Thanks a lot for the progress report, Silvio. I’ve been enjoying your photos of architectural art in Northern Italy, too.
Removing the stink from a river like that one is a solid accomplishment. I had no idea you’d tossed so much orgonite in there, either. Cleaning up poisoned, dead bodies of water is one of the finer abilities of orgonite and the East Africans are demonstrating that on a very grand scale.
I want to mention some other river and pond gifting successes to underline yours because they’re related:
In 2001 several of us began randomly tossing orgonite into the ‘Muddy Mississippi,’ which is the largest and longest river in North America. In a short time it was no longer muddy but was translucent and the toxic foam was no longer seen along its shores. I sailed down that river from St Louis to Baton Rouge (a thousand miles) in a home-built sailboat in 1970 and I can assure you that it was disgusting, then. It’s quite different, now.
In 2004 Doc Kayiwa and I tossed a half dozen ordinary towerbusters into a pond in the city of Kampala which was dead and polluted. Many poor families were drawing water from that pond for washing, cooking and presumably drinking. Within a week the water became clean, the foam along the shores was gone and a month later, after I’d returned home, the Doc told me that Japanese men were catching fish there. I was particularly glad that the poor people who relied on the water were no longer likely to die of illnesses that they might have contracted there, before.
Eliud reported from Tanzania that the fishermen in that part of Lake Victoria were no longer getting elephantiasis from the water after he, Chris, Nicholas and Dancan had gifted that region of the lake.
Carol, Jeff and I (spring of 2005) cleaned and evidently ‘de-nuked’ the ugly, brown seawater along the seashore in the vicinity of to the nuclear power plant on Hutchinson Island in Florida. A couple of feds were waiting for us in a boat near the shore, pretending to fish. They looked absolutely miserable [Image Can Not Be Found] . The plant had evidently been dumping nuclear waste there because when we first took our boat there we all tasted metal in our mouths while we were there–a sure sign of the presence of radioactive material. Two weeks later, when we went to that beach, the water was pristine and a lovely blue color, nor did we have the metallic taste any more.
Eric Carlson came with us to gift the waterway behind the nuke plant, on the other side of Hutchinson Island from the beach and when we were in a restaurant for a victory celebration, later, he took some of the best CIA/NSA sewer rat photos I’ve ever seen. Boy, they were angry at us! [Image Can Not Be Found]
We achieved the same result in Biscayne Bay, south of Miami, at another nuclear power plant that probably powered the nearby underground base at the ‘decommissioned’ air force base. They built that base in the days before they were worried about people noticing because there’s a small mountain made up of the dirt they hauled up from underground. It’s bristling with weather weaponry, which we had busted in 2003, of course.
Some bodies of water will never become clear but they’ll all become clean from orgonite, according to our experience. The ones that remain only-translucent might have a lot of tannin (from falen oak leaves, for instance) or some other natural substance in the water.
~Don