| SOUND AND NUTRIENTS IN AGRICULTURE |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
Sonic Bloom™
for Home and Garden
Sonic Bloom™ for Drought Resistance Sonic Bloom™ for Black Walnuts Grower's Results with Sonic Bloom™ |
|||
|
Sonic Bloom and Plant Magic® allow the gardener / grower / farmer to harvest in fewer days with less herbicide and pesticide, using less water, yielding larger crops, with more nutrition and double-triple the nutrient retention with low capital expense and simple installation. I've used Sonic Bloom in my organic garden. Sonic Bloom works! Plant Magic® works better! |
|||
|
SOUND AND NUTRIENTS IN AGRICULTURE
It
has always been the uneasy role of true science to emerge from the shadows of
mysticism. That
task is no easier now -- with over 80% of the scientists who ever lived alive
today -- than it was in a day and hour when scientists were rare -- and a rare
breed. Only
has only to read Lewis Mumford's
The Myth
of the Machine to understand that intellectual Neanderthalers, even those
styled protectors of science, always have something far less in mind for mankind
than free and open access to the wonders of nature.
To be sure, there are always clarion calls for competent, objective
testing, the implication being that such a grading system is to be found only
among those who have never spent an hour of time with this -- ah!
This mysticism.
Dan Carlson is a plant breeder and a mystic, according to the conventional wisdom. Trailing him over some ten farms in Minnesota recently, and observing results of his sound and nutrient program, Acres U.S.A. was at first impelled to remind Carlson -- as others have reminded Dr. Phil Callahan, "You've gone too far." It all started when Carlson grew a purple passion plant -- normally only 18 inches long -- until it vined out some 1,400 feet. A cherry tomato plant was made to grow 15 feet high, 20 feet wide, and bear approximately 600 tomatoes. It is difficult to select the moment in time when Carlson assembled the strange,
yes, even mystical premises for his sound and nutrients idea.
Rachel Carlson warned of a silent spring if some sort of scientific
intelligence were not brought to prevail in the matter of pesticides, but not
even Carlson read that to mean birds and their morning concerto were of
consequence in plant growth.
Still it must be noted that Rudolf Steiner made that precise connection.
It was one that was ignored for almost a century simply because Steiner
"went too far."
"I began experimenting with these sound waves in the 4 to 6 kilohertz range
after I entered the University of Minnesota in 1964," Carlson told
Acres
U.S.A.. At
first my studies led me to a group of plant growth stimulants.
Some of these stimulants made 3 out of 100 plants grow ten times normal,
but this had no practical application.
So I went into the library for about 2-1/2 years looking for a way to
make all plants accept these plant growth stimulants.
His search led him to studies on a sound that was said to "make plants
breathe better."
He wondered that if plants could breathe better, then maybe they could
absorb better too.
He began to work with an oscillating sound generator with some straight
tones around the 5 kilohertz range.
Then he applied the plant growth stimulants while the sound was
activated, and found that instead of 3 out of 100 plants responding to the
stimulants, the acceptance range zoomed to 99%.
He found that the stimulants alone were not satisfactory, because
although the plants grew amazingly fast, they were spindly and weak.
With that, he concentrated on finding the right combination of plant nutrients
and amino acids, along with ingredients that provided frost resistancy and
insect resistancy to create a foliar food that -- combined with high frequency
sound -- created giant, enormously healthy plants.
"The plant that I began my experiments with is still alive and well in the
kitchen of my home.
In 1971 I bought a 4-1/2 inch purple passion plant for 88 cents at Target
and grew it to 1,4000 feet in 2-1/2 years with the use of high frequency sound
and plant growth nutrients.
I am still listed in the Guinness
Book of World Records for the largest indoor plant in the world.
They listed it at 600 feet.
It doubled again after that, but they wouldn't come out and measure it
again because they said no one could beat me.
The normal length of a purple passion plant is 18 inches!"
At one time Carlson took 400 cuttings of the plant and sold them at a flea
market. He
put his phone number on each little pot and told people that if any of the
plants died, they could call and he would gladly give them another one.
Within six to seven months, he started getting a lot of calls, not about
dying purple passion plants, but about purple passion plants that were now over
100 feet longs.
Carlson recalls getting somewhere between 75 to 100 of these calls.
Test
Data
After
working with the purple passion plant and perfecting the treatment, Carlson
began work with backyard gardens and farms.
His test data books are chock full of results for tomatoes, potatoes,
edible yellow beans, artichokes, and many other crops.
Some of the more remarkable are:
a 15-oot tomato plant with 836 tomatoes; 50 acres with 2,200 pounds of
edible yellow beans produced after one spray, whereas controls produced 1,400
pounds; double yields on potatoes; 65 to 75 roses on rosebushes versus 5 to 7 on
controls.
Research
Farm
A year and a half ago, Carlson obtained a research farm in Kealakekua, Hawaii.
It was an old coffee plantation, and the trees were all over 65 years
old. There
were many orange, grapefruit, and lemon trees, macadamia nut trees and avocado
trees. "The
place was very run down when we took over, and the trees appeared to bear just a
few fruits and nuts.
We were really excited, when after only a couple of treatments, the trees
bore so heavily we didn't know what to do with all the produce.
We had done no pruning or fertilizing, but used just the sound and spray
treatment alone."
A year later regular treatment appears to have created everbearing trees.
Huge clusters of 20 to 25 avocados instead of the normal one to two to a
cluster became commonplace.
Flowers bloomed together with fruit in various stages of growth.
Macadamia nut trees did the same thing.
In a nutshell, it appears Carlson is creating everblooming trees.
Seed Germination
One of the most exciting findings besides the everblooming trees involved seed
germination treatment.
When Carlson used sound and plant growth nutrients and soaked the seeds,
he got a seed about 40% larger than normal.
In jojoba seed projects in Arizona and California, Carlson germinated
seeds. These
jojoba seeds became so large that they couldn't be planted with the usual corn
planter. They
required a peanut plants with seed capacity of 40 to 50% larger.
With the jojoba, Carlson got over a 90% germination rate within 20 days,
normally the control seeds germinate about 30% of the time in anywhere from 30
days to 5 months.
Reseeding a minimum of three times is common.
This means a 97% germination rate within 20 days is financially a plus.
Regular vegetable seeds treated by Carlson break ground in about 72
hours.
When seeds are treated, they become much larger.
They put down a much longer tap root, a greater root mass, and the plant
that grows appears much sturdier.
In treated corn, the seed will swell about 40% larger than controls, and
germinate within three to four days.
In some experiments with corn, Carlson waited about three days after
germination and then treated that corn once and waited a few more days.
Then he damaged the plant by breaking it off.
Instead of the corn perishing, as did corn from the untreated seed, it
looked unhealthy for a day or two and then four to five stalks of corn appeared
from the same root system.
The same results were observed with viney type vegetables.
Hardier seeds don't perish when abused.
Then they double, head out.
They put out runners in two directions that have multiple blooms.
Carlson and his associates are conducting a number of tests in Minnesota,
Wisconsin, and Canada.
North of the international border, he's working with various wheats and
grasses such as Durham wheat, rye, rape seed, and lentils.
In Canada, the major problem is early frost, which occurs as early as
August 15.
Experiments have shown repeatedly that crops mature faster and produce a much
higher yield when treated with sound waves and nutrients.
Other tests are being run in Pennsylvania, Cedar Falls, Iowa, and River
Falls, Wisconsin.
Treatment Process
To treat with sound Carlson has developed an oscillating, bird-like sound which
is produced in several units; a cassette tape for house plants and backyard
gardens imbeds the oscillating sound in East Indian or classical music which is
acceptable to most listeners; an oscillating sound unit which is solar-powered
or battery-powered and attaches to the tractor as it goes through the fields.
This last unit covers approximately 35 acres from a specific point.
About 15 minutes before the spray is administered, the sound is
activated. It
actually can be activated simultaneously and be effective, but where its
feasible, Carlson likes the extra time.
The spray is administered in as fine a mist as possible.
An atomizer is suitable for the window plant.
A solo sprayer is suitable for the window plant.
A solo sprayer is suitable for gardens.
Sprayers capable of putting out a fine mist are suitable for farm fields.
Helicopters have also been used successfully.
Three sprays about 14 days apart seems to maximize the effectiveness of the
treatment on most plants.
Some hardy plants, such as jojoba, require more treatments.
More treatments are indicated for some trees.
What happens when plants are treated?
Leaves swell, some stand erect, and the plants get a much lighter,
brighter green.
After a third treatment, plants develop multiple blooms.
Withal, Dan Carlson is quite philosophical about the matter of production
quality. In
some cases Carlson had enabled potato growers to improve crops over controls by
19 and 20%. More
important, he has been able to revitalize faltering orchards, and has enhanced
absorption of available moisture (dew) in desert plants.
Other people have experimented with sound and music, and these Ripley
"Believe It Or Not" entries have amused the Sunday supplement crowd.
Is Dan Carlson any different?
Are his findings parlor conversation stuff, or do they have practical
application to main line agriculture?
Finally, if the system has validity, when will competent, objective
testing tell farmers whether in fact -- under field conditions -- the nutrients
and the sound are worth a farmer spending a dollar on it, except for curiosity?
The last question can be answered immediately and the answer is never!
University researchers, or workers subservient to USDA, can be counted
upon to maintain the position that people like Dan Carlson are not competent to
do what they were trained to do, or that the institutions have a monopoly on
honesty and objectivity, when in fact honestly and objectivity have been
squandered by science politicians the way a drunken sailor squanders money.
Science still relies on a hunch or a hypothesis.
The rest is largely procedural and requires no superior intelligence.
As for honesty, it is probably distributed equally among human beings of
like education.
Dan Carlson believes he has developed a unique, high-frequency sound pattern
overlaid by pleasant music that somehow functions by opening the leaf stomata to
better absorb nutrients, moisture and other dynamic influences present in the
environment. The
nutrient solution is sprayed on the plants while stomata are still opened by the
sound.
Each component of the system -- sound or foliar spray -- works alone.
Combined, they produce astonishing results.
"I have treated dying trees and have turned them around," Carlson told
Acres U.S.A.
"And we know that one of the answers to the greenhouse effect is to
grow more and more trees and plants and keep our present forests alive and well.
I can also grow some trees so rapidly that we can economically replace
fossil fuels with wood pellets, a product now being produced in northern
Minnesota, or fuel alcohol."
Carlson was doing a number of tests this year using half the amount of
fertilizer. He
feels groundwater can be improved rapidly if certain fertilizers can be reduced
by 50%. "When
we use my system, instead of chemical fertilizers, the crumb structure of the
soil improves, the root mass of the plants is heavier, and the earthworms come
back at a rapid rate," Carlson says.
Carlson fees the typical commercial farmer isn't going to become an eco-grower
overnight. "First, he's built up some practices that it's going to take a
few seasons for the plants and the ground to change away from.
But if we can show him he can get a higher yield when he cuts his
fertilizer in half, he can begin to see the economics of that.
Carlson figures it is up to him to provide his own credibility.
This has prompted him to order radioactive isotope uptake studies, with
laboratory work accomplished by Albion Laboratories, Clearfield, Utah. (Dr.
Harvey Ashmead of Albion Laboratories will be one of the 1984
Acres
U.S.A. "Far View" Conference speakers.)
Studies used FE 59 radioactive tagged iron with the experimental design
including sound and spray, sound alone, spray alone and nothing on controls.
According to Albion Laboratories, treated plants absorbed 400% more
nutrients than the controls with sound alone and 300% more with spray alone.
The synergistic effect created enabled plants to respond dramatically to
trace elements, chelated amino acids and multiple vitamins.
The bottom line, Carlson believes, will be more nutritious food.
Order Plant Magic® |