
Latest Reports;
February 18th 2007
This sunday I once again returned to london.
This sortie was centered in and around Kensington, as Dan (edostar) made a generous contribution which has paid for the TB's in this run and the last.
Arriving in Hammersmith by around 11am, wasting little time I began covering pockets in a weaving fashion as best as my poor geographical senses allowed. Moving on from Hammersmith to Shephards Bush, here I had gifted a small ammount previously (as with Hammersmith), so I tried to just weave out from the formerly covered areas, whilst gifting any towers I could see.
When in Sheppards Bush, I gifted the BBC with quite a decent batch of TB's. Then from here I moved East into Kensington. Most of the rest of the TB's were scattered as widely and evenly around this area, probably about 100/120 TB's. By around 2pm I found myself walking down Portabello Road along the market, which was nice, as I had been hard at it for a few hours at some pace I decided to stop at 'progresso' and have some carrot and orange juice and a veggie pie for my lunch, giving me some fuel to continue and a nice cooling off period for my poorly trained muscles! As I left I gave the waiter a TB as a 'tip' drawing a quizzical look :)
After lunch I had a brief period of fear wash over me, as I reolised I wasn't sure where I had parked about 40minutes earlier, which in the vast sprawl of London is not a comfortable feeling! The pannick was soon averted as I stumbled back to my car after just one wrong turn.
Back on track I continued to weave N/E Covering Nottinghill and then across to Bayswater. Below is the updated map, once bayswater was reasonably well covered I began moving back west, and decided to stop back at sheppards bush, where I gifted a little more including 4HHg's as near to the BBC as I could get. One the way out I stopped off for one more batch, which were quickly scattered, only to get back to my car and see a parking ticket :(
This left me with just 15 or so TBs which I decided I would use around the area of the next tower I saw, which was chiswick.

During the previous visit, I mentioned the clearing of the skies when I gifted the first HHg and TB's into the Thames, I took some pictures of this on my phone as my camera is not working currently. However, last week when I checked my phone for the pictures they were not on there at all. This time, again, when the first few batches of TB's were gifted some clearing of the cloud cover occured (not anything like as dramatic or lasting as the previous visit though).
Thanks to Dan for the donation, and John for the excellent TB's, which you can buy from (the also excellent) website http://www.whale.to
Best Wishes
Rich
Late March
Fellow gifter Gary's generous purchase from Orgonite Moksha allowed me the finances
to finally built a long overdue Cloudbuster, which is now residing in Mudeford. The month
since has been a real chemtrail onslaught, so the extra strength of the orgone envelope above
the bournemouth area has been supplying some much needed additional resistance :)
April 8th
Yesterday Lucy and I spent the day gifting around London. I was to be venturing in alone, however Lucy got a late call relaying that she needn't go to work, so, she accompanied me much to my delight.
We drove in on our usual route via the M3 from Bournemouth, so I had decided to pad out the previous patches covered, and, hoped to cover quite a sizeable chunk of the south east quarter.
We begun as soon as we left the M3 as there are several large towers in immediate view. We weaved our way around from Sunbury to Felthamhill, across to East Bedfont, Feltham, Hanworth, Hampton, across through Bushy Park, up to Twickenham and then back to Strawberry Hill. As we went to gifted all the towers we came across (maybe 70 or so in total on this trip, many large rooftop arrays and large towers), otherwise just gridding every few hundred yards.
Once the above areas were as well covered as we had the time to do, we stopped for a spot of late lunch in our car before quickly moving along and due north.
In my shoddy preparations I neglected to check where Ize had already covered or at least begun coverage, and thought he was gifting Hounslow (oops!). As I didn't check, we decided to cover where may well have already been covered by gifting around North/East/South/West Acton and Acton itself, then moved across to the edge of Shepherds' Bush and down a little around Gunnersbury, Brentford, Isleworth and Spring Grove.
At this point we had to call it a day, after around 300tb's were scattered around, as rather unfortunately I had worked Lucy too hard, the day before at Tennis, so her aching posterior was becoming unbearable (not sure she would want me to relay that, but hey, I'm writing the report!).
Upon leaving London, there was a beautiful and often seen occurrence for gifters, the entire day had seen several spew planes playing tic-tac-toe, however immediately above London was a large area where virtually no spew had stuck, just a few sorry wisps. Ize's Cloudbuster and gifting, coupled with ours (and no doubt others) is showing nice results. It was a joyous way to end the day and to leave 'the smoke'.
This trip was funded by a generous donation by John L, many thanks kind Sir :-)
Orgonite was supplied by John at the excellent and cheapest UK supplier of tactical Orgonite http://www.whale.to/orgone.html
It must be said that it is immensely difficult to navigate around London efficiently when you don't know the place all that well, so unfortunately we didn't cover anywhere near the area we had hoped to, none the less it was a good and productive trip. Below in an updated map, please bear in mind the dots are only vaguely representative, there was quite alot more gifted than the new dots suggest, but it gives a good indictation of geographics.

My
friend Rich had suggested last winter that he, Cesco, and myself take a trip
through the Balkans to see if we could bring the positive canopy over that so
often unsettled region.
This seemed like a good idea to me, which is one of the reasons I went with
Merlina through eastern Germany and Poland in April: to bring the canopy as
close as we could from the Baltic down south toward the Balkans. We brought it
down and across the southern border of Poland, but I did not know how far it
extended into Slovakia and the Czech Republic.
On June 2 Cesco arrived in England from Iceland, and myself from America. The next day, with Rich, we flew from Stansted to Ljubljana, Slovenia. At the suggestion of Rich and Don Croft, I had written to Meta Kumer several weeks earlier to ask if she would like to get together with us when we came. She has done much to publicize orgonite in Slovenia, and has made and distributed many good orgonite devices in that area. She met us at the airport and graciously opened her house to us during our stay in Ljubljana. She lives in a wonderful place up in the mountains in the outskirts of the city, with a stupendous view, a garden, and an orchard, in which latter she gave us free access to pick cherries, strawberries, and raspberries. We could not have asked for a better hostess.

The place was special in other ways as well, for two quite positive lines
of qi crossed in the yard under a tree, and a quite nice spirit, in addition to
a resident diva, were present nearby. On the mountain, higher up, was a vortex
just waiting to be opened, to which task we attended the first thing next
morning.
So it seemed an auspicious start. On the 4th Meta drove us gifting to the
Slovenian coast on the Adriatic Sea (though she said that in Slovenia it should
be called the Jadranskaya Sea). Besides the one mentioned, we gifted three other
vortices: one in the forest on a mountain
overlooking a Slovenian valley
, one on a hill over the Adriatic (in a heavy cloudburst),
and one on a mountain ridge with an imposing monastery on one end, and a statue
of
Saint Francis on the
other.
Next day we took our leave from Meta and drove north into Austria, gifting vortices as we went north, intending to continue until we reached the boundary of the existing European canopy. We reached Vienna by dinner time, and although that city was not beneath the canopy, the latter was visible both to the north and to the east. So after our meal, we turned east, reaching Hungary by nightfall, and sleeping in the car (in the rain), close to a rest stop just over the border.
We were now under the canopy, but gifted a vortex some way into Hungary, barely avoiding getting stuck in the mud after going a little off-road.
Shortly before Budapest, we turned south again, entering the northern
boundary of Serbia. I was surprised and pleased to see a freeway in that
country, though we found the tolls rather high. We of course had to leave the
freeway to reach vortices, and due to the unexpected appearance of rivers with
no bridges, were not always successful in reaching them.
I recall that in one small town there was a pole with a stork nesting on a
platform on the top, and on the base of the pole was written KLINTON in Cyrillic
letters.
Early in the evening, about an hour before dark, we were overdue for
finding an accessible vortex. One on a hill on the side of the freeway became
apparent. Cesco and Rich stayed with the car on the side of the road while I
took off up the hill. Part way up were a number of orchards and vegetable
gardens. Not wanting to seem an arrogant trespasser, I walked up to an elderly
man hoeing one of the gardens. He was extremely glad to see me. He shook my hand
and placed his hands on my shoulders. Even though we could neither of us
understand a word the other spoke, he smiled, showed me his garden, and led me
over to a small bench under a tree and offered me a drink out of a bottle of
liquor he had there. I had to refuse, so then he brought me some water. I think
he would have been glad to have me till dark, but I had to excuse myself and he
showed me to a trail up the hill When I came down after gifting the vortex, I
was looking forward to greeting him again, but he had gone home for the night.
Afterwards I heard that Serbian hospitality is famous throughout the region.

Next day we headed on south, and eventually entered Macedonia. We got the most for our money there of anywhere on the trip. The car we rented could not be driven into Greece, but we wanted to bring the canopy as far south as possible, so we drove right down to the Greek border and gifted a vortex not far by. Driving north again, and finding that we were once more in need of finding a vortex, not long before dusk, we stopped near one on a mountain next to the freeway. As I began climbing up, I happened to turn around and noticed that a police car had stopped next to our rental car, and that the officer was speaking with Rich and Cesco. I hoped that they would still be there when I got back, but there was not a lot of light left, and so I kept climbing. Fortunately I soon found a marked path and reached the vortex much more easily than I would have guessed. When I got back to the car, they had eaten dinner, and while I was eating the leftovers, they told me that the officers had only been friendly, and were checking to see if there was any trouble.
We
had no good place to stay, and since it was raining off and on, we decided to
drive into the night. Rich did most of the driving, and I appreciate all the
stressful work he cheerfully did in this regard. We were under the positive
canopy now, and could drive without stopping to gift, so he drove all the way
back to the Macedonian-Serbian border, over into Serbia, and up onto a road
which our map said would take us to Montenegro. This road was a challenge,
especially in the dark: part gravel and dirt, and what pavement there was filled
with potholes. We kept moving slowly up into the mountain and, somewhere about
midnight, were stopped at a checkpoint by Serb police.
The Serbian police looked at our passports, assured us that it was simply a
checkpoint, and let us go on. Just over the hill was another group of police,
who stopped us again. Turns out we were at the de facto Serbian/Kosovo border,
and the Serbians dont officially recognize Kosovo yet, so they did not mention
that they were actually on border patrol. The Kosovo police were quite friendly,
freely gave us plenty of information and advice, but... charged us 50 euros for
additional auto insurance. We had to either pay it, or go back and around de
facto Kosovo (which would have cost us much more). So we paid it, and drove on
into the night. Eventually we stopped at the side of the road and picked up a
few hours sleep in the car. I found it curious how much new construction we saw
in Kosovo, especially of new homes. Of course there had to have been
considerable destruction in the recent conflict, but from where was the new
investment coming.
Next morning (Thursday the 7th) we woke up just after daybreak and drove (sleepily) through Kosovo, back into Serbia, and then over the border into Montenegro. We drove south, along mountain roads and stopped for lunch at an interesting Greek Orthodox monastery named Moraca. Its chapel housed a quite respectable spirit, and was situated on the edge of a high cliff over a river. Afterwards we continued back to the mountain road, in the rain, behind slow trucks down to the coast. At the coast, the weather turned sunny and we found a vortex on a small mountain, just a few miles from the beach.
It is generally easier to find and reach vortices near the coast. Find them is easier there, partly because vortices seem to occur on higher ground in a given area, and the beach is higher than the water. But it is more than this – I cannot ever recall sensing a vortex under water close to the coast. I do not know the reason for this just that it is so.
We spent the night in the town of Kotor:

and had a good cheap meal at a restaurant in the old town (within the old city walls). This is a vacation port, with plenty of tourists, but we luckily found a room to spend the night for 30 Euros (though some of us had to sleep on the floor).
Fortified with a good nights sleep on Friday, we drove north into Croatia.

Little of special interest occurred that day, and we slept in the car again, at a road stop. Actually two of us slept in the car, as Cesco found a miniature house in the childrens play area in which he could isert his sleeping bag (and self).
We had covered a considerable distance in four days, and it seems appropriate to mention a certain change. When Cesco and I began gifting in Germany two years ago, we had to to find a new vortex every 40 kilometers or so, in order to create a new positive canopy, and to keep it advancing behind us. On the trip to Thailand in February, and the trip to eastern Germany and Poland in April, I found that that minimum distance had increased to about 100 kilometers. In this Balkan trip we were gifting at about 100 kilometer intervals, and found that each morning the positive canopy would have passed us up and moved some distance ahead of us. It may be that the intensity of the positive qi in the canopy has increased to the point that it now increases with smaller additions: or it may be that there is more positive qi now in the sky even where the canopy has not yet spread, which makes increase faster. I simply do not know the reason but the fact is certain: that it is more easy now to extend the canopy than formerly.
On
our entire journey north through Croatia we were under the Canopy. It had moved
down from Austria through that part of Slovenia near the sea coast (which we had
gifted Monday with Meta), and west from Serbia, to cover all of Croatia. On
Saturday we traveled north to the Slovenian border, thence to the Italian
border, past Trieste, and turned south again.
We passed Venice, Padua, Florence, and spent the night sleeping outside in
a farmers yard (with his permission) in a area somewhat north of Rome. The
weather ever since Kotor continued to be sunny, and I found it a much better
sleeping out on the soft ground than in a car seat,
Next
day was slow, due to traffic congestion and road repair. In the evening we tried
an experiment when gifting vortex on a hill just before dark. But explaining the
experiment requires a little background.
Manfred, who writes in the German forum, wrote me about the beginning of
May concerning a discovery he had made. He made some TBs, placing them above a
CB for the resin to cure. He found that these TBs had a special effect: positive
qi swirls up above them similar to the way it comes up from a CB. He said he
would send me some photographs when he could. A week or so later I received the
photographs, and from them it seemed to me that indeed he was correct. I
repeated his experiment in my shop and found and obtained similar results. I
made 12 TBs in a muffin tin and cured them by resting the muffin tin on top of
the pipes of a CB (my first one, constructed 4 years ago). The five which were
above the space encircled by the pipes were all special: the others were not.
It then occurred to me that perhaps these special TBs could be used to
charge water. I placed one of them several inches under a wooden plate, poured
two glasses of water, placing one to the side, and one on top of the wooden
plate. After some hours I found that the water in the glass over the TB was
charged, as if it had been charged over a CB. The other on the side was not
charged.
This all occurred shortly before the Balkan trip, and I did not have time
to report on it before now. I also wanted to do a couple more experiments as
well: one was to see if a single special TB could change a negative line in the
ground to a positive one, the way a carefully placed circle of 6 TBs will do;
the other was to see if gifting a vortex with a special TB would produce any
unusual results.
We did the first experiment on a negative line at Metas place, and found
that the single special TB did not change it to positive.
We did the second experiment that night in southern Italy. I used three
special TBs which I had brought with me from home on the vortex. We slept near
the vortex that night, and next morning positive qi was swirling up into the sky
strongly. But several days later, on our trip back up north, I had a chance to
view the opened vortex once again, and though working properly, it did not seem
perceptively better than vortices opened by ordinary charged TBs.
The
morning after opening that vortex we headed on south. The positive canopy was
not over southern Italy the day before, but had proceeded ahead of us to the
south, even over Sicily. I felt that to bring the canopy as far south as
possible during this trip, we should cross into Sicily and gift a vortex near
its southernmost coast. This would stretch it far into the Mediterranean at that
longitude, since the southern coast of Sicily is more south than the northern
tip of Tunisia in North Africa.
We crossed by ferry, and made it about 2/3rds of the way through the island
before nightfall. By then, the positive canopy had likely been over Sicily for
12 hours or more. Consequently we could not check to see how the sky above the
island had been. before the coming of the canopy. But we could feel the trees,
and lesser plants, and without exception their elementals all expressed painful
stress. We slept on the ground that night in a camp site. Next morning the trees
felt somewhat better, but were still under palpable stress.
For a good part of the trip south through Sicily both Cesco and I could
feel a strong vortex far to the south. Mount Etna, which is a volcano in the
northern half of the island, felt quite negative driving past it, but I felt
that it was not the right time for us to try to do anything about it. The
dormant vortex far to the south also felt negative, and this I had a clear
feeling we should treat.
So next morning we proceeded south and eventually found the vortex. It was
on the coast, and on one of the southernmost points of the island. There was one
especially strong point where it surfaced, and about this point we placed a
circle of 6 TBs, in the manner one uses to change a negative line to a positive
one. Almost immediately a very tall positive entity appeared on the spot. Before
and after we had gifted the vortex Cesco had felt a huge and negative entity out
in the sea not too far away from the shore, to whose presence I can attest.

We walked back to the car and began to drive back. When we had found the correct road north, Cesco directed my attention to the trees. In the upper branches you could feel a huge expression of relief and thanks. The feeling was so strong, it made one want to weep. And this was within 20 minutes of opening the vortex. This feeling in the trees persisted strongly for some time, relaxing to just a positive feeling by the time we had returned half way up the island.

Our trip back north up Italy to Slovenia was without special incident,
although it took us more than two full days of steady driving. Our good weather
finally deserted us when we crossed the mountains west of Ljubljana, and we
drove into the capital through heavy thunder and lightning. Meta met us in the
city, took us to her house for one more night of Slovenian hospitality
(including an excellent soup made from her garden and some apricot kndel).

The positive canopy now covers all of western and central Europe, with the
possible exception of parts of Spain and southern France.

January 2008
My New Cloudbuster, My First, But Not My First!
Since Lucy and I brought our first house in September, I
had been eagerly awaiting the moment I would be able to make my first
cloudbuster, which we could house ourselves. Since the start of my gifting work
I have made around 25 CB's, quite a few with and/or for John, but mostly to give
away or occassionally swap with folks who said they would give one a home.
The first few months in our home was far more expensive than anticipated, so
although a couple of good friends helped me out with money for the Pipes and
couplers (thanks Cesco) and some nice crystals (thanks Kelly) I simply couldn't
afford to get it made. Then, near the beginning of december I had to visit my
family for birthdays, so this saved my petrol costs, so I decided I had to make
the CB now or it would likely wait several more months.
Anyway the CB was made without any great incident, except the usual feeling of
doing something really meaningful and significant, of course.
Although this is the 7th CB that I have placed in the county of Dorset, as I
said before it is very special to me as it is the first which I can have and
keep! Again, sorry the picture is not the best, but I wanted to put one up, for
my posterity and as I had some financial aid in making it, so it is nice to see
what my buddies monies bought :-)
As there are already lots of CB's in the area I cannot say there has been much
noticeable impact atmospherically here, though more locally everything just
feels fresher, which is usually what I find from gifting. Also as a nice treat,
when I was finalising where I would place it in our little garden, the birds who
frequent our neighbours ivy covered house were singing, neigh cheering, a song
of approval, which dimmed and heightened as I moved the Cloudbuster, so I
tinkered around until they reached their crescendo at which point I knew it had
found it's home!
Thanks for the help guys, and, of course John for letting me use his palacial
(in my mind!) shed to put the CB together.
You can of course get your own CB like mine, or, in the more usual straight pipe
'Croft' Style from John @
Whale Orgone
Best Wishes
Rich
Laozu's Comment;
Nifty, Rich. First time I recall an elemental being up in the upper part (about the middle of the center pipe).
June 1st 2008
I have now started a new project to finish gifting around Dorset, more on this when enough
has been
completed to compile a report of note.
UK Gifting
Log, compiled by John