My personal anecdotes regarding horses and orgonite.
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Yesterday I had to perform a hoof trim job on two
horses. Their owner is our acquaintance.
These horses were stabled at my farm for one month in
2008, so I must have looked a bit familiar to them. They
were quite untrained in terms of handling and did not
respect personal space of a human at that time. These
gals were able to literally run me over so I had to make
myself big and important. However, I was not actively
engaged in stable activities around them back then.
It must be noted that at that time (august of 2008) I
didn't know anything about orgonite yet.
It must also be noted, that the premises of this
acquaintance are ungifted. Even the nearby cell towers
are ungifted.
I appeared at the location wearing a standard copper
zapper and a HHG (holy handgrenade). The first thing to
do was to put the HHG down to the floor in a corner
where I was going to perform the trim. It was a special
HHG containing only fine brass/copper shavings,
pyramid-charged crystal, a copper coil and a small piece
of lapis lazuli all poured into martini-glass (roud-tipped,
smooth HHG).
After preparing the tools I tried to communicate with
the 'patients'. One of the mares was with a young foal
and acted a bit protective at first but cooled down
quickly. I scratched their manes and noticed that their
breathing slowed down. They tried to offer me the same
service i.e. to scratch my arm.
After a lot of reading and discovering I no longer talk
to horses verbally. Instead I do it silently with
thoughts and they respond very, very well which
sometimes at first encounter is beyond belief.
Without getting into intricate details of trimming, both
horses behaved brilliantly. They were calm and relaxed.
If you fondle a horse and he/she starts to smack lips,
yawn, lowers head and half-closes eyes, then these are
good signs of equine relaxation and feeling of safety.
One of the horses gently tried to pull his left front
foot free (the last hoof I was working on) and when I
asked her silently "Do you need rest?", she nodded
clearly her head.
According to the owner, she has not seen her horses
behave so well. For one of the mares it was actually 2nd
trim job of her life. That is so because 'orthodox'
farriers have been quite afraid of her and refused to do
the job.
The whole session went without a hint of violence. Upon
finishing each hoof I treated the 'patient' with apple
or bread. They were very, very cooperative. I must note
that violence is sometimes daily practice for a
'orthodox' PJ farrier to do his job. It is so because
they are not taught other ways of communication and they
are unable to think outside the rigid frames of their
egos and education.
I myself strongly advocate barefoot trimming based on
wild horses hoof model and no steel shoes.
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The stable at my home is gifted, too. Horses spend most
of the day out in the paddocks and are taken in after
sunset. They are calm, well relaxed and do not exhibit
any malicious behaviour.
Trim jobs performed there go pretty much the same as the
job described above.
Paddocks are not especially gifted but in addition to
standard Croft CB working on the premises I have a
Peacemaker installed in the nearby (100 yards) forest
(6-pipes, HHg-s up pointing down). So far I have
succeeded gifting nearby (ø 5 mile) celltowers. More to
come.