Brown trout in Missouri are half again as large as they were just twenty years ago, and are now the largest ever recorded, anywhere

“There is no avoiding war, it can only be postponed to the advantage of your enemy.”

From " The Prince ", by Niccolò Machiavelli, 1532

It’s February 2020, and great positive changes are underway at every level of our reality. They began in earnest in 2012 and have been increasing in speed and magnitude since. I’ve been writing articles on the subject since 2013.

I have concluded that these epochal positive changes are being driven by untold thousands of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work. Those devices are collectively unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix that’s been patiently built and expanded by our about-to-be-former Dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon and before. And the Ether is returning to its ages-long natural state of health and vitality.

One of those changes is that Nature is booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in my lifetime.

For example, the current Missouri state record (and also world record) brown trout, from 2019, weighed 40 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 51% larger than a prior 26 pound, 13 ounce record holder from 1997.

Brown trout in Missouri are half again as large as they were just twenty years ago, and are now the largest yet ever recorded, anywhere.

The Missouri state record brown trout increased in size by an average of .3% per year from 1997 to 2005.

The Missouri state record brown trout increased in size by an average of .8% per year from 2005 to 2009.

The Missouri state record brown trout increased in size by an average of 4.74% per year from 2009 to 2019 .

Compared to the average rate of growth seen from 1997 to 2005, the growth rate of brown trout in Missouri more than doubled going forward in time from 2005 to 2009, then their growth rate increased again from 2009 to 2019 by more than five times.

That’s not supposed to be possible. Organisms will grow at smaller and smaller rates as they get closer and closer to their maximum possible size.

Here the growth rate is continuously growing, going forward in time, and getting larger the further forward in time you go.

To the highest level ever seen on Earth. It’s a world record fish:

(September 16, 2019 - Huge brown trout caught in Missouri tops world record set in Arkansas

The relative health of its energetic or Etheric environment is the most important driver of the size, health, and longevity of any organism.

The current Missouri state record brown trout, from 2019, weighed 40 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 51% larger than a prior 26 pound, 13 ounce record holder from 1997. That’s a baseline average annual rate of increase in size of 2.5% over those 22 years. That’s half again as large.

The current Missouri state record brown trout, from 2019, weighed 40 pounds, 6 ounces, 10.2% larger than the previous 36 pound, 10 ounce record holder from February 2019.

That previous record holder was 27.3% larger than the prior record holder from 2009, which weighed 28 pounds, 12 ounces.

The record stood unbroken for ten years, then just recently was broken twice in a year, once by a huge margin and then a second time by a very large margin. Such records are usually broken in tiny increments, as organisms get closer and closer to their maximum possible size within a basically unchanging external environment down through time.

The current Missouri state record brown trout, from 2019, weighed 40 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 47.4% larger than a previous record holder from 2009, which weighed 28 pounds, 12, ounces.

That’s an average annual rate of increase in size of 4.74% over those 10 years. That’s closing in on twice the baseline.

That record holder from 2009 was 3.3% larger than the previous 27.8 pound record holder from 2005. That’s an average annual rate of increase in size of .8% over those four years. That’s about three times below the baseline.

The growth rate of brown trout in Missouri increased by 3.3% from 2005 to 2009, then increased by 4.74% from 2009 to 2109. The growth rate is increasing, going forward in time. That’s not supposed to be possible as organisms get closer and closer to their maximum possible size within a basically unchanging external environment down through time.

That previous record holder from 2009 was 3.7% larger than the prior record holder from 1997, which weighed 26 pounds, 13 ounces. That’s an average annual rate of increase in size of .3% over those 12 years. That’s roughly eight times below the baseline.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, February 25, 2020

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1997 - Brown Trout 26 lbs 13 oz Bull Shoals Lake Rob Caudel 11/10/1997

November 20, 2009 - The old Missouri state brown trout record was 27.8 pounds set in 2005.

(The author hedges by omitting the name of the person who set the record, and where it was set. - ed)

December 9, 2009 - Record Missouri brown trout weighs in at 28 pounds, 12 ounces

An angler fishing Missouri’s Lake Taneycomo landed a 28-pound, 12-ounce brown trout, a new state record. The fish bests the previous record by more than a pound.

The California record brown is 26 pounds, 8 ounces, caught at Bridgeport’s Twin Lakes in April 1987 by Danny Stearman of Bakersfield.

(The author hedges by omitting mention of who set the previous record, or when. They use the terse, general "bests the previous record by more than a pound, so you have to look up the previous record, and do the math. As a bonus, they insert the California record as “chaff” to distract you. The plausible-deniability is provided by the fact that the iuarticle is from a California publication. - ed)

February 23, 2019 - Monster brown trout smashes Missouri record

The fish was weighed alive at Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery, and once it’s officially confirmed, it will easily break the current Missouri record — a 28-pounder also caught at Lake Taneycomo in 2009.

(The author hedges by omitting mention of who set the previous record. They use the terse, general “smashes Missouri record”, and “will easily break the current and hedged again by omitting the percentage increase between the records.” And hedged again by listing the 28 pound, 12 ounce fish as “a 28-pounder”. So I had to correct them, then do the math. - ed)

February 25, 2019 - NEOSHO ANGLER CATCHES STATE-RECORD BROWN TROUT

TANEY COUNTY, Mo. – The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) reports that Paul Crews of Neosho became the most recent record-breaking angler in Missouri when he hooked a brown trout on Lake Taneycomo using a rod and reel.

The new “pole and line” record brown trout caught by Crews on Feb. 23 weighed 34-pounds, 10-ounces. The new record beats the previous state-record by 6 pounds and 2 ounces.

(The author hedges by omitting mention of who set the previous record, and when. They use the terse, general " beats the previous state record", and hedged again by omitting the percentage increase between the records. So I had to do the math. - ed)

September 5, 2019 - The previous record was set just seven months ago by Paul Crews of Neosho. Crews was also fishing at Lake Taneycomo when he reeled in a 34-pound, 10-ounce brown trout Feb. 23 using a pole-and-line.

September 16, 2019 - Huge brown trout caught in Missouri tops world record set in Arkansas

BRANSON, Mo. (News release) – A massive brown trout was caught in Missouri on Lake Taneycomo last Wednesday, one that set the trout world abuzz.

The trout, caught by fishing guide Bill Babler, weighed 40 pounds, 6 ounces, was 41.25 inches long and had a girth of 28 inches.

It will easily smash Missouri’s current brown trout record, once confirmed, and tops the world record for 4-pound line class brown trout, which was caught in Arkansas. That mark was 40 pounds, 4 ounces.

It’s also 2.5 pounds shy of the world record for any line class, which was caught in New Zealand in 2013.

The previous best brown trout in Missouri was 34 pounds, 10 ounces, also caught in Lake Taneycomo. Babler caught his brown using a pink Berkley PowerBait worm fishing the upper part of the lake. He was using 3.6-pound test tline on a 7-foot custom-made rod and spinning reel.