Gifting In Okinawa

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I’ll try to make this quick, because I actually need to get to work!
This will just be some quick, preliminary reports about gifting in The Ryukyu Islands, specifically Okinawa,
with more to come later.

First I need to thank Laurent for sending me a donation for a couple of gallons of resin, and I need to thank
Eric Carlsen for metal shavings. You both made this possible.

I have been busy with school, so I have not been able to gift as much as I would like, but break is soon.
Also I was without ammo for awhile.
Don mentioned a rule of thumb of 1 tower for every 1000 people. I think Okinawa may actually have more than
this.

A few weeks ago, I went to Seifwa Utaki. One of the most sacred places in Okinawa. It is a UNESCO World Heritage
Site. There was a tower very close, and several towers around it. I gifted all of the towers, and I gifted some in the
site. There were many people, and sometimes they do archeology there. I was able to find good hiding places for them
and I don’t think they will be found for a long time.

On the way there, I found a drainage ditch next to a tower. The water was gross, and there was a thick, nasty film floating on top.
It was so thick that you could throw a pebble on the foam and it would float on top. I gifted a towerbuster into that ditch.
A week later I went down the same road to go to some castles, and the water had cleared up completely. It was still maybe
a little green, but I could actually see the bottom. I was VERY impressed, and this is after 5 years of gifting. The 4 or 5 towers
in the close vicinity that I gifted didn’t hurt either. Also nearby was a rock that was brought over to Okinawa in ancient times from
Korea. There used to be a small pond there, but it was destroyed during the battle of Okinawa. I gifted a TB there also.
Here is the tower, and the before and after pictures of that water:
Tower:
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Water Before:
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Water After:
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OK, so here is Seifwa Utaki, which was gifted nicely. I stayed there for over two hours. It was really nice feeling the energy clear
up while I was there. You can see people praying in this one part.

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Last weekend I went to Zakimi Castle. Zakimi Castle is another UNESCO World Heritage Site. I gifted a few tbs there as well.

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This week I visited Morikawanokawa. This is a sacred place with a spring and a special legend. A long time ago there was an angel bathing
in the spring. A farmer hid her wings so she could not fly away. The married and lived together for a time. One day the angle found where
the farmer hid her wings, and she flew away. I gifted some tbs around the large park. There is the spring, and a shrine, and a large monument.
There are also several places to burn incense and pray in the park. Above the park are a couple caves that people probably hid in during the
Battle of Okinawa. Many times Okinawan civilians would hide in the caves, and the Japanese soldiers would make them leave the caves so they
could hide in them, and they would take their food. Also the soldiers forced many Okinawans to commit suicide before the Americans arrived.
Now, many Okinawans think of themselves as Japanese people. I think that this is like a Native Hawaiian person considering themselves to
be fully American, even though it was only about 100 years ago that America stole Hawaii… Okinawa was one island in the Ryukyu Kingdom
before Japan annexed it. The sovereignty movement is much stronger in Hawaii than in Okinawa.
Anyway, I digress…

I gifted a TB into two of the caves. This park is right
next to the disputed Futenma Base.

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More later…

Arigatõgosaimasu (thank you) Jack

Enjoyed your gifting report and pictures very much!
Hopefully the Japanese version of this report, and more in the future I’m sure [Image Can Not Be Found] will encourage more people in Japan to take up gifting.

Carlos

Aloha everyone,
I know I haven’t been posting much, but I have been busy gifting.
Finding metal shavings has been my only problem. I have visited metal shops, but they never have more than enough for a couple
towerbusters. I even put an ad in one of the English language weekly newspapers, hoping that somebody on one of the many
military bases would sell me or give me some shavings. From that ad I got an invitation to meet with somebody’s elementary school
classes and tell them about America.

Tomorrow I will take my first trip to another Ryukyu Island. I am taking orgonite, and if I don’t have enough that is OK because I will go there
again in a couple months.

On Sunday September 8th I gifted 3 weatherballs. This makes 4 total that have been gifted, and all are in Southern Okinawa.
I have also gifted as many towers as I can. There are just so many in Naha and the cities and everywhere…

I haven’t yet made it very far North past the center of Okinawa. In a couple weeks when I receive my new scholarship I will have the funds to travel there.
Even so I may have to ask people to donate some money for resin—.

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I forgot to say that there were 3 large towers near the first weatherball, at the airport, and then 2 large towers and 1 smaller tower at the other two weatherballs.
I gifted them also. So that day a total of 6 towers and 3 weatherballs gifted that day.

As I gifted the 2 weatherballs and towers it cooled off, and sprinkled a little bit. Later in the afternoon it rained quite a bit. I live North of Naha, in Nishihara. The first weatherball was in Naha, and the other 2 were South of Naha in Itoman.

I did a lot of gifting here before I received a GPS from my parents, so this map is incomplete. But here you can see some of the progress of gifting in Okinawa.
This map reflects approximate locations of towers and sacred sites and other places gifted, not the actual location of orgonite.

So far I think I have used about 5 gallons of resin, so approximately 250 towerbusters have been gifted in Okinawa. I would like to gift another 500 or even another 1000 before I leave. I will need help to do this, but I think it is possible.
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this will be a report about gifting in Kumejima (Kume Island) from last week. The island is very small, and has a population of only 8,500.
Because the population is small, I was expecting about 9 towers, and I brought only about 20 towerbusters. It was not sufficient at all.
There was a great host of weather weaponry and 3 weatherballs, and many towers and haarp weapons. Next time I will have to take much more
orgonite and hopefully I will have more time. I was only there for 3 nights and 2 days, and some of that time I was with my host family, so I could
not go off on my own. I gifted everything that I was able to gift, and I made great connections with the people there.

As we left Tomari Pier in Naha by ferry I dropped one TB into the water. I noticed panels on several buildings around the port so I will go back there
and gift a few more into the water. Before going to Kumejima we first stopped at a small island, Tonaki Island. Dropped one into the bay there.
I could see some antennae in the distance, but no real DOR panels. Maybe there are other ones that were unable to be seen. Hopefully I can go there in the future
and explore a little bit.

We were met at the port in Kume by members of our host families. They took us for lunch at a traditional soba restaurant. Then we went to an awamori
distillery for a tour and some tasting. Next a trip to the museum, and then the high school to give some presentations on our countries. Along with myself
from America, there were 2 students from Korea, 2 from Nepal, 1 from Indonesia, 1 from Belgium, and one from Taiwan. After finishing at the high school
my host brother took us to a park for a barbeque. I dropped one into the water there, since the park was close to the pier.

Then the next day, (Saturday September 14th) I was able to do some gifting in earnest. First my host brother took me to yajaa gama (ヤジャーガマ)or Yajaa Cave.
Evidently it takes an hour to walk thru the cave, and come out elsewhere, but he said we should prepare. Hopefully I can go there next time. Next to the cave opening there were some old tombs, so I did throw out a TB there. If I link the picture below, you can see the broken pots and the human bones there in the tomb. After that
we went to one of the castle ruins, Gusukawa Castle Site. I gifted one TB there. Then we went to a place close by that is a holy site. If a couple is having trouble conceiving a child they go to that place to pray. I thew one into the ocean there. Next we went to the community radio station. At the party the night before I had sang a couple songs with ukulele, and so they asked me to sing on the radio. I gave the DJs a TB for the studio, and one each for them. I explained what it did, and so on.
So then when they brought me on air, they spoke about the orgonite gift I had given them. They asked me some questions about it although my Japanese is not great or anything, and I explained it as best as I could, LOL. I didn’t talk about gifting towers, but I said that many people all over the world make it, and they put it in special places, and anywhere they live because it increases positive energy around the world.

Okinawan people (at least on this occasion) were very quick to accept the idea. Many of them wear bracelets made out of crystals, and so because I explained that orgonite has a crystal in the matrix, they were quick to understand. And when I say many of them wear crystal bracelets, it’s probably an understatement. Quite a lot of people wear those. Sometimes they even go to Yuta (female shamans) who will give them specific stone combinations that they should wear.

After that I gifted a single panel on an apartment building below the radio station, and then a large tower above the radio station.
Then my host brother had to return to work for awhile, but he loaned me his car. I only had a couple hours till we were supposed to meet at home, and then
go out to eat with one of the radio employees, and some people from the town council.

On my own I gifted first a complex of 4 antennae, and close to that a tower above a newer-style Okinawan tomb. I have noticed on the main island of Okinawa that almost all the time, one can find a tower next to a tomb. Or if one finds a tower, there is usually a tomb right below it, or very close. People in Okinawa visit the tombs and pray to their ancestors a couple times each year.

Continuing on I found a tiny single antenna on a pole above one of the villages, and close to that another quadruple antenna. Next I came to a cliff and scenic viewpoint. I stopped there and saw a large tower nearby. Then continued on and that took me to more targets. First a tower on one of the ridges, then next to a mountaintop tower, and then a mountaintop HAARP array.

After this I drove back, and I saw something that really surprised me: a platform with 2 weatherballs. I had seen it on the way up, but lost sight of it. After turning around I was able to see it again, and find my way to it. It was this day that I realized I had not brought enough ammo with me, and that Kumejima had far more weather weaponry than I expected. I would have wanted to give more orgonite there, but I left only 2 tbs. As I got there I was quite impressed with the installation. There were 2 square-shaped platforms that had many antennas and lines of wires on them, in a configuration that looked like something right out of Montauk, and there were 2 weatherballs. I took several pictures, but because of the time of day, the lighting makes it hard to discern the details. I then continued on up the mountain.

I then reached the end of the road. To the right was a castle ruin, that is on a mountaintop. To the left was where the mountaintop complex of death towers and weapons truly began. The road was blocked with fences and barbed wire, and even a guard shack. Back a bit I could see a miniature concrete pillbox that someone could shoot intruders from. From there at the gate one could see two close towers. Behind those two was a large weatherball. I estimated that the weatherball was within 1/4 mile of the gate. So I gifted 3 tbs there. But from the base of the mountain I saw that there are another 5-7 towers on the other side of the weatherball that are completely ungifted. The next time I go to Kumejima I’ll need to have more time, and bivouac into the woods so that I can gift all those towers. There are even two buildings within that complex of towers that look like barracks.
…I am sure the orgonite I gifted was not sufficient. Most people would probably gift at 6 tbs for a weatherball.

Then it was time to return home. I stopped because right around the corner from my host’s home was a tower. I noted the location and considered it already gifted because the first thing in the morning when I got up I had thrown a TB into the underbrush near my host’s house.

The next day everybody had to work, but I had been invited to play golf by the section chief of the school board. We had met last year when he visited Hawaii because Kumejima is a new sister city to Kona, Hawaii. He invited me for a tournament, of Park Golf (パークゴルフ). Park Golf seems like a combination of regular golf and miniature golf. One receives a rather large ball, and a single club which is shorter than a normal golf club. The course is shorter than a regular golf course and more compact, but much larger than American miniature golf–and there are no silly obstructions. Playing let me observe weather conditions the day following all the gifting.

It was quite windy, and there was actually a significant haze in the air. It was harder to see the hills and mountains than it had been the day before. The air was very clean on Saturday, but not so much the Sunday of the tournament. Maybe they turned the power up on all the towers because of the gifted orgonite.

Everybody in the host family had to work, but I met one of the cousins who had come to the island. Together we did some sight seeing. She took me up to the castle that was near the large complex. On the way down we went by a different route, and we stopped at a single small antenna that was in the middle of nowhere. I gifted a TB there. Then we went to a place that showcases traditional weaving, and next a place that processes deep sea water into drinking water. This is one thing that Kumejima is famous for. Then we were returning home, and I had her stop at a bluff overlooking that side of the ocean. On that hill there was a complex of 4 towers and a small Haarp array. I gifted my last tb there. Of course, there were many tombs on that hill with the group of towers, maybe 30 or so modern style tombs. Of course that hill will require a couple more TBs in the future, because there were so many towers there, but that last TB was all I had.

Then we went swimming at a beach on the other side of the island, close to home. Next to the beach was a resort which had a couple DOR panels on it. There was nothing I could do, and I’ll have to gift them next time I go back.

I have asked myself why such a small island would have so many towers and weather weapons on it. I have three answers. First, I have already noted that the main island of Okinawa seems to have much more towers and panels than a normal city or state has in America. Second, Kumejima is a perfect place to poison all of the East China Sea. When we visited the first castle my host brother told me that in that specific castle one would see the trade ships arriving from Korea in ancient times. He explained that the trade ships from Okinawa would stop in Kumejima, and then continue on to Korea. And that the trade ships from Korea would stop in Kume Island before continuing on to Okinawa. The Third reason I think that Kumejima has so many DOR weapons is that it is considered to be a very spiritual island. When I mentioned Kumejima to people in Okinawa, several of them mentioned that it is a very holy and spiritual island.

I will return with more orgonite and re-gift most of those locations, and gift others that I wasn’t able to gift this trip. I saw a couple large towers in the boonies, the middle of the island, which I was unable to gift due to time and lack of ammo. Also next time I might get to go to a famous sandbar that is near to Kume Island. One has to go by boat, about 45 minutes from Kumejima-- it is a very long sandbar, maybe 2 miles, and it is the whitest sandbar in all of the East China Sea. I hope I can go there next time.

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Pictures from Kumejima (Kume Island). The screen shot of the GPS points of the towers had one weird thing. Whenever I was tagging that point it kept showing up as in the ocean, but I was on the island. i’ve had that happen to me one time before, don’t know why. The picture which has the metal railing is from Uegusuku castle. You can see the large weatherball in the background, as well as the towers behind it which have not been gifted yet… The picture of me singing is from when I was able to introduce orgonite on the radio to the people of Kumejima.

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Jack, this thread is one of the most comprehensive gifting reports on EW, thanks. You really found a jackpot on Kume Island, too [Image Can Not Be Found]

Carol and I experimented with weatherballs early on and were surprised to discover that it only takes a little orgonite to disable one. The best evidence of that was when we did one near Spokane, Washington. On that day, there was energy around the ball that was so dark that I could see it and it affected the sky righ overhead by producing dark clouds in an otherwise clear sky. This was some time after we flipped all of the death towers in the city adn surrounding area. We only tossed one 3-ounce towerbuster beside the road as we drove by the weatherball and within a few minutes all of the dark energy was gone and the clouds over it disappeared, too. It’s always better to drop more than enough orgonite and none of that is ever wasted. On your first visit, maybe it was more important to give orgonite to people and near cultural sites.

It may be that the haze on the windy day following your gifting was reactionary and produced by the ungifted weaponry on the island. You might have sensed the sewer rats’ fury in that case [Image Can Not Be Found] and this is another common confirmation, however subjective. I’m glad to see that you’re honoring your own subjective confirmations and reporting them because this is quite valuable for new and unsure gifters to read. I think we’re all conditioned to discount our intuitive promptings, after all, so a little encouragement and confirmation from reputable others like yourself really helps. You might have some better-developed intuitive skill than average on account of your martial arts training and experience.

I hope that the next time you visit that island you may meet and offer orgonite to one or more of the nice witches you mentioned who prescribe crystal combinations to people because I think they may really appreciate it. Coach Dooney prescribes crystal combination bracelets to individuals who contact her at donebydooney.com and we’ve noticed that most of the jewelry stores now feature articles with gem combinations that were designed by psychics, too. It’s great that you noticed that mentioning orgonite to people in that context gets their confidence! Good move, Jack.

Tetsuzi Moriwake of Hiroshima gave orgonite to Shinto priests at shrines in Southern Japan and they immediately knew its value and were thankful, putting the orgonite in proper places at the shrines. I’m going to send Tetsuzi this report because he struggles under a lot of interference and pressure on account of his monumental successes throughout Japan. I know he’ll be greatly encouraged by your work on those untouched (by orgonite) islands. The newer translation programs are really helpful, too, for people who don’t know English.

When I spent a summer in the Belau Islands (Micronesia) in high school in the mid-60s I sometimes hung out at a boatyard to watch Okinawan craftsmen build wooden fishing boats, which were also the main transportation in those islands and these Okinawans are much appreciated by the Belauans. Their boats had one-lung diesels with huge flywheels and plowed along at about five knots.

You mentioned the lack of sovereignty movement in Okiinawa but I noticed that the Belauans, who were treated very harshly during the Japanese occupation between the 1890s and 1945, had a lot of respect for the Japanese and appreciated what remained of the very fine infrastructure that they had built. The Americans made a point of destroying as much of that infrastructure as possible after the defeat of Japan, unfortunately, and the Belauans were more eager to get clear of American domination than from the earlier Japanese domination. It reminds me of how American and British heavy bombers destroyed Iraq’s infrastructure during the year preceding the invasion, then the Americans/Brits were eventually driven out by ‘insurgents.’ [Image Can Not Be Found] The Belauans didn’t shoot Americans; they simply refused to allow America and Britain to park nuclear ships in their islands and the Americans finally gave up and Belau immediately got its independence. Even Killer Kissinger had failed to bludgeon those wonderful people into submission. There are lots of ways to defeat tyranny so why not choose the more elegant ones?

I think that the sovereignty issues will be sorted out in ways that we can’t predict after the fall of the corporate order in coming years. I’ll be surprised if France or Germany break up, for instance, but when you think about it, Texas is bigger than both of those countries and Texans want to be sovereign, perhaps more than anyone else in America. Texas as a ‘tea party’ governor who is now cruising the continent, inviting businesses to move to Texas [Image Can Not Be Found]

Good to see that you’re still being astonished by orgonite’s ability re: clearing the water in that ditch. I think this stuff remains new and fresh to most of us who work in the field.

How can we most easily send you money and material? I don’t think you posted that info, yet, and I really want to help you get the support you need to finish the job while you can, especially the devil weaponry on that important little island!

~Don

A curious thing about the Japanese is their easy ability, as a culture, to absorb and disseminate new tech and someday this is going to happen with orgonite, there. They have a history of oppression because the military have usually had a lot of political power but we can probably imagine that the spread of orgonite is going to cause a political and cultural transformation, there, that’s perhaps more dramatic than we might see anywhere else.

My brother, who is a Japanophile, told me story about the adoption of the telegraph by the Japanese, soon after the Americans set up a trade center in the mid-1800s. Lines and poles were strung up really fast from the port city and out into the countryside. Some farmers soon started hanging bags of produce on the telegraph wires, assuming that they no longer needed to carry it to the market in the city.

I don’t know how conditions are in Okinawa but the main island of Japan is incredibly crowded now. I know that in the 1930s the government were trying to induce people to move north to the relatively empty, huge island of Hokkaido.

When I read your story about the ditch, Jack, it immediately reminded me of a very polluted pond outside of Kampala, Uganda, where Doc Kayiwa and I tossed six towerbusters one evening during our daily stroll. He had told me that many poor families were drawing their household (including drinking) water from there and that was kind of heartbreaking for me, hence the gifting. Over the next week we witnessed the pond getting clearer and cleaner and a month after I left, the Doc emailed to say that some Japanese had started fishing, there. They were part of a nearby NGO that was teaching Ugandans to be mechanics and they were maintaining a large fleet of donated, small Japanese buses that were a major part of Kampala’s public transportation infrastructure.

~Don

Great gifting Jack!

I had seen these places a long time ago:
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I wonder if this site is of any help to you (seems you’ve found already a lot of what’s listed), it’s a great database to find special targets! And there are a lot in Okinawa!
https://www.zone-interdite.net/P/
Btw. this website if of great help for anyone in the world looking for good places to gift!

Don: “Over the next week we witnessed the pond getting clearer and cleaner and a month after I left”
I can report that aswell with rain, I know some people who had reddish/brown rain water, after gifting and installing cloudbusters it returned the rainwater to a crustal clear state over a couple of weeks. No idea if the cloudbusters where necessary or not, since every report of that I had always involved a simultaneous gifting and cloudbuster installation. That’s why I like water gifting [Image Can Not Be Found]

https://www.zone-interdite.net/P/
Very useful website Braikar, thanks! It’s a prime tool for anyone with an over-abundance of earthpipes [Image Can Not Be Found]
Maybe in the future there will be a version of this website which includes the underground bases.

Back to topic – thanks Jack! This is a great report which I am sure will be encouraging to many new comers.
It looks like you hit the jackpot too, with Kumejima. So much weaponry confirms it’s special place.

I really like to hear it every time someone tells a story where total strangers immediately relate to and accept orgonite [Image Can Not Be Found]

Carlos

Great gifting with pics Jack, amazing how many w balls You discovered! You have changed the weather warfare
For a huge area no doubt … With Japan on the edge of the pacific is why that many w balls I think?

in Thailand the only place We can find aluminum shavings is from a large metal factory that saws up thick sheet aluminum
Into thinner sheets, no doubt Japan will have similar factories… How many more months will You be in Japan?
Have an excess of aluminum shavings here as factory sent Us a bonus 50 kgs after taking them almost 5 mnths
To fill the last 300 kg order… So I will check on price and delivery time of sea shipping to Japan if someone
Can chip in for shipping costs? $'s very tight this year [Image Can Not Be Found] check out aluminum sawing factories first though should
Be able to get for a buck a pound or less…

tY Braikar that is a great website and lists 31 military airfields in thai/nam almost half We have already gifted with accompanying w balls…and the rest will now get disabled in due time [Image Can Not Be Found]. Didn’t even know about the other half of them wow
Best website Ive seen yet for gifting Thailand/Vietnam and if all BASES are listed in Thailand it’s a good bet is
For the world thx again!

Thanks for everybody’s comments. I will try to address many of them, but it will take some time!
Also, school has started back again so I am pretty busy, and have lots of homework. I thought I would be able to
write a lot this weekend, because of the typhoon, but I got really sick and spent a lot of time sleeping.

I also have some new reports to add, so I will do that after I address a few of the wonderful comments everybody wrote.

First Don thanks for your comments. I have found 3 more weatherballs on the main island, which means there may even be more. One is on a mountain, with only Jeep access roads, so I will have to find a way up there. The other two are on a military base. I can see them from the road, but they about a half mile from the road. I will gift the gate there, but I don’t have a pass to get on base and gift within a quarter mile of the base.

About the Yuta (female shamans): yes, I hope to meet some, and to give them orgonite. I will start asking people how to do that. I’m glad you mentioned Dooney’s crystal bracelets, I was trying to figure out a way to bring her up in relation to the ones people wear in Okinawa and Japan. I bought 3 from her and I really like her work. I recommend people get her bracelets because the are both very powerful, and very affordable. Ones in Okinawa are expensive: for really nice ones, sometimes $100-$150 dollars. I found a couple shops that sell the beads for making them, and they are also very expensive, more so than in America.

You wrote, “Good to see that you’re still being astonished by orgonite’s ability re: clearing the water in that ditch. I think this stuff remains new and fresh to most of us who work in the field.” I am really proud of those two pictures. I can show that to people and it instantly explains just how great orgonite is. Someone who I introduced orgonite to was a little skeptical, but he said someone in science could replicate those results in a clinical, scientific trial, to see if orgonite would clean the water. I think that’s a great idea, as I am sure Riech was very careful to study the results of orgone in a scientific way. But, I gave a towerbuster to my teachers last week when school started, and I showed them the pictures. It helped me explain along with my very basic Japanese.

Don, you asked: “How can we most easily send you money and material? I don’t think you posted that info, yet, and I really want to help you get the support you need to finish the job while you can, especially the devil weaponry on that important little island!”
The main thing I need now is resin. I would like to get another 2 gallons, and a gallon here is about $48 American dollars. I can accept paypal gifts to the email "[email protected]". I have found a local source for crystals-I can get little bracelets for about $1 each, and use those tiny chips in by TBs. There are some specific crystals I might need soon, and I will post later and ask somebody to donate those. If somebody wants to send me a snail mail, my address is

Jack Musick
University of the Ryukyus International House B-611
1 Senbaru
Nishihara, Okinawa 903-0213
JAPAN

Someone wrote me regarding metal shavings, and made a great suggestion, that I will post on EW soon.

Hey Braikar,

thanks for the comments and for the links. The picture looks just like some of the mountaintop complexes that I have seen here. I hope I can get up there and gift them soon! The website is a great resource also, for finding gifting targets.

And also Carlos, thanks for the encouraging comments. I have some more reports and I will get to those soon. (Maybe a few hours of Japanese homework first, and then post some more gifting reports, lol! Priorities! [Image Can Not Be Found] )

Gare, you wrote, “amazing how many w balls You discovered! You have changed the weather warfare
For a huge area no doubt … With Japan on the edge of the pacific is why that many w balls I think?”

I think that is a lot of it. Kumejima is between Okinawa’s main island of Okinawa, and China and Korea, so it is perfectly situated in the East China Sea. Okinawa itself is on the edge of the Pacific, and south of Japan. Also, there is just so much military hardware and troops, I wonder if this wasn’t a testing ground for much of the towers, DOR panels, and weather weaponry before it was imported to America. Anywhere new I go I usually always see new bases or towers of panels and weather weapons. I will keep gifting as much as possible while I am here.

Gare, as for shavings, that may have worked itself out. Somebody wrote me and suggested that I put aluminum foil through a paper shredder and use those. I bought a hand-cranked paper shredder for $10, and a roll of foil for $3. I shredded the whole thing and the shavings seem really great. This is a low-cost solution for people needing shavings. I will buy another roll of foil after the typhoon is gone, and take pictures and make a photo tutorial. Now, I just need resin so I can make another batch of towerbusters!!!

Again, I wanted to say thanks to everybody for your comments. I will honor them by posting more reports. A couple weeks after my Kumejima trip, one of the English language newspapers here did a little story on Kumejima. You can read it here, as it tells about some of the other things I didn’t talk about in my report.
Kume Island story in Japan Update https://www.japanupdate.com/2013/09/kume-island-has-lot-to-offer-for-short-trip/
The 300 year old tree was something I did get to see, but it was after dark and after all my orgonite had been gifted. I will definitely gift that special tree when I get back there. There were many shrines set up within and around that tree.

OK, now some Japanese homework, enjoying the rain from the back side of the typhoon, and more gifting reports later.