Wednesday, August 30, 2023

We are Draining Our Aquifiers Dry in America

 NY Times ran a great story a few days ago about how we are drawing our fresh water aquifers dry.  America Is Using Up Its Groundwater Like There’s No Tomorrow.

We are draining water faster than nature can replenish it. Four out of every ten sites investigated by the Times have been at record low levels in the past decade.

Sections of Kansas, part of America's bread basket, can no longer support industrial scale farming.

So much water has been pumped out in sections of Texas, Utah and California that roads are buckling.

Global warming  is accelerating the depletion as snow packs are smaller.

As a aquifer is depleted it can crater, or cave in, because it has been emptied.

"It adds up to what might be called a climate trap. As rising temperatures shrink rivers in much of the country, farmers and towns have an incentive to pump more groundwater to make up the difference.


Experts call that a self-defeating strategy. By draining aquifers that filled up over thousands or millions of years, regions risk losing access to that water in the future when they might need it even more, as climate change makes rainfall less predictable or droughts more severe.


“From an objective standpoint, this is a crisis,” said Warigia Bowman, a law professor and water expert at the University of Tulsa. “There will be parts of the U.S. that run out of drinking water.”


As farmers ran out of water, they increasingly switched to what’s called dryland farming, relying on rain alone.


That change is reflected in corn yields over time. Last year, corn growers nationwide produced an average of 173 bushels per acre. But for Wichita County, the yield was just 70.6 bushels, the lowest in more than six decades. The same is true for neighboring counties, whose yields have fallen to where they were in the 1960s.

Kansas has no mechanism in place to stop its groundwater decline.

The Kansas Geological Survey produces what it calls a lifetime map for the Ogallala Aquifer within state borders. It shows that large areas already lack enough water for commercial agricultural irrigation.

In the parts of Western Kansas where the usable portions of the Ogallala are located, more than one-quarter of the aquifer is at what the survey calls “minimum threshold,” according to Brownie Wilson, water data manager with the Kansas Geological Survey. That means it’s not possible to extract 200 gallons per minute, a standard threshold for large-scale irrigation. Within 50 years, almost half of the aquifer in that area is expected to decline to minimum threshold.


Wichita County and neighboring counties have been one of the first areas in Kansas to get close to the bottom of the aquifer, Mr. Wilson said. But they won’t be the last. “Tomorrow is here today for them, in terms of reduced yields,” he said.


Some farmers say they can adapt, including Mr. Watt, who cited advances in plant genetics and also more efficient irrigation and better land management. Experts say farmers nationwide should make similar changes to ensure remaining groundwater is used as carefully as possible.

But those types of innovations will only work for so long, said Bill Golden, a professor of agricultural economics at Kansas State University. “The loss of water is going to outpace the gain of technology,” he said. “Eventually, we’re going to lose.”

Much more--Click on the link and read the article.




Saturday, August 26, 2023

Dowsing Video Gives Tips and Exercises on Working With L-Rods

I just posted  a video on YouTube 'The Secrets to Working With Dowsing Rods that teaches how to use L-Rods. It also provides suggestions and exercises to become a better dowser. Below is a link.




Thursday, August 24, 2023

The Invention of the Clock Diconnected Us From Our Mother

 I was reading a book by Carl Frey, The Technology Trap, that gave a historical perspective on the development of technology and the challenges it presented. Frey along with his Oxford University colleague Michael Osborne predicted in 2013 that AI and robots could replace up to 47% of the USA labor market.

in the book Frey quotes American historian Lewis Mumford on how the invention of the clock was responsible for the development of the Industrial Revolution. For the first time the length of an hour was set, the day and work day could be divided because it was no longer dependent upon the sun.

How about how the clock disconnected us from our natural environment. While the sun is not part of Mother Earth, its cycles and rhythms greatly influence life on Earth. With the invention of the clock it was no longer necessary to be attuned to the sun to grasp  what part of the day it was.

The clock marked the acceleration of our disconnect from our Mother and her cycles and rhythms. We no longer needed to be aware of ou environment--instead we had the clock that would eventually become a new task master that allowed for industrialization.

The CLOCK helped separate us from our Mother.




Saturday, August 19, 2023

The Earth Magic I Work With

A few months ago I read a book that told how the magic Wicca works with only goes back a few hundred years and not the thousands some claim. This is not the case for the Earth Magic I work with--it dates back to the Neolithic Period; which began somewhere between 4500BC to 10,000BC and varied by regions.for example as late as 1492 in North America.



The start of agriculture is what distinguishes the Neolithic period from the Stone Age that was defined by hunter gatherers. The building of large megaliths and stone monuments also began during the Neolithic.

I felt it important to note this and because of this posted a YouTube video about it.


Tuesday, August 15, 2023

New Film Highlights the Dangers of Wind Turbines

Fourteen years ago I did a YouTube Video on how wind turbines disrupt the flow of the Life Force and create negative energy vortices longer term.

Then today I read that Michael Shellenberger has a new documentary, 'Thrown to the Wind,' coming out about how offshore wind turbines are killing whales. No surprise here.

Whales dying off the coasts of NY, NJ and Mass has been reported for some time. However, environmentalists and industry advocates have been vociferously saying "NO" to the claim that offshore wind turbines are behind whale deaths. Let's hope that Shellenberger is able to break through and expose wind turbines for what they are.

When it comes to the environmental movement the medicine is often worse than the disease.


Saturday, August 12, 2023

Ley Lines Vs. Energy Lines

In a continuing effort to educate about our Mother's Hidden Body I just posted a YouTube  Video explaining  what Ley Lines and Energy Lines are, and how they are different.





Sunday, August 6, 2023

Fields of Consciousness, Where Ley Line Originate From--VIDEO

 I have posted a YouTube video, Fields of Consciousness, Where Ley Line Originate From.



Saturday, August 5, 2023

Climate Change and Climate Migration

 I have been working on an article about climate migration, which is inevitable. However, what I find very concerning is the attitude and perspective of the writer's and prognosticators whose work I have been reading as I research the topic.

Many continue to believe that we can do with Mother Earth as we wish, as we have been doing for thousands of years. . In other words, there appears to be very little change in the believe the we can continue to do as we please; all we need to do is more judicious in our actions. Just figure out how many people can live in a certain location.

Very little, or no discussion,  about how we can best preserve and save our Mother. I would argue if we make our focus how we can best protect our Mother, we will in the process save ourselves.

I will post the article once published.