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SONIC BLOOM - Terry
McComb
God often blesses
when we take His word to heart, and that appears to be the
case when Dan Carlson examined how God originally watered
our primal planet-" . . . a mist went up from the earth
and watered the whole face of the ground." (Genesis
2:6). Carlson’s discovery of God’s ways resulted in a
powerfully prolific garden that produces cauliflower so big
only four will fit in a box designed to carry twelve!
Such an
astonishingly fruitful harvest is part of a unique twofold
process Carlson calls Sonic Bloom. This program uses the
musical sounds of bird songs broadcasted over the garden and
a misting machine with a special foliar that applies the
mist to the plants’ leaves.
During a visit to
Hickory Nut Research farm near River Falls, Wisconsin, I
bumped along with Carlson on his John Deer utility cart on a
short tour of his 140 acre tree farm. I soon became aware of
a gentle sound above the clattering machine which sounded
similar to a chorus of chirping crickets. When Carlson shut
off the machine, I listened more attentively to the musical
tones. They were not an obtrusive timbre but rather more
like gentle rain. After awhile, I was not even aware of
their presence.
With cheerful
enthusiasm Carlson explains how he doubles production
yields, increases the nutritional content, and more than
doubles the shelf life of food products by using the sound I
was hearing. This oscillating frequency apparently opens the
plants’ stomata (breathing pores), and while the pores are
open the leaves are sprayed with a plant nutrient enzyme.
Carlson’s happy
eyes become serious as he said, "This whole idea began
on a bitter cold day in 1960 while I was serving the U.S.
Army in occupying the Demilitarized Zone in Korea. I watched
horrified as a mother deliberately thrust her four-year-old’s
legs under the back wheel of a reversing two-ton GMC
military truck. I went to hit her, but when I saw the look
in her eyes. I went away weeping because using a crippled
child and begging was the only was she could hope to feed
her family."
Carlson had noticed
that 40 percent of the farmers in that area had starved
because they would not eat next year’s seed. "I went
to my fox hole and spent the next few days praying and
thinking, praying and searching for answers," he
continued with emotion. It was then I decided to do
something about the world hunger problem during my
life."
Back home, enabled
by the GI Bill of Rights, Carlson spent four- or five-hour
days for nearly seven years at the University of Minnesota
Library studying plant physiology. Enrolled in the
university’s Experimental College, he was allowed to
design his own curriculum in horticulture and agriculture.
While researching, he stumbled across a little-known
recording called "Growing Plants Successfully in the
Home" written by George Milstein, a retired dental
surgeon. Milstein’s innovative idea convinced recording
company executives of Pip Records to amalgamate into a
popular tune the pure sound frequencies used by University
of Ottawa researchers that had increased their wheat yields
66 percent.
Carlson started
where Milstein left off and focused on finding frequencies
that would stimulate leaf stomata to open. Stomata are
breathing openings about 1/1000th of an inch
across which allow oxygen and water to pass out of the leaf
while other gases (notably carbon dioxide) move inside the
leaf to be transformed by photosynthesis into sugars.
Carlson experimented with various frequencies until, with
the help of an audio engineer, he found one in the 3,000 to
5,000 kHz range that caused the stomata to open.
Having found the
right frequency to achieve his goal, Carlson next turned his
attention to the second part of his Sonic Bloom approach –
what to put into the stomata once they open. Carlson
reasoned that (even in poor soil) plants could be well
nourished via the stomata with a foliar spray containing the
right elements. It required not only the right elements, but
the right balance. Nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus are
needed, but an overdose of any one element can distort or
even kill a plant.
Carlson spent the
next 15 years experimenting in the field and in labs
throughout the country to find this balance. These tests
required countless hours using radioactive isotopes and
Geiger counters to trace the elements from leaves to stems
to roots. Eventually Carlson included 64 trace and minor
elements derived from natural plant products including
seaweed. He also added chelated amino acids and growth
stimulants while altering the surface tension of the water
base to make it more easily absorbed. The end results of
this research are known today as Sonic Bloom.
When applied to
plants, the results are almost unbelievable. The first test
of this twofold process was on a common household purple
passion vine (Cynura) which normally grows about 18 inches
and lives a short time. When treated with his Sonic Bloom
process it grew to 1,300 feet and lived nine years! It
traveled from room to room in his Minnesota home, and its
growth was verified by researchers from The Guinness Book
of Records.
Further tests showed
that even without sound a leaf can absorb 300 percent more
Sonic Bloom nutrients than any other foliar spray. But when
accompanied by the special frequency, the absorption rate of
nutrients rises to an amazing 700 percent – far more than
can be absorbed via the roots. As a result, the harvested
plants are more nutritious, taste better, have longer shelf
life, produce greater yields, and mature earlier.
The experimental
gardener than enlisted the technical expertise of a
Minneapolis high school orchestra and choir teacher, Michael
W. Holtz, to help develop a cassette tape for home gardeners
with music pleasant to the ear. Carlson had been using Rega
(East-Indian) music, which was picked up from a man, T.C.
Singh (head of the Department of Botany at Annamalai
University), who had conducted research on plants during the
1950’s in India. While these tones may not especially
appeal to the listening taste of Americans, Singh’s
published research "proven beyond any shadow of a doubt
that harmonic sound waves affect the growth, flowering,
fruiting, and seed yields of plants."
When I visited with
Holtz, a kind, soft-spoken middle-aged man, I asked,
"Did you use special audio lab equipment to determine
the right pitch and harmonics to make the stomata
open?" Holtz smiled and said, "No, but I did pray
a lot." When Holtz first heard Carlson’s cricket
chirping sounds oscillating out of the speaker, he
recognized the pitch to be the same as the early morning
bird choirs that sing just before dawn.
No one has explained
why birds sing for about an hour just before dawn. The
sounds are not mating calls or territorial warning calls.
"It was thrilling," Holtz said, "to make that
connection." I began to feel that God had created the
birds for more than just freely flying about and warbling.
Their very singing must somehow be intimately linked to the
mysteries of seed germination and plant growth."
Holtz discovered
that the key of D and E flat are best suited for Carlson’s
purposes. He explained, "I feel from Genesis 1:3, when
God said, ‘Let there be light’ that He used sound to
create the electromagnetic spectrum." Holtz writes in
his book, God’s Creation: Sounds, Birds & Plants, "The
specific organella, the mitochondria, the chloroplast, and
the golgi apparatus of a cell seem to be in the sound energy
converting business. Their shapes appear to be perfect sound
energy receivers of sympathetic vibrations. In the case of
the chloroplasts, the sound and light work together. Both
sound energy and light energy are converted and are stored
as chemical energy." Holtz refers to Dorothy
Ratallack’s book, The Sound of Music and Plants,
where she tells how many of her plants preferred sound to
light. They would lean towards the sonic energy coming from
the speaker rather than toward the light source. She also
demonstrated the effects of classical, jazz, and rock music.
The former had positive effects on plants while the latter
killed the plants in two weeks!
Perhaps we can learn
from plants, for Job 12:8 tells, "Or speak to the
earth, and it will teach you; . . . " If we are
attentive, nature speaks of her Author. "And He [Jesus]
is before all things, and in Him all things consist"
(Colossians 1:17). It is exciting to know that we can learn
how nature and humans may work in concert with our Maker.
Creation science often points to the differences that
existed in God’s original creation, and the mist that came
up from the ground to water the Garden of Eden certainly
must have been laced with nutrients from the rich, untainted
soil. This feeding of the plant life coupled with the most
beautiful sounds of praise from birds that were not hindered
by the fear of man could lead only to growth and fruit
production substantiating theories about the large size of
plants and animals being revealed in the fossil record.
The amazing harvests
that have come from using Carlson’s process could fill an
entire book, but here are a few examples. Wilson Mills of
Circle K Apple Orchard near River Falls, Wisconsin, has used
Sonic Bloom methods for the past 10 years. The state average
yield is 290 bushels per acre; Mills gets over 500 bushels
per acre. His crops mature two weeks ahead of competitors;
his fruit has a shelf live of five months instead of the
normal 30 days.
"I figure my
20-acre orchard has made one million dollars in the past 10
years using Sonic Bloom," says Mills. "My apples
used to be 50 percent packable, but now they are 90 percent
packable" (meaning they are eating size, thus bringing
top prices).
Now let us consider
a second example using cucumbers. Five hundred cucumber
seeds soaked in a 500-to-one mixture of the Sonic Bloom
nutrient solution were serenaded for eight hours by the
Sonic Bloom tones. Planted in a greenhouse, they matured
from seed to harvest in 40 days, producing 7,600 pounds of
cucumbers. They had to be picked daily over a period of 36
days lest they grow too long to fit in 20-inch packing
boxes.
Now consider studies
done on soybeans. In the spring of 1985, field tests on
soybeans were conducted by Gerald Carlson (no relation to
Dan), senior editor of the Professional Farmers of
America and Land Owner publication, in conjunction with
the Biological Research Farm near Cedar Falls, Iowa. The
tests clearly showed Dan Carlson’s process had increased
the crop by 100 percent when compared to a control crop of
untreated beans growing a quarter mile away. Soybeans have
also done extremely well in Central and South America where
harvests are often 137 bushels per acre with the Sonic Bloom
program compared to typical harvests in the U.s. of 40 to 45
bushels per acre.
Foreign
agriculturists have bought kits from Carlson that include
sound recordings and nutrient solutions. Notable results
include farms in New South Wales, Australia, where
production increased by 160 percent in plums, 130 percent in
nectarines, and 100 percent in apples. Although plagued by
poor growing conditions in China’s Inner Mongolia region,
melon, and potato harvests have experienced a 30 to 90
percent increase using Sonic Bloom products, and the
Indonesian Minister of Agriculture found amazing test
results. He plants to utilize the Sonic Bloom approach in
his country’s agriculture development.
In years past Sonic
Bloom has met with a certain degree of skepticism in the
U.S. within academic circles, but there is a growing
interest from government agencies, like the Department of
Natural Resources.
In addition to the
increase in crop yields, there are other benefits to the
Sonic Bloom method of gardening since the sound attracts
more birds than usual along with a large increase in the
number of butterflies. Mosquitoes and other pests are thus
consumed and their threat to crops is greatly decreased. The
plants typically grow healthier and with less disease. Fresh
evidence shows that fewer herbicides are needed in
controlling threats to crops since the same sonic process of
opening the stomata also works on weeds, thus increasing the
absorption of weed-killing agents. This pest abatement
method is called Sonic Doom.
Carlson’s desire
to feed the world is making an impact with over 35 countries
now using his process. As I savored a tomato (juicy and
dripping with flavor like grandma’s garden variety) grown
by his process in a greenhouse, I thought of the text,
"Oh taste and see, that the Lord is good; blessed is
the man who trusts in Him!" (Psalm 34:8).
Carlson obviously
gives all the credit and glory to God for these discoveries
that harken back to the Garden of Eden. "We should
tender [treat carefully] plants and animals, not distort
God-given gifts, still unrevealed in His creatures, but coax
these gifts and learn to live cooperatively with all God’s
creation," he commented with conviction. The next time
you hear a bird singing in the early morning, remember He is
not only praising his Creator, Jesus, he is also awakening
plants to drink in the morning dew. "Let them praise
the name of the Lord, for He commanded and they were
created. He also established them forever and ever; He made
a decree which shall not pass away." (Psalm 148:5-6).
-- Creation
Illustrated, Summer 2000
If you have
enjoyed reading this story, order the Sonic Bloom 6 hour
video and meet the true stars of the Sonic Bloom story!
Order
the Sonic Bloom "Endless" Video!
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