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secret_life_of_plants [2011-04-15 18:06] – [Alchemists in the Garden] cockysecret_life_of_plants [2011-04-15 18:42] – [Dowsing Plants for Health] cocky
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 long before the advent of man to his stewardship. In that sense, **//plants  long before the advent of man to his stewardship. In that sense, **//plants 
 are the oldest alchemists.//**  are the oldest alchemists.//** 
 +
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 ==== Dowsing Plants for Health ==== ==== Dowsing Plants for Health ====
  
-Applying his technique for measuring wavelengths directly to human  +---Simoneton found that the **normal healthy person gives off a wavelengt  
-beings, Simoneton found that the normal healthy person gives off a  +radiance of about 6,500**. Bovis and Simoneton's thesis: human beings should eat fruit,  
-radiance of about 6,500and host of other noxious weeds.  +vegetables, nuts, and fresh fish that give off radiations higher than their  
-Simoneton believes the day wi11 soon come when vaccines are made +own normal 6,500, if they wish to energize themselves and feel healthy. 
 + 
 +---Myrna I. Lewis, taken by  
 +the Soviets on visit to several sanitariums in the Black Sea city of Sochi  
 +to find aging Soviet citizens, afRicted with a variety of ills, both physical  
 +and mental, **being treated not with drugs but with vibrations from  
 +flowers in greenhouses** where they were led to smell specific blooms so  
 +many minutes a dayThey were also being treated with music played  
 +in their rooms and the sound of the sea recorded on tapes. pg 308 
 + 
 +---During his months in Wales, Bach felt his senses quickening, becom-  
 +Ing more developed. Through a finely developed sense of touch he was  
 +able to feel the vibrations and power emitted by any plant he wished  
 +to test. Like Paracelsus, if he held a petal or bloom in the palm of his  
 +hand or placed it on his tongue he could feel in his body the effects of  
 +the properties within that plant. Some had a strengthening, vitalizing  
 +effect on his mind and body; others would give him pain, vomiting,  
 +fevers, rashes, and the like. His instinct told him that the best plants would be found blooming in the middl,e of the year, when the days are  
 +longest and the sun at the height of its power and strength. pg 309-310 
 + 
 +---Though many of the flowers did not contain the healing properties  
 +he sought, Bach found the dew from each plant held a definite power  
 +of some kind, and deduced that the sun's radiation was essential to the  
 +process of extraction. As collecting sufficient dew from individual flowers  
 +could be laborious he decided to pick a few blooms from a chosen plant  
 +and place them in a glass bowl filled with water from a clear stream,  
 +leaving them standing in the field in the sunlight for several hours. To  
 +his delight he found that the water became impregnated with the  
 +vibrations and power of the plant and was very potent. To potentlize his  
 +water Bach would choose a summer day with no clouds to obscure the  
 +sun's light and heat. Taking three small plain glass bowls filled with fresh  
 +water, he set them in a field where the flowering plants were growing,  
 +then selected the most perfect blossoms and placed them on the surface  
 +of the water.** To lift the blooms from the water without touching the  
 +fuid with his fingers he used two blades of grass.** The water was then  
 +transferred by means of a small lipped phial to bottles. When half-full  
 +the rest of the bottle was filled with brandy designed to preserve the  
 +mixture. Before the next experiment Bach would destroy both bowls and  
 +phials. pg 310-311 
 + 
 +---blindfolded ruddy-cheeked Scotsman, Alick McInnes, can** put his hand over a ripe  
 +bloom and tell from the wavelength of its radiation** just what plant it  
 +is and what its medical properties may be. In India, where he spent  
 +thirty years working for the British Raj, Mcinnes got his first introduc-  
 +tion to the fact that plants not only give off radiations which are sensible  
 +to humans, but are themselves sensitive to the radiations given off by  
 +humans; this he discovered when he visited the Bose Institute near  
 +Calcutta. pg 312 
 + 
 +---By the entrance to the Institute stands a luxuriant Mimosa pudica.  
 +Visitors are requested to pick a small frond from this compliant horticul-  
 +tural guinea pig and place it in one of Bose's complicated machines,  
 +which provides a schematic pattern of the vibrations of the plant on a  
 +sheet of paper. A visitor is then asked to place his wrist inside the  
 +machine and watch as a duplicate of the pattern is produced, demon-  
 +strating that mimosa is so sensitive it can pick up and faultlessly reflect  
 +individual human radiations. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jagadish_Chandra_Bose]]pg 312 
 + 
 +--- 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +  
  
  
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