An introduction to Electroculture

conor c

Well-Known Member
There was a fairly recent potcast interview, I can’t remember which one, sorry, where the guy was doing something similar with great results.
I think he stopped for fears of a potential fire and he’d had a slight shock.

100% something to it, as said above the ancients were a lot smarter than most give them credit for.
This tech even in modern times been around a while i never messed with it but i knew about it years ago there might be something to it as for the ancients being more advanced than we give them credit for sure of course they are history is kinda biased and more modern folks like to kid themself on like there so much more superior and civilised than previous people/civilisations prime example look at neanderthal man so long has it been painted as primitive yet they now say they had knowledge of what mould to eat that acts like a anti biotic among some other things so suppose it goes in roundabouts man
 

go go kid

Well-Known Member
Just been thumbing through one of my tesler books, when it came to me, it might be worth getting a ring magnet and placeing it around a seedling to see what happens.
you could also wrap wire around another ring magnet and creating a ring of wire comming off of it and have it around the plant too.
would you do this sort of thing with seeds or clones, im just wondering about a controle plant with nothing around it
i cant find my ring magnets at the moment, but i have a bunch of old neodynium coated magnets from hard drives, but the magnetic force would stop you from creating a ring of them. the only way i can think of, would be to use some stronger copper wire to wrap them and space them apart.
now that would create a magnetic force that is compleatly differant from a ring magnet, but as yet another seeding/clone, experiment along with the controle plant, could be very interesting.
and all that without any external electricity in the mix.
it may lead to an entirely differant aproach to growing.
just a thaught, any thaughts on the subject wellcomed. hope it doesnt detract from the original topic of the thread
 

potpimp

Sector 5 Moderator
View attachment 5266085 the earths electromagnetic energy points. places like the great pyramids, puma punka,stonehenge and all monoliths are built on them. just how the anciants knew where or how todetect that energy, only the extra tarestrials thet taught us about them in the first place can tell. we only have the tecknology to detect then since 1800 look up nikola tesla and free electricity, still atainable too.
the image is from this site
https://www.oshunspirit.com/blog/we-are-using-the-planetary-crystalline-grid-as-our-vehicle-of-energy-transfer
I can't help but see 19 lines converging to what we call the "Bermuda Triangle".
 

BlueDieselDog

Well-Known Member
An original electroculture antenna is just copper wire coiled clockwise (northern hemisphere) round a dowel or bamboo stick. It harbours the earths energy thru vibrations & frequency. A 6 foot stick will apparently cover 265sq/yds.....
 

res_monga

Member
This is how you make batteries actually. I'm no EE but I'm also not saying people haven't studied it. Also very similar to how people perform electrolysis based plating which should inform one on what exactly they can expect charged ions (based on their affinity) would move and form to the anode/cathode. Understanding the chemistry or physics of the probe setup in solution is all fine and dandy but understanding how that intertwines with the system that supports and generates living plant tissues is the only matter of importance here really. What is the mechanism? How many would you be able to narrow it down to. Probably not a small number of influences considering how many ions in solution would see a charge and move all together (in different proportions) in one direction dependant on the bath current between A and C.
 
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