It's been a bit dry lately where I live, but not terribly so and the rainfall to date is actually above average. It's been quite hot lately too, but nothing we haven't seen before in the land where you can often fry on egg on the sidewalk in the summer time.
What I haven't seen before outside an extended drought, is all the spotted, shriveled and dying leaves and blooms.
Across the front of the property where we live is a line of crepe myrtle trees that should be pretty awesome now, especially the larger ones. Instead, virtually every one of the thousands and thousands of blooms have withered and not opened. Many of the leaves are partially brown and many have fallen off. The growing tips are dead or dying and look like they have been sprayed with some kind of caustic herbicide and the bark itself is curdling up.
The hyacinths are faring even worse. Blooms are not maturing and leaves are dying and dropping. One of our largest specimens is almost totally absent of leaves when it should be full of both leaves and blooms.
The large Queen Elizabeth rose bush, one of the hardiest of all hybrid tea roses, is almost totally bare of leaves. On it too, the buds are not making it all the way to flowers.
Coincidence? Perhaps. Kind of like the coincidence of upper respiratory crud that also seems to be making the rounds I guess. Or the oily film on the outside of my cousin's travel trailer. Yeah, I know that oil films are not uncommon when you travel on the highway - but the catch is that his trailer has not moved from his pasture since he bought it three or four years ago, and it was thoroughly cleaned off just last year.
No ozone generator or special filters at this point. However, I have a good nebulizer, colloidal silver and lobelia - along with the Chinese herbal formula ClearLungs and more herbal supplements and detoxers, immune boosters, and assorted other hoodoo and voodoo than you can imagine.
I graduated from high school in Plano in 1970 and lived there off and on for several years. Some folks still remember me for coaching a couple of state champion soccer teams there (one girls team and one boys team about 10 years apart). Hopefully a diminishing number remember me for some of my high school hijinks . . .
It's a far different cry these days than it was back when it had about 15,000 people and a whopping graduating class of 186. I am about an hour and a half east-northeast of there now in a quite rural setting. Did you know that Plano is where Trapper recently moved to? I absolutely have to look that dude up!
I do need to get a decent ozonator. Among other things, I would like to use it to ozonate olive oil so I can use that as a base for a topical cancer cream that would include the olive oil, highly condensed oleander extract, condensed colloidal silver, iodine and a bit of DMSO. Any recommendations?
It is really good to hear that your mother is stabilized now. I have little doubt that the oleander has played a big part in that. Typically it will slow down the progression, then stabilize it and finally shrink it away to the point of either elimination or perhaps a small amount of benign scar tissue. Of course, it can make a big difference when one also combines all the elements of a good overall anti-cancer protocol, such as diet and nutrition, lifestyle, physical activity, stress elimination/management, cleansing, etc.
DQ (Tony)