Farmer Patterns for plants and animals

In his “Introduction to Quantum Agriculture” (unpublished conference paper, 2004, Acres USA), Hugh Lovel describes how energy could inform life and what kind of effects it could have. Further explanations can be read in his recent book ‘Quantum Agriculture’ (2014). He suggests that agriculture will become most efficient by using the energetic patterns that steer life in nature. And like no other, he insists on a good nutrient balance – not too little and never too much – as a condition for the energetic and informative techniques to be effective.

Title page of the best book about quantum agriculture. Source: www.quantumagriculture.com 

British researcher Mea-Wan Ho (2008) in fact suggests something alike when she argues that only circular systems can achieve highest efficiencies, ‘by closing loops in food, water and energy systems. Closing these cycles creates a stable, autonomous structure that is self-maintaining, self-renewing and self-sufficient. Productivity and sustainability always go together in a sustainable system. Why? Because the different life cycles are essentially holding the energy for the whole system by way of reciprocity, keeping as much as possible and recycling it within the system.’ (quoted from ‘Virtuous Circles; Values, Systems and Sustainability’ by Andy Jones et al, 2012.) To design smart farms, Ho starts from the entropy principle in thermodynamics. Her message is that any sustainable system should minimise its loss of energy and organisation. To explain how a system arranges its internal communication, Ho starts from the Coherent Domains of water, as formulated after principles of quantum physics. Probably these Coherent Domains are able to store patterns of information.

Back to Lovel. ‘To achieve highest efficiency in agriculture systems we should understand and apply the rules of quantum mechanics.’ In addition to nutrient advice, he uses techniques like colour therapy, biodynamic remedies, homeopathy, radionics, cosmic pipes (also called field broadcasters) and many more. These all work according to the rules of quantum physics.

Quantum holography and quantum non-locality or entanglement are two of thesurprising rules of quantum physics. According to quantum holography 
every part of any organized whole (e.g. a living organism) is one with or connected to all of its other parts. Any part can represent the whole, 
just as every cell in a person’s body contains the same DNA. 
Since matter is made up of vortices that connect three-dimensional space 
with transcendental or transfinite space, this means at the level of 
vibrations space and time are transcended. Hence any part of an organism, is entangled with the whole organism regardless of its location. 
Ordinary concepts of distance or time do not apply. Imparting patterns to a part, specimen, witness or token of an organism with a radionic 
instrument instantaneously imparts the same patterns to the entire 
organism no matter where it is. Photos and maps, such as aerial photos or official surveys, allow patterns to be transferred from any distance to 
whole fields or entire farms.

Says Lovel that farmers can transfer Information by strengthening regular patterns which you can recognize in so many natural processes. Thinking this way, he says, you develop the subtlest as well as the cheapest techniques. If one long quote in this book would be acceptable, it is a quote from Lovel (2004, unpublished). I simply cannot find better wording to clarify this way of thinking that I believe is crucial for more robust food-systems. And I deeply respect his early and profound understanding of the relevance of quantum mechanics and his bridging function between these sciences and practical farming.

“Patterns

Many farmers use dowsing to choose appropriate patterns for homeopathic and radionic applications. Either dowsing or intuition, or both, may be helpful in working out treatments to deal with specific concerns, such as fertility problems or building immunity to insects or diseases. Usually as mineral balances improve, disease and weed and insect problems recede.

One can use energy grid lines and power spots for setting up pattern energy devices to accumulate energy. Patterning devices may include establishing boundaries, prayer wheels, cairns, energy circles, field broadcasters, environmental harmonizers and atmospheric reorganizers.

By influencing the way things take form, patterns have profound effects on crop quality. Most farms and gardens can establish far more ideal patterns at every level from minerals and soil biology to plant functions and weather cycles. Each form has inherent patterns. One might say dynamic patterns give rise to corresponding forms of energy. Investigating and classifying energy patterns ought to be one of our top research priorities.

Establishing Patterns via resonance

Patterns are established or are transferred via resonance. For example, a bell or a tuning fork has a certain inherent pattern or tone it resonates to. When struck it will resonate to that pattern. Sea shells or spider webs likewise have particular patterns that allow them to conserve energy in specific ways that resonate or set up a standing pattern through their entire structures. As they grow they resonate according to that basic, natural pattern. Oxygen can make these patterns dynamic by liberating carbon from its rigidity. [Hugh explains this aspect in his recent book ‘Quantum Agriculture’ (2015), a book very well written].

In identifying the wellsprings of nature, Johann W. von Goethe (1749-1832) found that in the inorganic, mineral realm the driving force is polarity. In the inorganic realm things run down or explode. In the organic, living realm, however, the driving force is enhancement. Living organisms become more concentrated and enrich themselves. They tend toward ever-greater complexity, sophistication and refinement, or in other words they implode. Central to organic, self-organizing patterns is the self-similar Phi growth curve that living organisms express in fractal forms such as sea shells, cow horns, fern leaves, tree branches, blood vessels and the like.

Phi [Greek letter φ], which is also known as the Golden Mean, is an 
irrational number approximately equal to 1.61803 . . . . Like Pi [Greek 
letter π, the relationship of a circle’s diameter to its circumference], 
φ is an irrational number, and usually is written as a non-repeating 
decimal. It can be derived from the Fibonacci sequence in which the next 
number is the sum of the previous two, i.e. 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987, 1597, 2584, 4181, etc. Values for Phi are
obtained by dividing the last number in the sequence by the previous one, as for example, 4181 divided by 2584 is 1.61803 . .  Interestingly, the 
reciprocal [2584 divided by 4181] is 0.61803 . . . which is why φ is 
called the Golden Mean.“ End of quote.

Interestingly, also Ho elaborates on the self-similar phi patterns in plant life. She confirms these thoughts of Lovel.

Mea-Wan Ho studied intensively the fact that many forms in nature apparently are organised according to a phi-pattern. Source: Mea-Wan Ho presentation.

I also like Lovel’s distinction between energy in purely physical terms as compared to energy behaviour in living systems. A nuclear power plant, or a wind generator a water turbine ‘produces’ the energy we obtain from an electrical outlet. These machines transform mechanical energy into electrical current. It is transferred, and once we plug into this system its electrical energy is turned back into mechanical power. Note that in the process there is always some loss, either in the electrical wire, in wasting heat by friction or just dispersion of energy. He says this kind of energy ‘explodes, it wears out or is used up’. This mechanical type of energy in fact disperses from higher concentration to lower concentration. It increases entropy. Organizational energy in living systems, however, instead of dispersing it accumulates. It implodes, going from lower concentration to higher concentration. That is the contrary to entropy, it is called syntropy or negentropy.

What we think of as life energy, as in living organisms, is organizational. It goes against entropy. You’ll remember this early architect of quantum physics, Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961), who noted that living organisms have the remarkable ability to ‘absorb order’ from the environment into themselves. He might mean the same thing with ‘order’ as Lovel does with ‘patterns’.

Order emerging out of chaos, a biblical awareness.

Order emerging out of chaos, that’s fully against the flow towards entropy as formulated in the second law of thermodynamics. Isn’t it fascinating to read this assumption already in the first chapter in the book of the Bible, Genesis, written about 3000 years ago. Says Gerald L. Schroeder in his ‘The Science of God. The convergence of Scientific and Biblical Wisdom’ (1997, Free Press, New York USA); ‘The seemingly simple language of “And there was evening and there was morning,” marks the closing of each day of the six days of Genesis. That we must look for a deeper meaning in this sixfold repetition is obvious once we consider that the Sun only appears on day four. How are we to understand the concept of evening and morning for those pre-Sun days? The kabbalist Nahmanides explained it for us almost eight hundred years ago in his ‘Commentary on the Torah’ (HK: that’s the name of the first five books in the Bible): The Hebrew word for evening is erev. The root of erev is disorder, mixture, chaos. The Hebrew word for morning is boker, its root being orderly, able to be discerned. In the subtle language of evening and morning, centuries before the Greek words chaos and cosmos were ever written (Hebrew writing predates the Greek), the Bible described a step-by-step flow from disorder (erev) to order (boker); from the plasma of the big bang to the harmony of life.” Both scientists and theologians conclude together that there must be something ‘attracting’ this self-organisationing of life. Life cannot be explained by random evolution from lightning that connected atoms into amino-acids. Harold Morowitz, in his book ‘Energy Flow and Biology’ computed that merely to create a bacterium would require more time that the universe might ever see if chance combinations of its molecules were the only driving force.’ Sir Fred Hoyle, a British astronomer, has said that the spontaneous emergence of a single-cell organism from random couplings of chemicals, is about as likely as the assemblage of a 747 airplane by a tornado whirling through a junkyard. Most researchers agree with Hoyle on this point.’ We know that the genetic material of many plants and animals contains blocks of latent information (so-called neutral DNA, part of the full library of genes) able to be immediately expressed by changes in the environment or by single mutations. This concept of a latent library posits a mechanism very different from the classical theory of evolution wherein random mutations provide the changes in morphology. The laws of biology, chemistry and physics, the laws of nature, determine which structures can evolve. Cambridge professor of evolutionary paleo-biology, Simon Conway Morris, one of the leading paleo-biologists, opts for this solution of life’s channeling. In his 2003 book ‘Life’s Solutions’ Morris derives that ‘the number of potential ‘blind alleys’ is so enormous that in principle all the time since the beginning of the Universe would be insufficient to find the one in a trillion trillion solutions that work.’ Morris suggests the ‘existence of something analogous to ‘attractors’, by which evolutionary trajectories are channeled toward stable nodes of functionality’.

So I wonder, while trying to grasp the deeper meaning of these words, could it be that such ‘attractors’, that apparently would ‘initiate’ or ‘instruct’ a certain order and a specific functional shape, are the same as ‘the order sucked from the environment’ or ‘the non-material patterns’ that shape reality. And could it be that, with also quite subtle energetic or informational or intuitive techniques, farmers and gardeners could indeed support or even enhance such processes in life, by offering ‘attractors’?

Information transferred by patterns

Let’s return to practice again. Lovel already showed that information can be transferred indeed by objective patterns, for example specific line configurations on cards (McRay-cards are available for many purposes) put in a field broadcaster, spreading information patterns. See Lovel’s website for pictures and construction details of this field broadcaster.

A Field Broadcaster?

“It is a self-driven, agricultural pattern energy device with no moving parts, usually made out of PVC pipe,that stands upright in the field and sets up an induction field of the patterns placed in its reagent wells.

A standard model Field Broadcaster can cover up to 4000 acres. We also have a Garden Economy model which covers up to forty acres. Some farmers choose the community model concept where they combine maps of several individual properties in order to cover them all as one.

Each Field Broadcaster is planted two feet deep in the ground and stands nine and a half feet high. It is a closed tube with a copper plate at each end. These two ends are connected by a wire in a circuit that includes two 2 inch diameter 2 foot long induction coils next to the caps and two reagent well circuits, one for each induction coil. The top induction coil and well circuit is the mirror image of the bottom one, and where the coils of the top circuit are wrapped in one direction, the bottom set is wound in the opposite direction in order to satisfy the quantum requirement of spin balancing. Overall, the Field Broadcaster is designed to induce organisational patterns into the agricultural landscape both physically, in the electromagnetic spectrum, and quantum non-locally in the pattern energy (aka etheric) field.”

Lovel also refers to intuitive skills to answer questions or to make fruitful management decisions. Whichever method you use, intuition is often helpful in finding answers. Your intuition offers one of the key connections between your body and your wider environment. More precisely, after having read the former alineas, we could speak as well about a key connection between our body and mind with Morris’ ‘attractors’. A well focussed thought or intention might well create or strengthen an ‘attractor’ that enhances the sucking of order into the plant or into our food.

More on www.quantumagriculture.com  Subtitle: ‘Farming Earth and Sky’. This website includes extensive explanations about the working principles of his techniques, including the Field Broadcaster.

Henk Kieft

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