TheBanyanTree: snake story
Roger Pye
pyewood at pcug.org.au
Mon Jun 7 18:40:44 PDT 2010
When we purchased our small acreage in NSW I put a remedy in place to
keep snakes away from it. The remedy concentrated on Australia's major
venomous snakes - the brown, red-bellied black, and tiger. Of these the
brown snake is the most common where our land is situated, it is also
the most venomous of the three.
(How I make remedies such as the above is I collect the resonant
frequency of whichever creature it is that isn't wanted, manipulate it
energetically (that means change its energies))and using the natural
systems and energies of Planet Earth, transmit the altered frequency
over the area to be protected. Sounds complex but really isn't. The
transmission warns creatures of the appropriate species that the area is
not safe for them to enter and so they stay away.)
I installed the remedy in November 2007. We did not see a single snake
of any kind on the property for just over two years. This is very
unusual particularly as we have a creek running through the land and
snakes are very attracted to water. Then in a single week in February
this year there were three sightings - a brown which popped out from
under the baby yurt, a red belly black from under a water tank and a
brown nearby. The handyman (Sam) who works for us dispatched the nearby
brown and the other two slid back under cover where they couldn't be
reached.
When I checked the pipe which held the remedy I found it had been
disturbed by something or someone unknown and wasn't transmitting. So I
reinstalled it and set it off again. The next day Sam cleared the grass
- carefully - from under the tank and yurt. However the snakes had gone
and none have been seen since.
Roger
Tom Smith wrote:
> Signs with a coiled snake in a triangle advised CAUTION at all
> park entrances. I had walked the trails of this well-used
> urban natural openspace area hundreds of times without seeing a
> snake of any kind.
>
> I did not want to see any rattlesnakes after hearing stories of
> their bites containing digestive enzymes that dissolved flesh,
> antivenom treatment that cost thousands of dollars and pain
> levels registering 12 on a scale of 10.
>
> The odds of hitting a jackpot though go up with the number of
> coins gambled, and on one early February morning walk I saw
> directly in my path what I thought was a straight stick of
> wood, that as I drew closer developed a triangle-shaped head on
> one end, with yellowish triangular lines tapering to a
> segmented tip on the other.
>
> I cautiously walked around what I now knew to be a rattler, to
> the tail-side. The snake remained motionless. I saw no
> injuries. I took the Olympus C-700 ultra-zoom camera out of
> the case on my belt and got shots from about 10 ft away.
>
> I noticed in the distance a jogger coming and thought I had
> better stay to warn him, knowing joggers are sometimes lost in
> their own world, having been in that world myself for many a
> mile. When the jogger showed no signs of seeing the snake at
> about 40 feet distance I pointed and yelled "RATTLESNAKE!!"
>
> The jogger stopped immediately, walked around the same end of
> the snake that I had, and said, "Thanks! You just saved my
> life." I never thought I had done anything that good, but must
> admit I felt happy.
>
> People with dogs, lawfully and wisely on leashes, approaching
> from behind me abruptly reversed their direction. The snake
> slowly moved in the direction he had been pointed, into
> underbrush, and disappeared.
>
> Photo at:
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/9482738@N07/4670667584/
>
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