You can also purchase the
precipitate from the ORMUS providers which are listed at:
http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/sources.htm#2
Once you have the precipitate it is very important to apply it at the
appropriate rate. It is typically applied at the rate of one to three
gallons per acre (ten to thirty one liters per hectare) for each crop.
(This is usually just once a year for trees but will be with each
planting for grasses which get multiple cuttings.)
I
have calculated the application
rates for ORMUS precipitate in agriculture and Sea-Crop,
one of the ORMUS providers, also has a page on this at:
http://www.sea-crop.com/application.html
My fourth visit with the Essene in October of
2001 corresponded with
the visit of one of the ORMUS producers. He started making the C-Gro
(now Sea-Crop) product in 2004.
You can see
pictures of some of the
results of using this product on plants at:
http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/c-groplants.htm
http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/pears.htm
http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/alfalfa.htm
and on the Sea-Crop site.
In August of 2003 I gave a series of presentations on ORMUS in
North and South Carolina. These presentations were arranged by Dana
Dudley. After hearing about how to do the Wet Method in one of my
workshops Dana told me that she was working with some folks who had
been using ORMUS precipitate from Great Salt Lake water for plants.
Dana contacted these folks and got some ORMUS Oranges from them. These oranges were
four and a half times as large as ordinary supermarket oranges.
Home gardeners are also sharing amazing results with the use of ORMUS
precipitate on their plants. If you are interested in documenting and
sharing the results you are getting with plants I have created a page
with helpful suggestions at:
http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/documenting.htm
At one of my ORMUS Workshops on May 16, 2004 I showed some folks how to
make the ORMUS precipitate with Dead Sea salt. I gave the precipitate I
made to several people and one of these people, a woman named Jane,
wrote me a note telling me what she had done with the precipitate I
made:
From: Jane
Subject: The Rose
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2004 12:35:00 -0700
The roses are still alive, and growing. The first went into ORMES
right after your second workshop in Kingston [May 16]. The second
went into the same solution a month later. Both were cut long
stem roses from the supermarket.
In October of 2004 Jane sent me a video
description of this rose plant. The cut rose was still alive and
growing in a bottle of water five months after her husband gave it to
her.
A gentleman named Ted had several plant boxes on his deck. A couple
days after he heard me talk about ORMUS at a lecture in Ashland on May
2, 2005 Ted watered his plants with Pacific Ocean ORMUS precipitate.
When I returned to Ashland on May 20, 2005 Ted gave his report on the effects of the precipitate on his
plants.
From all of these observations we are quite confident of the following
results:
- Cellular respiration is increased
- Phototropism is increased
- Increases photosynthesis
- Increases carbohydrate content of sap
- Increases soil micro flora
- Increases nitrogen fixing bacteria in soil
- Increases phosphorous leaching fungi
- Improves soil tilth and aeration
- More resistant to insects and disease
- Has saved diseased orchards
- Less need for pesticides
- More drought tolerant
- More transplant tolerant
- Fruit is larger and better tasting
- Produce lasts longer on the shelf
- Mineral and vitamin content increased
- Plants produce sooner
- Crop yields are increased
- Application is easy
- Application is inexpensive
- Organic
- Non-toxic
- More resistant to freezing
There are also indications that animals receive great
benefits from eating plants which have been grown with ORMUS. In an on-line
book titled HEALTH & SURVIVAL IN THE 21st CENTURY by Ross Horne
we find the following passage:
Started feeding mice both
experimental and control, food that was raised on the Ray Heine and
Sons Farm. The experimental food had been raised on soil fertilized
with 2200 pounds (per acre) complete sea solids. The control food was
the same as the experimental with the exception that it was not
fertilized with complete sea solids. The food consisted of a
combination of one part soybean, two parts oats, four parts corn,
balanced food proteins, carbohydrates and fats for mammals.
C3H mice were obtained for this feeding experiment. This
strain of mice has been bred so all the females develop breast cancer
which causes their demise. The mice were two months of age when
received and started on the feeding experiments. The life expectancy of
this strain for females is no more than nine months which included the
production of two or three litters. The experimental and control groups
both consisted of 200 C3H mice and those fed on control food were all
dead within eight months seven days. The experimental mice that were
fed food grown on the sea solids fertilized soil lived until they were
sacrificed at 16 months; definitive examination revealed no cancer
Though this experiment was done with whole sea solids
(including the salt) I think we can presume that these benefits will
also apply to animals that eat plants grown with the ORMUS precipitate.