T
the piper123
Guest
I watched a show last night about Atlatis and the desciption layed out by Plato. My question is do the C's refer to the concentric circles of the cities design in any way and the utopian reality that stemed from the perpendicular canals? Salt water seems to be a great cundutor of electromagnetic energy so was this layout specificly designed to produce a maximum positive current or something of the like???
As a garden designer I have noticed in a couple of designs that when I use concentric circles as a basis for the layout with water in the center that the garden ends up having a very specific energy depending on the plant palet used. There are certain plants/trees which "give back" more than others be it water or oxogen, fragrence or color. Then there are a whole other group of plants that seem to only take in and hoard both water and oxogen or anything else for that matter.
Using the former in the design produces an enviroment where people are often drawn to the same location and it's not the center...it's one of the perpendicular pathways with the best view of the center, not the most beatiful or fragrent area and not the easiest to get to to view the center of the garden either. It's just a magnet of some kind and most people are drawn to this area and then turn and look towards the center.
In like, do the C's mention anything about plant's?
Thanks,
tim
As a garden designer I have noticed in a couple of designs that when I use concentric circles as a basis for the layout with water in the center that the garden ends up having a very specific energy depending on the plant palet used. There are certain plants/trees which "give back" more than others be it water or oxogen, fragrence or color. Then there are a whole other group of plants that seem to only take in and hoard both water and oxogen or anything else for that matter.
Using the former in the design produces an enviroment where people are often drawn to the same location and it's not the center...it's one of the perpendicular pathways with the best view of the center, not the most beatiful or fragrent area and not the easiest to get to to view the center of the garden either. It's just a magnet of some kind and most people are drawn to this area and then turn and look towards the center.
In like, do the C's mention anything about plant's?
Thanks,
tim