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Introduction
Much research into the effect of homeopathic preparations uses
plants for testing. Such ‘bioassays’ avoid the possibility
of the placebo effect to which humans subjects are prone, enable
invasive testing to identify physiological and biochemical responses,
and allow many replications for statistical analysis. We might extract
this practice from the laboratory and take it to the fields and
gardens. If we do this, we can raise our focus from getting data
for some other purpose and concentrate upon the health and yield
of those plants. This is increasingly referred to as ‘agrohomeopathy’.
There are more and more references to this emerging discipline,
because there seem to have been many positive and encouraging results
and - surely - the goal is so desirable. Cheap, non-toxic, open-source
interventions to grow the food we need whilst repairing the Earth
we have damaged, must be high on the wish-list of most people.
I have been asked to sketch an outline for this e-zine. I propose
to create a snapshot of the discipline at the moment (2008), suggest
allied disciplines, and offer a way of taking this all forward.
I hope it will be of sufficient interest for people to join in the
discussion and, most important, to try this. Some of what I have
written is a little provocative and I hope you will take the bait,
because I am taking the trouble to write this in part so I can learn
from others.
I studied homeopathy with Misha Norland in the 1980’s but
my work with agriculture took over for many years, so I did not
convert my diploma into an RSHom. I have had unambiguous positive
experiences with homeopathy, so my conviction that it can work is
from personal experience, rather than any statistical analysis.
However, I am a great advocate of such testing because my rational
scientific mind wants to understand what is going on that allows
no-thing (the remedy) to affect us, and so we can improve the discipline
over the full range of its potential.
Snapshot: 2008
I am aware of several homeopaths working in agriculture. A published
one is Vaikunthanath Das Kaviraj who wrote ‘Homeopathy for
Farm and Garden’[ii]. Kaviraj is a Dutch man who worked in
India with Dr. Chatterjee after having his own health rescued by
homoeopathy. He worked with Dr. Chatterjee and then took over his
rural practice for many years. He is a committed classical homeopath
who has carried over this approach to agriculture; one simple remedy,
repeated only after improvement has ceased and after retaking the
case etc., etc. At a friend’s house he was asked to treat
fruit trees after having treated the family and animals there. Okay,
he would try out of interest. The tree lost the leaves with the
rust and grew new unaffected ones and set fruit which had lost the
bitter taste it had had up to this point. This improvement carried
over to subsequent seasons. Hmmm, interesting… Kaviraj had
started with a crude kind of anthropomorphic approach: if this apple
tree were a human it would need Belladonna – redness, thirst
etc - and Belladonna was the effective remedy. Kaviraj went on to
experiment in Europe, India and Australia and became convinced that
this was a very fruitful approach. At one stage, in Western Australia,
his slug preparation (helix tosta) had a large market-share until
the regulatory costs[iii] became excessive and life took him on
to other things.
Also in India, whilst studying homeopathy, GSR Murthy had to leave
his flat for a period and was concerned that his balcony roses would
not survive until he came back. Indeed, on his return, they were
all dead – except one. This one had been watered with a remedy.
Hmmm … interesting. Dr Murthy then began over 30 years of
research with many plants such as rice, ladies fingers, various
lentils, bananas etc. [iv]. He called his resulting preparations
‘Homeonutrients’ [v]. I suspect this will strike many
as a misnomer, but all agricultural homeopaths have learned to dodge
and weave a little in the face of the legal restraints at which
footnote iii hints, and the laws concerning fertilizers are potentially
more navigable than those of growth regulators etc., which are all
lumped together as pesticides in the meaning of the acts. In these
30 years he has made complex remedies and undertaken trials with
university guidance comparing yields between his homeonutrients,
standard fertilizers, and with no additions as a control. His preparations
produce ‘at par’ or yield more than the chemically fertilized
plots, and the health and taste is always superior. The control
plots produce much less.
Work is also ongoing in South America at the Comenius Institute
[vi] and Pakistan’s Iftkhar Waris [vii] of Lahore has had
‘99% success’ with the problems which beset cotton.
Also in India is the Agrocare range of Dr Abdul Lethif [viii]. Again
in India a patent has been applied for by Swami Paramand [ix]. Pankaj
Oudhia has been working with many growers in rural areas of South
India investigating the effect of homeopathic remedies in agriculture
[x]. Academic research is strong in Italy [xi], Germany, Switzerland
[xii], India and Brazil. No doubt there are others in both the fields
and laboratories. (Please tell me of any you know.)
Allied disciplines
I have come to agrohomeopathy having been much more involved in
biodynamic agriculture [xiii]. Only after having begun to research
biodynamics in earnest did I come back to my homeopathic roots and
find all these researchers.
Biodynamic agriculture is an interesting companion to homeopathy.
Both use dynamisation, but biodynamic farmers do not do this in
a series of steps. Instead they dynamise their field sprays for
an hour without adding or removing anything except what spills from
the barrel. However, a pin head of silica dust stirred in 40 litres
of water for an hour can have dramatic effects on a hectare of land.
For a practically inert material to work in these doses reinforces
the suspicion that, as with homeopathy, we are talking of forces
rather than chemical interactions.
Biodynamics started in the 1920s with a series of lectures [xiv]
by Dr. Rudolf Steiner. However, even before these agricultural lectures
were given, Steiner was guiding researchers using a more standard
potentisation technique. The foremost amongst these was Lilly Kolisko,
whose superhuman efforts in those years and up to the second world
war were recorded in ‘Agriculture of Tomorrow’ [xv].
(I think this is essential reading for those interested in homeopathy,
along with Rudolf Hauschka’s ‘Basis of Potentisation
Research’. These early graphs of effect against potency seem
to me to be wonderful routes into the question of what potency should
be applied. But I digress … )
Lilly Kolisko died in 1976 and, as it happens, it was in this year
that several people independently took up the reins with work on
potentised biodynamic preparations. In New Zealand Glen Atkinson
[xvi] began potentising these eight preparations and making various
combinations for specific agricultural purposes. What particularly
interested me was that a test was made on his ‘Warmth Spray’
(now sold as ThermoMax or BdMax TM) for the Pip and Stone-fruit
Growers of NZ, whose crops had been decimated by a late frost through
their orchards. The government lab, HortResearch, tested Glen’s
potentised mixture and it was the best available. This unsolicited
testimony (the spray was sent in by an orchardist and not by Glen)
from an independent laboratory of the effect of a potentised preparation
upon plants, seems to me to be a world event. Since then various
combinations of Glen’s potentised biodynamic preparations
have been used on thousands of hectares to protect against frost,
or to increase photosynthesis in dull light conditions, or to increase
dry matter without splitting the maturing fruits [xvii].
In the UK, early trials in the dairy farms of the peak district,
Staffordshire and Shropshire, are showing increased grass yields
with Glen’s preparations. Perhaps even more remarkable, a
farmer called up the suppliers [xviii] worried that his slurry pit
had clarified and stopped smelling. He wondered where his nutrients
had gone to and would they block his irrigation system, now that
they had settled at the base of the pit. (They didn’t, and
hadn’t disappeared but behaved as aerobic pits do.) Others
confirm that there is dramatically reduced smell from the slurry
pits and when the slurry is spread, there is greatly reduced burning
of the grass on to which it is spread. Glen’s experience from
other countries is that there will be less bloat and a generally
improved response of the animals.
A question: if the right homeopathic remedy stimulates the body’s
own healing mechanism when taken by a human subject, what is it
that is stimulated when a 200,000 litre slurry pit is given a litre
of E7? Do slurry pits have an immune ability?
More from the biodynamic stable
At about the same time as Glen Atkinson began his practical experimentation
with biodynamic preparations in New Zealand, Enzo Nastati began
his own work in Italy [xix]. He worked with these preparations pretty
much as had been directed and was traditional. However, in 1986
Chernobyl changed things. He estimates that Chernobyl made these
traditional agricultural preparations about 50% less effective than
hitherto. However, he bought himself a Geiger counter and potentised
some mushrooms (which accumulate certain radio-nucleotides) and
spread them around his garden. The count went down 40% in less than
a week. This is perhaps remarkable enough but it galvanized Nastati
into trying to understand the potential of the discipline. Due to
ruffling feathers in biodynamic circles and the ‘innovation’
of Hahnemannian potentisation of the preps, he gave the name ‘Homeodynamics’
to his work and moved on from his role as president of the Italian
biodynamic certification body ‘Demeter’.
Since that start, Nastati and his team have removed diesel from
subsoils with the sole use of potentised preparations. They have
reduced the level of heavy metals on the roads between his native
Trieste and neighbouring Slovenia by up to 75%. He has removed rats
from a municipal waste tip. He has treated horse chestnut trees
for their bleeding canker. He has revived the majority of a chicory
crop after a -13°C frost. He has rebuffed GM pollens from a
corn crop. There is much more[xx] …
You would not be alone if your response, in whole or part, is one
of disbelief. These are miracles – or delusions, surely! We
will not find out unless we try these things. They are publicly
available to those who have studied his general approach and joined
his l’Albero della Vita association. For those who I imagine
will be reading this – homeopaths, Randi and Ben Goldacre
perhaps – the publication which is most appropriate, (he has
written over 70 of which half a dozen are currently translated into
English) is called ‘Le Basi per una Nuova Omeopatia’.
I have translated this as ‘Foundations for a Development of
Potentisation’, because the law of similars is only briefly
touched upon. However, the subject of Hahnemannian potentisation
is discussed in detail and is expanded upon to outline other methods
such as those that he himself uses in order to achieve the list
above.
It is with a certain trepidation that I present a glimpse of this
75 page book. First of all, because I have been out of the homeopathic
loop for 20 years or so, I am not sure what the state of the debate
is on such questions as the mechanism of homeopathic potentisation.
A brief Google seems to suggest that sub-microscopic investigation
of ‘clathrates’ and ‘liquid crystals’ and
other ‘nano-phase’ structures in water are sought as
the means that water can have a ‘memory’. However, it
is clear even from the popular press that homeopathy continues to
struggle for scientific legitimacy. It is because of this that I
am a little nervous, since the understanding that I have gleaned
from Enzo’s work may be counter-productive to this impulse.
But hey ho – let’s go!
Steiner wrote a book called ‘An Outline of Occult Science’
[xxi]. In this book a very different version of the history of the
Earth is presented from that which features big bangs, replicators,
DNA and so forth. However, since homeopathy cannot fit comfortably
in our cultural model of life, the universe and everything, I assume
we are in the market for a better one. Enzo takes this basic work
of Steiner’s and applies potentisation’s enigmas to
it. After a detailed analysis, an alchemical answer is offered.
Alchemy is suggested to emerge from the realization that one cannot
change outside of oneself what one has not transformed within oneself.
Steiner says that homeopathy is the new form of alchemy and that
the scientist of the future must approach the lab bench like a priest
approaching the altar! In particular it is important that the process
of potentisation or dynamisation is undertaken with the right attitude.
For agriculture one must proceed on the understanding that Nature
is a being and not a physico-chemical mechanism. Our current approach
is of maximizing the output of this mechanism, which as an industrial
model and all other things being equal, is all well and good. But
when one realizes that Nature is a being, this monomaniacal rush
for efficiency becomes exploitation or rape, and if Nature withdraws
her cooperation we should not be surprised.
Whilst this could all be mystical nonsense – each must decide
– I am very happy with the detail and rigorous approach which
has produced this conclusion. Dr Steiner called his work Spiritual
Science, an oxymoron to some, but for me, I prefer to see it as
a very securely founded science, liberated from the discredited
dogma that material is, in the final analysis, the one true reality.
I don’t want to advocate that everyone goes and studies this,
because leaving people free is much more important than having anyone
agree with me. However, I will ask readers to consider from where
Hahnemann first got his own epoch-forming counter-intuitive ideas.
It is Enzo’s conviction that he honors Hahnemann’s undoubted
genius, not by imitating him, but by going to the same springs and
drawing afresh. From these springs we can receive an answer to the
question above about the healing mechanism of plants and even slurry
pits and understand that repelling GM pollen is not a miracle!
Progress
I hope that wasn’t too irritating but chaffs sufficiently
to evoke some constructive response. In the end it will only be
useful if it gives us a chance to heal the Earth and perhaps the
common arbiter of that, is what happens on the ground. To this end
I would encourage you all (and all your friends and enemies) to
try some of this stuff – and here we can take another lead
from the genius of Homeopathy. One of the wonderful aspects of homeopathy,
that really became crystal clear to me only as I was pondering this
some years ago, is how to move this discipline on. Kaviraj has given
the world his fledgling material medica and repertory. We are 200
years behind the human versions, but we have a much more rapid communication
and data-crunching potential available to us than Hahnemann, Kent,
Clarke and those great visionary pioneers. My niche in this young
discipline has been to create an online version of the ‘materia
medica agricultura’ [xxii] and repertory [xxiii] which can
be consulted as with the human’s version. What is unusual
is that your own results can be added on line, if you care to do
an experiment and sit at a terminal for a little. All I ask is that
people agree to ‘do my best’ and let time and peer review
decide whose experiences were crucial and reliable. Anyone can access
this who has a little computer competence. http://www.considera.org/hrxmatmed.html
When making this and as my Walter Mitty world took form, I imagined
the same collaboration as there has been for human homeopathy creating
a reliable body of work but, perhaps, gathering pace a little more
swiftly because of the urgency of the issues and the technology
available. This has the benefits and drawbacks of the human version.
The benefits would, at least in my mind, be self-evident. The drawback
that is most clear to me at the moment, is that so much research
is currently done by those who are, directly or indirectly, funded
by those who have exploited intellectual property in the market
place and, therefore, have a certain agenda to pursue. If the homeopathic
pharmacies are making preparations which are ‘open-source’,
then the remuneration is unlikely to be sufficient to sponsor experts
and students in this way. However, I think this is a price worth
paying for self-empowered people to own the process themselves.
I would prefer to call it democratic research, in the hands of anyone
who wants to have a go for the benefit of all.
Summing up ..
That’s it for now. There’s a little snapshot of the
work of which I am aware, a glimpse of the potential which lies
therein, a few toes dipped into other ways of looking at the world
which has spawned much of this work, and a way to make progress
which should bridge the divide between the different schools. I’m
interested in feedback on any or all of these and, if I get time,
I would be happy to go deeper into these sketches should there be
interest. As they say on the radio here in the UK, ‘goodbye
and good gardening’.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Placebo was the Marx brother who was sacked because people only
thought he was funny.
References:
[ii] 'Homeopathy
For Farm and Garden’ ISBN 978-0951789058
[iii] The regulators have been helpful as individuals but as organisations
they are faced with an intractable problem. The gauge of their regulatory
net is set to catch the next DDT so we can be thankful that issues
such as active ingredients and bio-toxicity are uppermost. But if
a homeopath comes along to suggest that plants are irrigated with
water (as physico-chemical analysis will suggest is all that is
happening) what then are we to put on the application forms? Add
to this the application and testing costs of tens of thousands of
pounds for each potion in each broad region and the problem ceases
to be so benign. This problem has faced pioneers in many countries.
In Germany there is a lovely method for such products of simply
registering. It would be most helpful to spread this all over the
world!
[iv] These can be downloaded in pdf format from http://www.considera.org/downloads/Homopathy%20in%20Agricult
ure.pdf
[v] http://www.1000inventions.com/detail2.php?id=1087
[vi] http://www.comenius.edu.mx/documentos.htm
[vii] http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_21-10-20
02_pg6_12
[viii] http://www.agrocare.tk/
[ix] http://www.medindia.com/news/UP-Farmers-Turns-to-Homeopathy-
to-Produce-Healthy-Crops-26959-1.htm
[x] http://botanical.com/site/column_poudhia/publish/journal.cgi
?folder=journal&next=outline
[xi] “Plant model systems to study the biological effects
of ultrahigh dilutions. The aim of our research group is to develop
in vitro model systems based on higher plants to assess the biological
effects of ultra-high dilutions, with particular attention to the
following features: randomisation, reproducibility, and standardizability.”
[xii] For example: ‘Baumgartner, S. M. Shah, D. Heusser,
P. Thurneysen, A. Homoeopathic dilutions: is there a potential for
application in organic plant production? Kollegiale Instanz für
Komplementärmedizin (KIKOM), Universität Bern, c/o Insel-Spital,
Imhoof-Pavillon, CH-3010 Bern, Switzerland. IFOAM 2000: the world
grows organic. Proceedings 13th International IFOAM Scientific Conference,
Basel, Switzerland, 28 to 31 August, 2000., 2000, pp. 97-100, 27’
[xiii] http://www.biodynamic.org.uk/
[xiv] http://www.garudabd.org/Agriccourse/contents.html
[xv] http://www.soilandhealth.org/01aglibrary/01aglibwelcome.html
[xvi] http://www.bdmax.co.nz
[xvii] http://www.bdmax.co.nz/home/article/3
[xviii] http://bluemerle.co.uk/
[xix] http://albios.it/en/pages/agri/agr.htm
[xx] Publications are available in Italian and some are available
in Spanish. I have made some translations into English which are
available for UK£10.00 each. Email mark@considera.org.
[xxi] http://www.rsarchive.org/Books/GA013/English/
[xxii] http://www.considera.org/hrxmatmed.html
[xxiii] http://www.considera.org/hrxrep.html
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Mark Moodie lives in the Forest of Dean as a satellite
/ parasite of Oaklands Park Camphill Community. He is co-inventor
of the ES4 and AirFlush water-saving sanitaryware. He would like
to bring scientific rigor to the study of the spirit. |