The Higa ceramics apparently have magnetic emanations. I use them in my water. It is easy to see that they have an effect by the many tiny bubbles rising up -- hydrogen or carbon dioxide I suppose, forgive my ignorance. (Glad to hear an explanation if somone knows . . . )
I assume this is a dipolar magnetism but I do not know. Using regular magnets that will displace a compass needle, one wants to use the side that attracts the North-seeking pole of the compass. This has good effects. The other pole has bad effects. Likewise a SOTA pulser requires that you aim the N pole toward the skin. This of course is apropos the watch battery business . . . JBB "John A. Stanley" wrote: > > In article <003501c1ad30$a0eee210$6401a...@prime>, > "I Anderson" <i...@win.co.nz> wrote: > >One way to re-program water is to freeze it. This forces the molecules > >to adopt a structured lattice. Thawing in sunshine is good. Magnets, > >vortexes, ozone or what ever can then be applied. > > I have a plastic water dispenser with a spigot that I fill with reverse > osmosis water that has been remineralized with a squirt or two of > Concentrace ionic minerals. Inside the dispenser is one of Dr. Higa's > toroidal ceramic doohickeys, and I keep one of those powerful magnetic > bricks next to it with the north pole facing the dispenser. > > The company selling the magnetic bricks makes all sorts of claims that > magnetic water alkalizes and detoxifies the body, etc. etc. But, does > applying a magnet to water really do anything to it? It's gotten to the > point that I now prefer my treated water to straight RO water, but I > have no idea if it's actually more beneficial. > > And, yeah, I know how RO water is supposed to be dead, etc. But, I > refuse to schlep spring water from town, and our water supply is > rainwater off the roof and/or water pumped from our pond, depending on > the weather and season, and it just doesn't taste that great when > there's a lot of pond water in it (which is most of the time.) > > -- > John A. Stanley j...@natel.net > > -- > 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: > silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com > with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. > > To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com > Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html > List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>