Log Date:
2025-12-18 00:00:00
Work done:
- Collected and distributed huauzontle to many swales on north side. No water was applied.
Observations:
- The massive growth of the garden this year is unmistakable. The weed pile is larger than a full cord of wood, and its removal is not yet complete.
- The continued growth and survival of plants that should have long been dead from cold is also significant. Sunflower, a summer crop, is still growing in swale #3 in spite of the weather. Though most of the new growth sorghum is apparently dead, some of it remains alive outside the swale #2.
Postulations:
- It occurred to me this morning that if my hypothesis about pyramids and water treatment is true, then the pyramids in Egypt were most likely built to sustain and enhance agriculture. It is conceivable that each of the pyramids built around the world (and other megalithic stone monuments) were part of a 'network'. I mean to suggest that there is some form of resonance between all the pyramids (and megaliths) so far extant on Earth. This is not within my means to prove, I am only suggesting this as an idea. If this idea is true, then the pyramids along the Nile were like a 'network' of nodes that exchanged energy, perhaps as a function of flow rate of the Nile. I suspect the objective was to induce an electric current in the running water, above and beyond what river flow would have induced itself.
- Given an elevated charge in the water via the influence of the pyramids, this would have acted as a natural fertilizer, as the charged water would have accelerated the formation of organic nitrogen compounds once it was diverted onto agricultural lands. If plant and root growth was enhanced, than soil health would have been the natural result, therefore facilitating higher crop yields over time.
- Furthermore, it is possible that ancient lakes and rivers in the Sahara desert were accompanied by as yet undiscovered pyramids. We know the area was wet and fertile from rock art and fossils found throughout the region.
- Why did the Sahara dry up then? There was the catastrophic after effects of the Younger Dryas, which most likely destroyed the advanced civilization(s) that built and maintained the pyramid 'network'. Though it may have been a sudden blow to human culture, it is also possible it took place over centuries, as political and cultural systems broke down and the knowledge base and highly trained workforce that built and maintained the pyramids eventually disappeared.
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