THE GOLDEN PLOUGH
Because of his experience with all kinds of water problems, Schauberger was nicknamed "water magician". He was once invited to Bulgaria in connection with the problem of farmland drying out. The Bulgarians were then using steam plows, the plough-shares being made of steel. Strangely enough, there was no drying out in the old Turkish settlements where wooden ploughs were still being used. Could the material used for the plough-shares be the reason for the difference? Back home in Austria, Schauberger made experiments. His ploughshares were covered with copper plates. The result was surprising, up to 60% more harvest. New experiments show an increase of up to 100%.
The use of steel has disadvantages; it has no magnetic permeability. The earth magnetism gets cut and diverged. This creates turbulent energy fields, a chaos; but more important is the grinding off of tiny steel particles because of the fast working methods of today. The fine steel dust combines with the oxygen. The result is oxidation and rust, which not only deprive the soil of some of its oxygen - at the same time killing some of the micro-organisms in the soil - but also causes the groundwater to sink. In time the soil drys out. You can prove this by putting a small quantity of rust dust into water. This is sufficient to prevent falling drops from generating electricity.
Another experiment was used to put galvanic elements into the ground. A copper plate was attached to one side of a container of water and a zinc plate to the other. This created an electric field, its radiation saturated the surrounding soil and the growth rate doubled.
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