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Great interview, I suggested the book, glad you noticed how well it meshes with Dr Kruse's work too. Thanks to all these great people I now have a much better understanding of how the quartz prep works in biodynamic farming- something I initially thought was more batshit crazy than all the guano wars combined. So I tried it out and things felt very different...as a result I am off learning about microbes, biophotons, paramagnetism and how light affects all sorts of things. I was trying to get Robert Temple on another podcast so phoned the publisher to get his email if you want to get in touch with him. It would be great to get his book to Kruse too, I know he doesnt think Peter Mitchell is correct and prefers Gilbert Ling's ideas, but I haven't heard him talk much about plasma so perhaps he doesnt know some of the ideas in the book.
Yes, I am usually listening to David if I am not listening to audiobooks. I am doing similar things with the limited space I have, I am always making biochar, biological ferments and giving them to local farms near me where I get produce from. For example I can tell when they get a new flock of chickens as the quality of the eggs goes down as they havent been innoculated with the microbes and biochar yet. For me biochar and ferments are my primary focus atm but I have tried some electroculture last year and the effects did seem rather positive. I didnt get any cabbage white caterpillars on the brassicas the entire time I was running it even with them being seen in the local vicinity but did after I took it down. Also @Cahlen was also doing stuff a few years ago with it and found similar posistive results with his jerusalem artichoke experiment . However, as I was using copper I didnt want to run it too long without really knowing more about what was going on, as copper toxicity is something I didnt want to risk. It's one of the harder elements to remove from soil when overdone, but I am sure it's something I will return to again very soon. In the next year I intend to get a paramagnetism meter to measure the paramagnetic properties of soil in my work and then go to the Preseli Hill in Wales to see if the bluestones which are the ones that ended up at Stonehenge also exhibit paramagnetic properties.. Phil Callahan found the grass grew better around the Moai on easter island and they are made of basalt, a rock not too dissimilar from dolerite/diabase the bluestones are made from. He later took very paramagnetic rock to biophoton specialist Fritz Poppand and found they were emitting biophotons. If you think back to Gurwitsch you can see how this might be highly beneficial for the plants. It just happens to be the man who makes these Phil Callahan Soil Meters in Europe also knows a great deal about electroculture too. He is the Belgian Agricultural Engineer Yannick Van Doorne, who now lives in Alsace France so perhaps you might want to get him on the show to discuss electroculture (along with other things) as he has been studying it for quite some time.