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Jon Logan and I left his place about 10 AM
Saturday May 17. Our first stop was Lake Osoyoos and we lifted his sixteen foot
canoe off the roof of my truck, hauled the heavy fiberglass three seater across
the beach to the water and paddled out to the middle. A couple of water-skiers
in wet-suits were making waves on the calm water but nothing they created did
much to rock the boat. Both of us agreed that one particular spot was good and
the Octo (octahedronal Holy Hand-grenade) splashed into the water. A few seconds
later we both felt it power-up as it sank deeper into the water. With Octos the
deeper the better. This trip has been six months in the planning and the first
of many lakes and rivers gifted with quart sized HHGs. Lake Osoyoos is part of
the Okanogan River which makes up a big portion of the irrigation water used to
grow Washington State apples in the Wenatchee area and along the same valley. It
just might happen that the apples will taste better in the future.
Our next stop was Lake Vaseux and winds had increased creating some waves but
the canoe rode through the chop easily. The Octo sang its etheric chord as it
sank. The canoe is over thirty years old and Jon repaired it after his brother
crashed into a weir and broke it in half. The patching gives the canoe a green
and brown mottled appearance. Camouflage? There are also four metal brackets for
out riggers but adding those pontoons makes the canoe hard to propel. The
brackets make paddling difficult too. Jon's patching was good and there were no
leaks for the whole trip.
South of Skaha Lake Jon spotted a tower on a small hill. The was a pond at the
bottom of the hill and a Tower Buster went into the water. Rain was soon falling
on the tower. On the Penticton's side of Skaha we launched again and dropped an
Octo near the Skaha Bluffs. Looking south the rain was still falling on the
tower. It was strange how the "operators who are standing by" wanted to soak
that particular tower. Jon took a picture of the small rain storm stuck above
that small hill. While on the beach a helicopter at low altitude slowly passed
overhead. Jon wondered if the tower stopped functioning and the helicopter was
sent to see where we were? Psychically I felt no threat from the pilots. This
trip we were avoiding the mountain top towers as we had just three days to cover
a large area.
North we dropped an Octo into Okanogan Lake at Summerland. Further north at
Peachland another Octo. Jon dropped his first pine resin orgonite Poshaust
across from Kelowna. He let it go once it was beneath the surface of the water
and it floated slowly into Ogopogo's depths. Ogopogo is the Loch Ness monster of
the Okanogan and Jon's parents saw it with their own eyes and his grandparents
refused to swim in that lake after that shock. North of Kelowna at Elison Lake I
threw another. Likewise Wood Lake.
Kalamalka Lake near Vernon was different. It was not friendly. The waters were
dark and Kakuli Bay Provincial Park felt like it was beset with negative psychic
cooties. We paddled to find the right spot on the lake and as soon as the Octo
was dropped the cob-webs broke free releasing the tension over the area. Jon
spotted a heron on the shore.
Our last spot of the day was Swan Lake north of Vernon. One of my Octos is
already in the Okanogan Lake at Vernon from a trip in April. We drove to my
place and slept for ten hours. Many dreams crowded our sleep.
The next morning the first stop was at Mabel Lake. We pushed the canoe past the
shallows. About fifty swallows were flying in the middle of the lake. They were
swooping and circling. In the midst of the swallows we dropped the Octo in deep
water. It felt very good. This is a friendly lake.
Three Valley Lake at Three Valley Gap was next. This is a spooky lake. A rock
fall had killed a man working on the nearby highway last winter. The three
valleys are separated by three mountains of the same height and shape. The lake
is at the junction of a large "Y". We decided to drop three pieces of orgonite.
An Octo, a large TB and a Poshaust. Getting into the canoe Jon accidentally fell
on the Poshaust breaking off the lowest arm. The Poshaust now had just three
arms....the coincidence was just too blatant and decided that the damaged
Poshaust had to go into the water because it now had three arms. We were the
only ones on the lake when we felt as strong thought directed our way. Someone
did not want us on their lake. Both Jon and I could sense which house on the
shore was the home of that person. Regardless of the animosity we dropped the
three orgonite pieces in a west to east line. The Poshaust went in closest to a
radio telephone tower erected by the Canadian Pacific Railroad. Again the light
tree resin gave the copper tubing some buoyancy and the orgonite sank slowly.
When the TB was dropped a flock of small birds whizzed past us. I asked Jon if
he could feel the presence of the Sylph guiding the birds? He nodded. The Octo
went nearest to the site of the rock fall. We both felt that strong medicine had
been worked in the lake. From the map work Three Valley Lake is a key in
establishing the Columbia River Grid even though it is part of the Thompson
River system.
Next we drove near Revelstoke where a Cloud-Buster was put into the Columbia
River last Christmas. Then south to the Galena Bay ferry. In the middle of the
Upper Arrow Lake I threw an Octo into the glacier fed waters. The level of the
lake was twenty feet lower than normal. The two years of drought are showing in
the water levels. As the level of both the Upper and Lower Arrow Lakes is
controlled by the Hugh Keenleyside Dam at Castlegar, water had been released to
replenish the Grand Coolee Dam in Washington State. Such releases of water are
controlled by a joint USA/Canada commission. A display on the ferry indicated
that a program of feeding the fish was on-going as the dams on the Columbia had
stopped the flow of nutrients from the tributaries. Even though the Arrow Lakes
were the size of Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam they could not generate enough food
to support the Kokanee Trout and other fish. One rare trout had died out
entirely. Damming rivers is not good for the ecology. The downstream dams also
stopped the migration of the Kokanee Trout which are landlocked Sockeye Salmon.
The annual migration used to add a huge nutrient base into all the lakes.
We had a frosty welcoming from an owner of the Halcyon Hot Springs when he found
out that we were not one of his well heeled customers. Lots of TBs were tossed
into the trees and lake. At Nakusp we tossed an Octo from shore. At Fauquier
another from shore. There were raptor nests on every second power pole. We
decided the the large birds were not eagles but could not decide what kind they
were. (Asking a wildlife expert I learned that they were osprey.)
At New Denver on Slocan Lake we buried an Octo at the base of a cottonwood tree
on the beach. The road from New Denver to Kaslo has three ghost towns where
silver and zinc mines had once been. Jon and I wondered what the trace metals
from the dark slag from a silver mine would have added to our orgonite resins
but did not stop to retrieve any. Slags are usually toxic. We did stop to
photograph a grizzly bear cub. We did not see the mother bear so we did not get
out of the truck to take the picture. ( The same wildlife expert said that the
mother grizzly would have been nearby and any call from the cub would have
brought her charging out of the trees.) There were white-tail deer everywhere so
we drove slowly to not add an entree to the menu of the Road kill Cafe.
The sun was setting as we arrived in Kaslo and the town was crowded. There were
men throwing double headed axes at tree stumps. Jon guessed that it was a
Lumberjack Rodeo. We stopped and got some pictures of the S.S. Moyie, a stern
wheeled steamship that traveled on Kootenay Lake from 1899 to 1959. It is now
high and dry on the beach looking elegant in its new paint. All the campgrounds
were full and so we made our own campsite on the side of a mountain. The
temperature was just above freezing so the fire was well appreciated. Both of us
had forgotten to bring eating utensils so Jon the woodsman carved two spoons so
we could eat our pasta. I had brought along a multiband radio and on shortwave
we got the news from the BBC: Suicide bombers in Morocco. Someone could have
been on the side of a mountain in Afghanistan listening to the same report. The
Beebe brings that sort of eerie realization often.
The next morning we dropped an Octo into the north end of Kootenay Lake and only
an otter watched where it went in. The water was mirror smooth. We later learned
that the Octo was dropped on one of the fish feeding zones boundaries.
At Ainsworth Hot Springs we dropped a number of TBs. The road to the Cody Caves
was rough so we did not gift there. Don and Carol Croft gifted a portal near
Nelson last year. Their efforts closed those subterranean routes. The caves are
about 15 miles from Nelson.
The Balfour to Kootenay Bay ferry is a new boat called Osprey 2000. Jon was in
the truck when I flicked the Octo off the side. Jon felt an emergency and left
the truck to find me. When we met a few minutes later Jon asked if I had any
problems? I said that I had no problems and no-one saw me drop the Octo. Jon
found that the alarm was from a woman whose husband had just had a heart-attack.
The crew of the ferry went into action and stabilized him. Jon has amazing
psychic awareness.
The next drop was at Lockhart Beach. The wind was strong and the waves were
about two feet in height which is a problem when the canoe's freeboard is about
six inches. We pushed into the lake from behind a breakwater. Away from the
shelter we paddled into the wind for about five minutes, dropped the Octo,
waited for a lull in the wind, swung the canoe around quickly and made it back
to shore. I was soaked as I was in front. By now our routine for lashing the
canoe to the roof rack was smooth and we were quickly in the truck drying our
clothes, heater set on max.
North of Creston is the Creston Valley Wildlife Management Area. This is one of
the biggest bird sanctuaries in the world. The number of birds is huge. Both an
Octo and a Poshaust went into this marsh. There are levees surrounding Duck Lake
keeping the wetlands wet when the Kootenay River is low. The Kootenay was lower
than the wetland. The Poshaust went into the marsh and the Octo into the river
with an osprey watching from above.
As we drove into Creston, Jon said that he was in what he called a "one/third
trance" while driving the truck. My spider senses were tingling, this is not a
good sign. Jon flicked the switch on his Succor Punch and placed it within his
windbreaker. A few minutes later I felt a psychic blow to the third eye and I
was drifting in towards la-la-land too. My last trip to Creston was in 1964 and
I do not remember that visit as I slept in the back of the family station wagon.
Jon had worked in town a few years earlier and knew the lay of the land. He
pulled into a mall parking lot to find that the gas station he remembered was no
longer there. Jon was not fully conscious of what was happening around him. We
drove to another gas station and I filled the tank while Jon bought two black
coffees. Jon decided that some TBs had to be dropped. A block latter we saw a
transformer station beside an RCMP station. The dirt lane to the transformers
was narrow and after the toss Jon backed out onto the pavement at the same time
two officers in one police car drove out of the station. Jon was on the wrong
side of the road blocking the officers and a pick-up truck. Jon edged over to
the right side of the road and the police officer driving the cruiser shouted to
Jon, "Wake-up!"
I shouted to Jon, "This is a psychic trap, let's get out of town immediately!"
Even then Jon could not get his bearings and mistakenly took the east road out
of Creston when we wanted to go in the opposite direction. A few minutes later
he could remember the turn off towards Salmo and points west. Jon wanted to stop
for a break. I said, "Let's get out of this valley then stop." As we started to
make the climb out of the valley the same officers we had seen earlier had
stopped a motorcyclist and were doing a search. Jon frowned and said, "That's
harassment!" We did not stop until we hit the snows at about 5000 feet and
finally the claws of Creston were letting go.
I told Jon much of what I knew of Creston as he continued to drive. At one time
Creston had more churches per capita than any other town in Canada. It still has
more than fifty churches for a population of 5000. Jon could sense one woman
surrounded by twenty-three others as the psychic battery for the woman.
After a couple of nights sleep I was able to determine that the psychic trap was
mainly created by the willful use of prayer by some of the churches to attract
new followers. The church "market-place" is saturated and the hard sell
techniques of born again missionaries rule the psychic realms around the town. I
have run into similar mind numbing pressure in the Bible Belt towns of the USA.
In many cases the rectors, priests, ministers and elders have gone over the line
in their zeal to do God's work and are deep into black magic and mind control.
Some "Fundamentalist Christian" books I read do instruct people in mind control
techniques. The neighborhood churches are copying the televangelist's gimmicks.
Creston is in the thick of a self created hypnotic haze.
The trip to Castlegar was a discussion on chemistry and the possible points of
interface with alchemical mysteries. Jon can see atoms through his higher senses
but what he is seeing is perplexing. I explained co-valent, ionic, Van der
Waal's and metallic bonding. Earlier I had explained the work of Kervran and his
book "Biological Transmutations". Driving along Kootenay Lake I told him about
the possibility of a hidden series of transmutations in chlorophyll which
convert water and CO2 into sugars. The transmutations could make the process
simpler and might possibly be the way nature actually does it.
At the Hugh Keenleyside Dam above Castlegar we tested the temperature of waters
at a marina and let an Octo flutter like a leaf through the waters of the Lower
Arrow Lake. Further upstream Jon threw a Poshaust from the granite boulders
along the shore. Our weekend mission was complete. The grid was buzzing.
It took another hour to drive Jon home and another three hours for me. We were
both tired. Jon said that he slept twelve hours. I slept ten hours. We had
traveled in three days the same region that David Thompson took years to map.
Since the Confederation of Canada in 1867, Canadians have been called, "Hewers
of wood and drawers of water." That is exactly what the Illuminati consider
Canadians to be: indentured servants! Originally most of Canada was charted to a
company in 1670, The Hudson Bay Company. All the charter holders were princes
and nobility. Three hundred and thirty-three years later Canada is still a
company town. When the 1858 Gold Rush happened in what became British Columbia,
the manager of the HBC, following instructions from London, became the governor
of the new colony. In 1859 the legislation paperwork caught up Sir James Douglas
became the first governor. BC was a colony and all the valued resources went to
Britain.
Canada is now an economic colony of the USA. Since 2001 there has been a 27%
penalty on softwood shipped to the USA. This has been applied because American
lumber companies said to the US Dept of Commerce that we were dumping softwood
below cost. On eight previous occasions GATT said there was no dumping. BC and
Canada have vast forests and sawmills are able to cut many times more board-feet
of lumber than US sawmills which have limited and expensive resources. BC is the
size of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and California combined. Half of which is
covered by forests. The population of the four states is over forty million. BC
has four million people. The economies of scale give BC a big advantage over US
producers. The strange aspect of this dispute is that more than half of the
companies working in BC are American owned. The Dept of Commerce is penalizing
American companies!
Another strange aspect is that the 27% penalty goes to the companies which
launched the protest when the dispute is settled. These are the same people who
already own more than half of BC's forests. The small companies have shut down
and those that are still cutting are now newly purchased by Americans and
shipping uncut logs to the US without penalty! This has led to the consolidation
of forestry resources under the largest of US lumber companies. That is exactly
what the Dept of Commerce wanted from the start. By the time the dispute is
over, 70% of BC forests will be in American hands.
The previous colony owners were in London, now the owners are in America. There
are a few men behind this transition of resource ownership. The new bosses are
just like the old bosses...scales and tails. They are greedy. Just like under
the HBC, few dollars or pounds remain in the colony, and now BC has a per capita
income less than the State of Mississippi. Americans did not know that the Dept
of Commerce was "legally" stealing the resource base of its northern neighbor at
the same time as George W. Bush was asking Canadians to contribute manpower and
materials to the War in the Gulf. When the Prime Minister said "No", Bush felt
that Canadians were not good neighbors.
Most Americans do not know about this conflict. Most Americans do not know that
Dubya stole billions from France and Russia by canceling their oil service
contracts in Iraq. Then Bush bad-mouthed France. The Dept of Commerce just
penalized Canadian wheat imports 12%, because they said grain was being dumped
under the cost of production. The price is set in Chicago and all the grain in
the world is priced under the cost of production because the ones with scales
and tails set up the Commodities Exchange making every farmer in the world a
slave to the manipulations of the few. The cruel irony is that most farmers keep
their farms going by working a second job. The second job indicates that the
price of grain is below the cost of production. US farmers get four times the
subsides Canadian farmers get. Capitalism screws the commodity producer. Farmers
have no redress or leverage. This is a worldwide phenomenon and now
multi-national corporations are tearing the stuffing out of America and America
is become a colony to be plundered just like the rest of the world.
The NWO one world rule is an economic reality with the USA acting the part of
the bully at this time. The horrible result is the planned deliberate collapse
of the US Dollar. This will allow those few with scales and tails to capture
whole resource rich nations such as the Slave Colony of Canada and ultimately
the Slave Colony of America. This is the intent that was sent out through the
grid which David Thompson mapped nearly two hundred years ago. As the RCMP
officer shouted, "Wake-Up!"
Zuerrnnovahh-Starr Livingstone
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