A Step Beyond Biodynamic Farming or Gardening

Biodynamic farming arose out of the works of Rudolph Steiner just after the turn of the century. He began his important work trying to pass on a way of “hearing” Nature to the general public. His system became one of mimicking nature and a set of principles and rules to follow for those who could not “hear”. You may have heard of one of these complicated, time consuming rules—fill a cow horn with manure, bury it, and let it sit for a year. At the end of a year, mix it with water and spray it over the entire acreage to be farmed. Amazing results were purported to happen. This was also by far the simplest instruction.

In the sixties and seventies two courageous women provided the next step or stage in our development process in learning how to connect with Nature. Dorothy McLean and Eileen Caddy, both of Findhorn, in Scotland, began channeling information from the Nature Spirits and the Divas of the garden. They were “given” explicit instructions for developing wondrous gardens in pure gravel and other unlikely landscapes. Their instructions worked and Findhorn became famous.

Little known is the fact the Nature gave them seven years to develop a process or teaching that would involve an easy method of communicating with the spirits of Nature for all of us to follow. This didn't happen and time ran out. Machaelle Small Wright to the rescue.

After Findhorn principals' restructuring of their intent and focus and the fading of the amazing gardens, Machaelle Small Wright became the key player in our collective journey to work with Nature. She “heard” and developed a system and a teaching whereby anybody (each and every one of us) can learn to talk to the spirits of Nature and the Divas--easily. None of us has to have the ability to “channel” the information. Her research and Perelandra Gardens opened up the scope and held great promise for healing our earth, even healing our peril. Her system allows us all to commune (have two-way conversation) and co-create (100:100 participation) with Nature.

But biodynamic gardening still exists. It still attempts to mimic Nature. It is still admirable in that it is a system for treating the earth reverently. But it does not commune or co-create directly with Nature.

Transforming Environments™goes a step beyond biodynamic farming and gardening, and permaculture, and even Perelandra Gardens by having a two-way conversation with all Beingness and having a full co-creative partnership with the All-That-Is. We can also teach you how. Easily.