The purpose of this trip was to connect the gifting work previously done in South Africa and Namibia by doing some massive laying down of tower busters accross Botswana.
Our friend Andy has already put up about 14 Cloudbusters in Botswana but not many towerbusters.
The population centres such as Gaborone, Francistown, Selebi Pikwe etc., concentrated in the eastern side of Botswana, had already been covered quite well in previous trips.
This (and the gifting in neighboring countries) has already lead to greatly increased rainfalls in normally very arid Botswana. (Botswana is 90% Kalahari "desert", more a dry savannah than a desert, but still very dry)
Now we are hoping to create a conduit on which the energy can freely move across the Southern African subcontinent.
On the list for intensive gifting were also some very mysterious and alluring places:
The Makgadigadi pans, a dry salt pan that was previously part of a large inland lake and – according to ancient legends – host to a lost civilization. The Okavango delta, a unique ecosystem where a river fans out into the sandy desert and is swallowed by it. It is probably the only delta that does not discharge into an ocean but just gets swallowed by a "desert". Only a few years ago, before the tendency for increasing desiccation was strongly reversed by our gifting efforts, it was feared by ecologists and tourism operators that this unique wonder of nature was going to dissappear within the next few years. Tsodilo Hills, holy to San (Bushmen) and Bantu alike, these hills had to have some special energies, apart from being called the largest open air gallery on earth with over 4,500 rock paintings on 10 square kilometers.
http://www.orgoniseafrica.com/discounts.html:2ldhvlob
Driving through the Makgadigadi pans