We live in the countryside in France. Some of the crops have done quite well, like the potatoes and tomatoes, but the seeds of the French beans didn't even germinate. The swet pea, which usually floods the garden with its scentat this time of the year has no perfume whatsoever and the flowers themselves are turning blue as they die off.
The chemtrails here are non stop over all the surrounding arable land and I reckon one of the aims may well be sterilisation of next years' seeds.
On a positive note, our Creator put a lot of work into His creation, and it is amazing. He's not going to let some demonic deviants destroy it. The only way round it is their destruction. I'm looking forward to that. :)
very interesting about the blue sweet peas. with hydrangeas, the presence of aluminum in acidic soil can turn the flowers blue.
aluminum toxins in soil can also bind with essential nutrients in the soil making these nutrients unavailable to the plant causing failure to thrive and may also be another reason fruits and vegetables are deficient in nutrient content. something our government officials are probably aware of as they continue to spray the atmosphere with it.
That makes sense. We have pink flowered hydrangeas and occasionally the flowers have had a blue tinge. The soil here is alkaline but there has never been a problem before this summer. I am sad about the sweet peas, they were previously abundant with the most beautiful scent. I would cut some for vases and the house would smell gorgeous! But like some of the vocal pro vaccine advocates now dying from the effects of the deathvaxx, TPTB aren't immune from the poisoning of the food supply either And neither are their children, and children's children.
Hope you get better!!! And not strange any more, I had the very similar health issues!!! And more, not a SINGLE FLOWERING citrus tree on my property, and I have PLENTY!! Oh, except one, lime tree, which was in shade, in pot, with lot of mulch.... The rest, used to be always in WHITE in flowers, no more this year, that all in CA capitol, wit LOT of 5G radiation.... About 20 miles away, in family member's garden, old citrus trees, carry LOT of fruits, full of them... ARe we being targeted, even with food production, or is it the old/young age of the trees???...
There is another new 'feature on many plants, veggies, all leaves have countless white,yellow, brown burned out spots, all over. Something like that can come only from 'above'... Tomatoes also rarely bloom, thus no tomatoes either, except for those few, which were there in july. Trees put in full sun, are burned out (UV-A), in particular needle trees, just lost a great japanese pine tree!!! It is a crime of astro-proportions, and whoever read 'We own the weather by 2025' will know why.. We are nearer the end with every month.
Thank you, Kitten. I'm so happy you're feeling better. It's dicey getting sick at all these days, so kudos on your recovery.
I just read another stack from the "mad prophet" (joking..) tonyp who was talking about the same issue from similar though different perspective. We keep hearing about impending famine and food supply shortages which may be looming, but as you and tonyp have stated, it could be an internalized famine from lack of nutrition in the food. A kind of controlled famine.
Unfortunately, this was also a method of homicide practiced on the American Indians once they were confined to reservations and their food supply almost completely dependent on the US government to supply. The government practiced controlled malnutrition to weaken and kill and create disease in the populations both current and future. Harms still evident in the health of the Indians today.
In the upcoming days, months or years (IDK how long this will take...) as people are divided into regions and confined to 15 minute cities (modern reservations), the control of food and the calculated depletion of nutrients will become as simple as controlling the feed given to cattle in feedlots.
Most people are not going to see this occurring. It's an incremental process.
Jesus warned us this is how it would happen. Like a snare that traps the oblivious.
I know there is much discussion and maligning of vitamins and supplements these days and considering the lack of nutrition being discovered in the best of foods, I wonder at the warnings against supplementation. If this isn't yet more propaganda. It is true that synthetic industrially produced vitamins and supplements (cheap ones) are at best useless and worst harmful, there are good ones out there.
I use vitamins and supplements from Pure Syngergy which is and always has been a privately owned LLC in Utah, USA that makes all supplements from whole organic foods utilizing the best of processes. They are pricey, but are good and helpful. There are others.
We need to remember to use caution when investing our beliefs in anything these days. Written or viewed.
Wise as serpents and harmless as doves.
I do hope your garden thrives under your wise stewardship.
Plants are people, too! Ha...You are what you eat.
There are varieties of fruit trees that bear fruit alternately, or that after a year in which they bear fruit a lot, do not bear fruit at all. the cutting of the branches is also important, the way they are done in the spring, because there is a possibility that if they are not cut correctly, they will stop producing flowers. the diseases of fruit trees cannot be cured with ecological substances no matter how much one would like. we tried and in vain, all the work was in vain, so we resorted to chemicals, otherwise we would not have had any fruit (and we have lots of trees). the same happened in the greenhouse, where the plants were protected from external pollution and still had various diseases and pests. gardening is not a simple job but we enjoy it very much. this year, we had lots of bees, more than expected, which was a wonderful thing...
fruit trees can also get into the cycle of alternating feast/famine harvests as a result of drought or other stressors (the plant seeks to reproduce as a survival mechanism) and once this happens it is a difficult cycle to break.
you are also correct about pruning with some fruit trees like apricots bearing on older wood and others like peaches on new wood. my neighbor actually did a very good pruning job that wouldn’t have been responsible for the lack of fruit (tree did flower.)
it’s nice that you’re seeing more bees/ pollinators (ours are in short supply which could be part of the problem.)
A little late to this garden tea party with kitten, but in my recent full-time experience as a horticulturist and growing up in citriculture, the 3 different HLB I've seen are really due to monoculture practices in the absence of native specialist natural enemies and the low effect of generalist endemic predators. (Estévez et al., 2018,
Molina et al., 2021) - which has allowed the psyllid to expand and poses a threat to modern integrated pest management programs. We all just really love that roundup and they're looking towards GMO citrus. I worked with concerned but ignorant residentials and boxhardware stores managers (that I monitored in tandem with county ag pals and city tree councils) trying to guide home owners in how to balance their garden's plant communities to attract beneficial insects without the use of pesticides or neem. I'd bring a microscope and show them and gross them out with hr gigeresque depictions of what adjustments were needed. European influence landscape architecture has its grip on what should be a loosely designed, native permaculture garden but to each is the King of his kingdom. That grass is not greener to me.
Use of neem oil subsequently has shown an effect on the productivity of the Hymenoptera order which is a part of the solution, so I'd caution of it's use. That order is the lynchpin of all biomass but in my household:
Last year my citrus trees were impacted by the heavy rains they caused knocking off all the blossoms. I recorded this video in front of one that had been prolific: https://thirdparadigm.substack.com/p/hazy-daze-and-tinfoil-skies. This summer the planes have mostly not been flying and it's been clear skies and hot (we get morning and evening fog from the ocean). Some of the citrus is back but the apples and peaches and plums are small and scarce. That's the central west coast report.
It's good to hear from you. People trying to grow their own food in various places and encountering more difficulty compared to previous years is a theme I keep seeing.
I have an apricot tree that gets many blooms every year but after the blooms we inevitably get a chemical cold rain storm that kills all the buds. I didn’t get one apricot this year. I do blame it on weather engineering and manipulation.
We had an astounding plum tree harvest this year along with bushels of bluberries. The best in a long time. Now we are gathering plenty of jalapenos, thai chile and red ghost, i found only 3 honey do on a volunteer vine this year just last week which was a nice surprise because i thought the plant was a dud. This amazing harvest came in spite of not observing pollinators this year... We saw mostly native bumble bees but not nearly as many as previous years. In TN where the chumtrails are always present... Oh and we already harvested red potatoes and sweet potatoes. They seem to be doing fine as well. The sunflowers are going to seed and will be plentiful if we can keep the squirrels from taking them before they are ready
I talked with my husband right now. His family immigrated here a couple of generations ago and were into growing, harvesting fruit. About 10 years ago they cut back on fruit trees, mostly almonds and some pistachio trees now. They bring in bee boxes specifically for the trees when they bloom. He thinks it is the pesticides killing bees may be affecting any crop that doesn't have outside bees to pollinate them.
This year we are overrun with wasps during peak flowering they were surrounding our house. Wasps kill bees. It could be the few bees not killed by pesticides are killed by wasps.
Regarding PCR, when cycled properly, I feel there is some worth.
We had one can of wasps killer for over 12 years. This year we used the last of that old can plus an entire new one. We couldn't open our doors without checking for wasps trying to come in. They were banging against the windows. Bulding hives inside pipes, all along the roof line. I was accosted taking trash out and scared for our mail lady having to deliver mail with all the territorial wasps.
we have some mud wasps that build nests under the eaves and sometimes in the garage (haven’t seen any lately) but I try to swat them down as soon as possible so it doesn’t get too out of control 🙀
similar to the situation with the citrus Psyllid, in the late 1980’s a Psyllid native to Australia infested Eugenia hedges and topiaries at Disneyland in Anaheim and they imported predatory wasps in an effort to control the problem but it never solved the issue which continues to plague the plants today.
sadly, I expect citrus to slowly disappear. for several years now nurseries no longer carry citrus stock and I was unable to find citrus trees for sale online for delivery to California. I want to keep my trees as long as they are producing edible fruit.
No longer carry citrus stock? That’s very concerning. People still have alot of pre-existing citrus trees in our desert community, and our dwarf Valencia Orange tree that is in the sirocco-like wind’s path is finally producing some fruit this year.
We live in the countryside in France. Some of the crops have done quite well, like the potatoes and tomatoes, but the seeds of the French beans didn't even germinate. The swet pea, which usually floods the garden with its scentat this time of the year has no perfume whatsoever and the flowers themselves are turning blue as they die off.
The chemtrails here are non stop over all the surrounding arable land and I reckon one of the aims may well be sterilisation of next years' seeds.
On a positive note, our Creator put a lot of work into His creation, and it is amazing. He's not going to let some demonic deviants destroy it. The only way round it is their destruction. I'm looking forward to that. :)
very interesting about the blue sweet peas. with hydrangeas, the presence of aluminum in acidic soil can turn the flowers blue.
aluminum toxins in soil can also bind with essential nutrients in the soil making these nutrients unavailable to the plant causing failure to thrive and may also be another reason fruits and vegetables are deficient in nutrient content. something our government officials are probably aware of as they continue to spray the atmosphere with it.
That makes sense. We have pink flowered hydrangeas and occasionally the flowers have had a blue tinge. The soil here is alkaline but there has never been a problem before this summer. I am sad about the sweet peas, they were previously abundant with the most beautiful scent. I would cut some for vases and the house would smell gorgeous! But like some of the vocal pro vaccine advocates now dying from the effects of the deathvaxx, TPTB aren't immune from the poisoning of the food supply either And neither are their children, and children's children.
sweet peas are my favorite fragrance too😻
Yes they really are trying to kill us all and the alien nanobotskies will take over our flesh and blood.
The fruits, the birds, the veggies, the squirrels are all suffering.
Boil your water before you drink it.
ScKamala put me in jail, she wants prison and depopulation. Trump wants a hand job.
Vote for sanity and Womanity.
& who would that candidate be 🤷♀️
Hope you get better!!! And not strange any more, I had the very similar health issues!!! And more, not a SINGLE FLOWERING citrus tree on my property, and I have PLENTY!! Oh, except one, lime tree, which was in shade, in pot, with lot of mulch.... The rest, used to be always in WHITE in flowers, no more this year, that all in CA capitol, wit LOT of 5G radiation.... About 20 miles away, in family member's garden, old citrus trees, carry LOT of fruits, full of them... ARe we being targeted, even with food production, or is it the old/young age of the trees???...
There is another new 'feature on many plants, veggies, all leaves have countless white,yellow, brown burned out spots, all over. Something like that can come only from 'above'... Tomatoes also rarely bloom, thus no tomatoes either, except for those few, which were there in july. Trees put in full sun, are burned out (UV-A), in particular needle trees, just lost a great japanese pine tree!!! It is a crime of astro-proportions, and whoever read 'We own the weather by 2025' will know why.. We are nearer the end with every month.
We have lilacs they usually bloom for 3 weeks, this season was quick almost non existent. Jim Lee
“The Climate Viewer Report” on Substrack has some info on all sprays being used.
Hope your cold goes away!!
I’m 99.99% better now, thanks!😻
That’s what I wanted to hear! 😊
They are parasites that can only manufacture that which is of their inverted, perverted minds.
Thank you, Kitten. I'm so happy you're feeling better. It's dicey getting sick at all these days, so kudos on your recovery.
I just read another stack from the "mad prophet" (joking..) tonyp who was talking about the same issue from similar though different perspective. We keep hearing about impending famine and food supply shortages which may be looming, but as you and tonyp have stated, it could be an internalized famine from lack of nutrition in the food. A kind of controlled famine.
Unfortunately, this was also a method of homicide practiced on the American Indians once they were confined to reservations and their food supply almost completely dependent on the US government to supply. The government practiced controlled malnutrition to weaken and kill and create disease in the populations both current and future. Harms still evident in the health of the Indians today.
In the upcoming days, months or years (IDK how long this will take...) as people are divided into regions and confined to 15 minute cities (modern reservations), the control of food and the calculated depletion of nutrients will become as simple as controlling the feed given to cattle in feedlots.
Most people are not going to see this occurring. It's an incremental process.
Jesus warned us this is how it would happen. Like a snare that traps the oblivious.
I know there is much discussion and maligning of vitamins and supplements these days and considering the lack of nutrition being discovered in the best of foods, I wonder at the warnings against supplementation. If this isn't yet more propaganda. It is true that synthetic industrially produced vitamins and supplements (cheap ones) are at best useless and worst harmful, there are good ones out there.
I use vitamins and supplements from Pure Syngergy which is and always has been a privately owned LLC in Utah, USA that makes all supplements from whole organic foods utilizing the best of processes. They are pricey, but are good and helpful. There are others.
We need to remember to use caution when investing our beliefs in anything these days. Written or viewed.
Wise as serpents and harmless as doves.
I do hope your garden thrives under your wise stewardship.
Plants are people, too! Ha...You are what you eat.
The insanity increases. We would best do all We can to solve for the psychopaths in control - taking away Their single tool to power would be awesome!
A Better Economic System (article): https://amaterasusolar.substack.com/p/a-better-economic-system
There are varieties of fruit trees that bear fruit alternately, or that after a year in which they bear fruit a lot, do not bear fruit at all. the cutting of the branches is also important, the way they are done in the spring, because there is a possibility that if they are not cut correctly, they will stop producing flowers. the diseases of fruit trees cannot be cured with ecological substances no matter how much one would like. we tried and in vain, all the work was in vain, so we resorted to chemicals, otherwise we would not have had any fruit (and we have lots of trees). the same happened in the greenhouse, where the plants were protected from external pollution and still had various diseases and pests. gardening is not a simple job but we enjoy it very much. this year, we had lots of bees, more than expected, which was a wonderful thing...
fruit trees can also get into the cycle of alternating feast/famine harvests as a result of drought or other stressors (the plant seeks to reproduce as a survival mechanism) and once this happens it is a difficult cycle to break.
you are also correct about pruning with some fruit trees like apricots bearing on older wood and others like peaches on new wood. my neighbor actually did a very good pruning job that wouldn’t have been responsible for the lack of fruit (tree did flower.)
it’s nice that you’re seeing more bees/ pollinators (ours are in short supply which could be part of the problem.)
A little late to this garden tea party with kitten, but in my recent full-time experience as a horticulturist and growing up in citriculture, the 3 different HLB I've seen are really due to monoculture practices in the absence of native specialist natural enemies and the low effect of generalist endemic predators. (Estévez et al., 2018,
Molina et al., 2021) - which has allowed the psyllid to expand and poses a threat to modern integrated pest management programs. We all just really love that roundup and they're looking towards GMO citrus. I worked with concerned but ignorant residentials and boxhardware stores managers (that I monitored in tandem with county ag pals and city tree councils) trying to guide home owners in how to balance their garden's plant communities to attract beneficial insects without the use of pesticides or neem. I'd bring a microscope and show them and gross them out with hr gigeresque depictions of what adjustments were needed. European influence landscape architecture has its grip on what should be a loosely designed, native permaculture garden but to each is the King of his kingdom. That grass is not greener to me.
Use of neem oil subsequently has shown an effect on the productivity of the Hymenoptera order which is a part of the solution, so I'd caution of it's use. That order is the lynchpin of all biomass but in my household:
WE BELIEVE
#biomassmatters
Last year my citrus trees were impacted by the heavy rains they caused knocking off all the blossoms. I recorded this video in front of one that had been prolific: https://thirdparadigm.substack.com/p/hazy-daze-and-tinfoil-skies. This summer the planes have mostly not been flying and it's been clear skies and hot (we get morning and evening fog from the ocean). Some of the citrus is back but the apples and peaches and plums are small and scarce. That's the central west coast report.
It's good to hear from you. People trying to grow their own food in various places and encountering more difficulty compared to previous years is a theme I keep seeing.
You control the food you control the population.
I have an apricot tree that gets many blooms every year but after the blooms we inevitably get a chemical cold rain storm that kills all the buds. I didn’t get one apricot this year. I do blame it on weather engineering and manipulation.
Glad you're on the mend Kitten 🐾❤️
We had an astounding plum tree harvest this year along with bushels of bluberries. The best in a long time. Now we are gathering plenty of jalapenos, thai chile and red ghost, i found only 3 honey do on a volunteer vine this year just last week which was a nice surprise because i thought the plant was a dud. This amazing harvest came in spite of not observing pollinators this year... We saw mostly native bumble bees but not nearly as many as previous years. In TN where the chumtrails are always present... Oh and we already harvested red potatoes and sweet potatoes. They seem to be doing fine as well. The sunflowers are going to seed and will be plentiful if we can keep the squirrels from taking them before they are ready
I hope you feel better soon. 🙏😢💞
I talked with my husband right now. His family immigrated here a couple of generations ago and were into growing, harvesting fruit. About 10 years ago they cut back on fruit trees, mostly almonds and some pistachio trees now. They bring in bee boxes specifically for the trees when they bloom. He thinks it is the pesticides killing bees may be affecting any crop that doesn't have outside bees to pollinate them.
This year we are overrun with wasps during peak flowering they were surrounding our house. Wasps kill bees. It could be the few bees not killed by pesticides are killed by wasps.
Regarding PCR, when cycled properly, I feel there is some worth.
great point about the wasp’s killing the bees, they are also importing a specific wasp to kill the Asian Citrus Psyllids.
Importing wasps!!! 😭
We had one can of wasps killer for over 12 years. This year we used the last of that old can plus an entire new one. We couldn't open our doors without checking for wasps trying to come in. They were banging against the windows. Bulding hives inside pipes, all along the roof line. I was accosted taking trash out and scared for our mail lady having to deliver mail with all the territorial wasps.
we have some mud wasps that build nests under the eaves and sometimes in the garage (haven’t seen any lately) but I try to swat them down as soon as possible so it doesn’t get too out of control 🙀
That's what we have...big wasps.
I looked up the Asian wasps. They are very small:
https://www.fondriest.com/news/imported-wasps-fighting-worlds-worst-citrus-disease-in-california.htm
similar to the situation with the citrus Psyllid, in the late 1980’s a Psyllid native to Australia infested Eugenia hedges and topiaries at Disneyland in Anaheim and they imported predatory wasps in an effort to control the problem but it never solved the issue which continues to plague the plants today.
sadly, I expect citrus to slowly disappear. for several years now nurseries no longer carry citrus stock and I was unable to find citrus trees for sale online for delivery to California. I want to keep my trees as long as they are producing edible fruit.
No longer carry citrus stock? That’s very concerning. People still have alot of pre-existing citrus trees in our desert community, and our dwarf Valencia Orange tree that is in the sirocco-like wind’s path is finally producing some fruit this year.