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Translations:Benutzer:Arian/Klett-Mini-Test/1328/en
The Application
After the two preparations have been transferred from the state of the solid into that of the liquid, they are sprayed directly thereafter into the air — the horn manure more in coarse drops onto the soil, the horn silica more as a fine-droplet mist onto the plants (Figure 25, p. 350). Suitable implements are used for this purpose, working with low pressure and low delivery volume (40 to 60 litres per hectare, or even less). It is natural to weight this process with no more than the aspect of necessary distribution. What actually takes place, however, and what is accessible to intuitive beholding, is the dissolution of the rhythmically moved liquid into a condition that opens itself to the element of air — that is, a surface expanding into the boundless within the drop-form. The force-constellation that holds sway, at the moment of application — differently in the morning than in the evening, for example — over field, pasture, garden and orchard in air and warmth and light, and that can be sensed as a mood, impresses itself upon the force-constellation that has concentrated itself in each droplet in the time-stream of the preceding preparation steps. Through the dissolution of the stirred water into finest droplets, a multitude of centres arises, and, toward the air, of peripheral boundary-surfaces, which in their totality enlarge themselves into the immeasurable. The skin-membrane of each droplet shimmers in the light that radiates around it in all colours, and is — polar to the absorbing force of the stirring-vortex — open on all sides at the boundary-surfaces of its spherical form to the peripheral forces working in the element of air.






