Hidden Nature

(Dana P.) #1
priests at least had a little roof built over their graves along
the cemetery wall at the eastern side in order to protect them
from rainwater. I realized later that, because of its free oxygen
content, which activates decomposive forces, rainwater
actually promotes decay or rusting.^10

Fertilizing energies

Schauberger's buried fermentation chamber is sited so as to be a
meeting place for the male seminal energies of the Sun (acting per-
pendicularly to the Earth) and the female fertilizing energies of the
Earth (acting horizontally at or near the Earth surface). The
residues or fallout of their combination result in physical growth. As
Schauberger describes:

Having been created out of the most thoroughly rotted elements
of former life, these emanations are the most natural fertilizers,
which have metamorphosed their erstwhile spatiality (spatial
volume) to such a degree, that they can only manifest them-
selves as highly dosed (concentrated) energetic matter.^11

This is what sustainability is all about. Matter being the energetic
waste products of higher (fourth or fifth dimensional) energies cre-
ated through heat and light, their reconversion into energies make
them the best possible natural fertilizers. There is virtually no limit
to the charge that can be built up with these energies, as they are
nonspatial.
The fertilizing energies (which may be a combination of dyna-
gens, fructigens and qualigens) enter the plant itself through the
root protoplasms, the little sacs or vesicles of proto-water or amni-
otic fluid attached to the root-tip. Like dew, another form of proto-
water formed on the tips of blades of grass during the night and
early morning, these vesicles, too, collapse if exposed to light and
heat. This is why the greatest care must be taken when replanting
small seedlings or saplings, which should be done only at night in
order to keep injury to a minimum.
Absolutely essential to the plant, these delicate root protoplasms
convert the nutritive energies and the minerals into a form that it
can absorb. Viktor Schauberger's sketch (Fig. 17.4) illustrates the
process, which he describes:


HIDDEN NATURE

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