Despite the current rules which state we cannot harvest our plants in this region of France due to a non existent lack of rain I picked a lettuce today with a fair bit of pride in my heart and had Sabrina take a picture because I eat salad every day and this is for me the best looking lettuce I have ever grown.
I picked it from this row next to our sweetcorn and it is no coincidence that it happens to be the closest lettuce to the cosmic antenna I set up one month ago.
Here it is on the 29th April between my feet when I planted out the sweetcorn.
Viewed from the other side you can see it was not the biggest lettuce at the time, but certainly it is the closest to the antenna.
I should probably explain that I also dug basalt into the soil that day and connected this grill I found in the forest to the base of the antenna.
There is also a magnetised cable running through this bed just under the surface which is connected to the antenna.
At the end of the day it looked like this.
Less than a month later here we are. One monster lettuce.
A few days before picking I measured it at 14 inches.
Probably should have measured it again when I harvested because it seems bigger looking at these images.
The electrical storms we've been having these last few days can have an amazing effect on the growth of plants. Particularly when you have a cosmic antenna in the ground collecting all that residual energy from the lightning.
It was so big it barely fitted into our basin at home.
Knowing what I know about the influence of electroculture on the quantity of nutrients present in plants may well affect my judgement but I can say with certainty that it tasted amazing in my salad and I felt extremely good after eating it.
The construction on my right in the image at the top of this post is a hexagon with a 51° cone on top for cucumbers to grow up.
It isn't finished yet so I will tell you more about this in a future post.
The pyramid you can see in the background is still doing wonders for the plants both inside and out and I can see how pyramids get lost in the jungle so easily for centuries, perhaps never to be seen again!
Everything around it just looks so happy. Mange tout ready to eat here.
Worth noting that the potatoes in the raised pyramid bed have almost finished flowering while the control group (planted at the same time) are around one quarter the size and not one of them has started flowering yet.
I keep my basalt here at the base of the pyramid next to the overwintered lemongrass where it can be charged before use.
Last point on this is that I planted a control group of sweetcorn on the same day as the one you have seen above and the control group plants are currently around one quarter the size of the others.
Certainly they are still healthy looking transplants and I expect them to do very well.
But when compared to those in the antenna bed, the difference is clear. Especially the one with a ferrite ring magnet around it, which looks both taller and more solid at its base than the others.
Natural antenna
Around the beginning of May I noticed something interesting with this enormous flowering lettuce.
It may be hard to see in these images but all the plants growing near it were doing better than those further away.
Look carefully and you will see how these kale at my feet get larger and larger as they move towards the flowering lettuce which is just out of shot, top left.
The effect was undeniable, seen also with the purple mustard plants which get bigger as they move closer to the antenna lettuce.
What this means is that certain plants are natural cosmic antennas, quietly doing their thing without any man-made equipment required.
So you may wish to consider letting some of your lettuces go to flower even if you don't need the seeds. Their spectacular geometry and elongated shape will boost the plants around them.
The power of the human mind
I recently heard Yannick Van Doorne talk about a Canadian farmer who bought a single copper frame pyramid from him but had a large expanse of land and wanted to affect not just one area of the land but all of it so she spent ten minutes every morning visualising her land full of pyramids. And guess what? It worked. There was an increase in crop yields across all the land.
While I am on the subject of Yannick, I highly recommend his latest series of six films which can be found at the end of this playlist. These are without a doubt the best films online for those of us seeking to better understand electroculture.
I felt inspired by this story and set about creating my own version which involved two identical pots of rocket seeds.
The only difference being that one pot had a pyramid drawn on it and every morning after my 30mins meditation I would spend a further ten minutes with this pot, visualising a massive copper pyramid around it.
And sure enough, when the seeds sprouted, the pot with the pyramid appeared slightly larger than the control.
Seen from another angle here.
One week later it rained a lot and I noticed how the pyramid pot plants had stronger stalks than the control, not bending over at all with the rain.
Pyramid pot here.
Control pot here.
In this last image which was taken just before planting out, you can see how the pyramid pot plants simply look stronger and healthier than the control group.
And now I am convinced that the power of our mind alone is enough to affect the growth of our plants.
Mind-powered pest control
Inspired by my recent conversations with who does not need electroculture devices to boost her plants because SHE is the cosmic antenna, engaging with them at an energetic level, I conducted another experiment when I noticed these black-fly all over my flowering celery situated next to the pyramid.
Here they are on May 9th, all over the upper section of the plant.
After I took these shots I spent a little moment with them, gently asking them to leave this plant.
And I think you already know what I am going to tell you.
By the 17th May most of the bugs had gone.
There were still some there however, collected around the upper most tips.
So I kept on with the experiment, gently and politely asking if they could leave the plant altogether.
The day before my birthday on the 22nd May I took these final images showing the plants entirely clear of bugs.
Only the dead ones remained.
I have since then begun other experiments in this vein, asking the same variety of bugs to leave this flowering sunflower (and my garden altogether).
By the way, it is extremely unusual to see sunflowers developing their flowers at this time of year. Normally we don't see this till July!
But these days I am no longer surprised by the incredible growth of my plants and I feel sure it won't be long before I am breaking records with the world's biggest vegetables.
Yesterday I found a tick on one of my cats so rather than remove it I simply asked it to leave. We also have a ton of flies in the house at the moment, which is normal for this time of year, so rather than put up the horrible sticky tape which traps and kills them, I simply asked them to leave the house whenever they see the door open.
Will let you know how I get on with these two experiments!
Final thoughts
Learning about electroculture has been such a joy for me but it can be expensive buying copper and time-consuming making 'machines' so these mind control experiments feel way more important.
Indeed, this option is available to any humans who are able to think. Which would be ALL of us! No money or time required. Just a gentle loving intention for all souls present, bugs and plants included.
Right, I must get on with my day now!
Today we will be picking as many of these cherries as possible to make cherry wine, cherry brandy and kirsch.
Love & Light everyone 🌱