“My name is Sherlock Holmes. It is my business to know what other people do not know.”
From “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle”, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1892
DELAWARE CORN YIELD RECORDS
2017: 189 bushels/acre
2016: 170
2015: 192
2014: 200
2015: 192
2013: 166
2000: 162
2004: 152
2001: 146
2009: 145
2006: 145
2005: 143
1996: 143
The 2014 Delaware state corn yield record of 200 bushels per acre was 32% higher than a previous record of 152 bushels per acre from 2004.
That’s an average annual increase in yield of 2.2% over those eighteen years.
2000’s record of 162 bushels per acre was 11% higher than the previous record of 143 bushels per acre set in 1996. That’s an average annual increase of 2.75% over those four years. That’s 25% above the baseline, and that’s to be expected, since we are believers in the Orthodoxy that organisms increase in size by smaller and smaller increments as they approach their maximum-possible, genetically-programmed size.
An 11% increase in corn yield across the state of Delaware in just four years, wow.
It is of interest to note that it was in 1998 that my friend, Eric and I were on his back porch in Emmaus, PA, witnessing a sunset that we felt signaled that a new world was coming into being before our eyes. 1998 was the year aerosol operations got underway in my hometown, as well. 1998 was when the literal forest of “mobile phone infrastructure” was thrown up seemingly overnight in all the nations.
The corn yield in Delaware decreased 10% in one year from 2000 to 2001, from 162 bushels to 146 bushels, as the Death energy technology came online.
2004’s record of 152 bushels was 4% higher than the previous record of 146 acres, set in 2001. The yield dropped ten percent in a year, then increased 4% for three years. That’s an average annual increase of 1.3% over those three years, which is 40% below the baseline.
Since we are believers in the Orthodoxy that organisms increase in size by smaller and smaller increments as they approach their maximum-possible genetically-programmed size, we are comforted that increases are continuing to get smaller, going forward in time.
From 2004 to 2005, the record decreased from 152 bushels to 143 bushels, by 5.9%. That’s 62% below the baseline, and back down to 1996’s 143 bushels per acre. And the increase per year is continuing to decrease, going forward in time, as it should, according to the Orthodoxy that organisms increase in size by smaller and smaller increments as they approach their maximum-possible genetically-programmed size.
The annual increase in yield from 1996 to 2005 was zero, which is way, way below the baseline average annual increase of 2.2% seen over the years we’re discussing.
In retrospect, we can see how Death energy-based technologies were doing what they were intended to do right up until roughly the time the storm steering and augmentation system stopped working in earnest. It has its swan song with Hurricane Katrina, which was pumped up, driven around like a bumper car and then straight into New Orleans in 2006.
Don Croft invented tactical Orgonite in 2000, and, after five years of ever-increasing distribution, the simple, inexpensive devices had already broken the back to the great Death energy network that was thousands of years in the making.
2013’s record of 166 bushels per acre was 14.4% larger than the previous record of 145 bushels per acre set in 2009. That’s an average annual increase in yield of 3.6% over those three years. That’s 63% above the baseline. The growth rate is increasing, going forward in time. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible. According to the Orthodoxy that organisms increase in size by smaller and smaller increments as they approach their maximum-possible genetically-programmed size.
Those attributing this phenomenon to “increased yields from genetically modified seeds” are going to need to complete an essay explaining why there are no ads saying “Monsanto-brand genetically-modified soybeans have increased soybean yields in Delaware by a third since 2004!”, or withdraw from the course.
The 2014 Delaware state corn yield record of 200 bushels per acre was 21% higher than the previous record of 166 bushels per acre from 2013. A 21% increase in yield, in one year! With the growth rate increasing by orders of magnitude, going forward in time.
Then a 4.1% drop from 2014 to 2015, an 11% drop from 2015 to 2016, and a 5% increase from 2016 to 2017.
The takeaways are “growth rate increasing, going forward in time”, and “exponential, historically-unprecedented increase in yield from 2013 to 2014."
The same quantum increase in growth, and growth rates increasing going forward in time are documented in fish during the same time period. As the future “2013/2014” article will compile.
2013 is the year I started writing these articles.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, December 4, 2020
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