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.