Over the winter I spent 6 months in Asia, primarily learning about healing and practicing meditation at a number of monasteries and other centres. In both Indonesia and Thailand I met up with other gifters who supplied me with orgonite, or allowed me to pour with them. I was able to distribute about 50 TBs in total and recorded some of my efforts.
The first significant result was a small island which shall remain anonymous, in the Andaman sea off the west coast of southern Thailand. I was there for a week visiting a friend of a friend, who had some bamboo bungalows on the beach.
On the island there was one cell tower which had been installed in 2007. I was aware that mainland Thailand was gifted heavily, and my travels south had given me no reason to assume the presence of much DOR. The island was different. Being a couple of hours by boat from the mainland it’s unlikely that any of the existing gifting extended that far. The weather was hot and dry, but with the tell tale white haze in the upper atmosphere obscuring the deep blue sky above it. I could also feel the subtle electrical tension in the air so this wasn’t quite the slice of paradise I was expecting to find. However, I had brought one TB with me and I knew exactly what needed to be done with it.
I hired a bicycle and cycled to the centre of the island. I found two large towers, powered by a high solar array. A standard Solar PV installation here in Europe is about 4kw and consists of 16 panels. From the number of panels at this site I estimate that the array on the island was capable of putting out in excess of 20kw on an average day of blazing Thai sunshine. Half of the time it’s dark so its safe to assume that the two panels were consuming 8kw which is a significant amount for a receiver of maybe 200 phones in total on this small island and a sure sign that something nefarious is afoot.
Using the TB as a makeshift spade I deposited the payload and made a quick exit. On return to my accommodation I notice a large and beautiful sylph over the centre of the island and so jokingly told some companions that it’s likely to rain tomorrow.
Tomorrow came and I was up quite early. The sky was a deeper blue than before, and the white haze seemed to have begun to form fluffier low level cumulus clouds. I was also relieved because it is a little cooler, and with less than two weeks on the continent my body still needed time to adjust. To top it off, the subtle tension in the atmosphere was gone and it was easier to completely relax.
Later that afternoon the rains came, and they were quite heavy. What seemed like a nice idea to my companions the previous day was now a cause for disappointed faces as their tropical paradise became more like northern Europe. The cloud cover continued for the rest of my stay on the island with the odd shower thrown in, which suited my still adjusting body quite well. Conversations with local people in broken English and Thai revealed that it hadn’t rained for too long, and when it did it was ineffective. As a result they had been importing food from the mainland for the last 5 years (2012 – 2007 = 5) and simple maths suggests that the tower could have been responsible for the lack of rainfall.
The day prior to gifting. Hazy sky, notice how indistinct the clouds are, the whole thing is just a shade of milky light blue.
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Scoping out the site. One of the solar PV panels is visible behind the blue shed.
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Making a deposit in the bank of POR
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A significant change in the character of the clouds was apparent by the time I got back to the bungalows that evening.
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The next day strong cloud cover was in stark contrast to the previous day’s haze.
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The resulting rain was so heavy that I didn’t want to risk getting my camera wet and so don’t have any pictures [Image Can Not Be Found]