the pyramid and one under the control box.
I did not break the yolks. After a few days when we had company visiting, I
chose to impress them. I told them what I was doing and broke the yolk of
the control egg. It was unbelievably awful! You could smell it from a few
feet away. However, the yolk of the pyramid egg was totally pleasant and
the egg had begun to dry up.

Another time I used 2 identical small plastic supplement bottles (something
that had had pills in them) that were, of course, washed and dried. I
stuffed each of them with the same amount of cotton balls and using a
dropper, measured the same amount of water onto the cotton so they would
both be soaked. I laid 3 viable sunflower seeds on the cotton of each
bottle and under the boxes they went. Each day I "watered" the cotton.
Somewhere between one and two weeks they began to sprout. I kept watering.
I waited until the new growth was at least a couple inches long before I
presented them to the family for their opinion. No one had any problem
determining which sprouts came from under the pyramid. (I asked each family
member separately) They were much larger, greener and just healthier
looking than the controls, which looked puny by comparison.

If I did any other experiments, I don't remember what they would have been.
The only thing against doing this is the length of time involved. I'm so
impatient! I hate waiting so long. But the results are definitely worth it.
You'll never feel the same about life again.

Sharon



--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
[email protected]  -or-  [email protected]
with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

To post, address your message to: [email protected]

List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>