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  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture I
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    • surroundings, but this becomes impossible if one comes to the
    • surroundings. And thus in practical life many things are
    • around the earth was not a mere superstitious belief. He had
    • contention on theoretical grounds. These two University
    • influences surrounding the earth. Hot only does this seem so,
    • earthly surrounding. For this reason, we shall never acquire
    • Furthermore, around the Earth we find the atmosphere. In
    • remembered that Saturn takes thirty years to go around the Sun,
    • as Saturn takes thirty years to revolve around the Sun we find
    • formation of bark around the growing trees is connected with
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture II
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    • the more distant planets lying outside the earth's path round
    • as it takes place underground, and by the nearer heavens in so
    • far as it takes place above ground; and the influences upon
    • structure of the ground from which the plants are to grow, and
    • ground in the “belly.” The forces coming in from
    • the Cosmos and being caught up underground must be able to flow
    • we must realise clearly that the cultivated ground together
    • surrounding Cosmos begins to work upon it. to stamp it with its
    • stem — vertically — not rotating around it (as in
    • soil. If we pull a plant out of the ground we may see that in
    • ourselves to have picked up the animal, turned it round and set
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture III
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    • air around us. In the atmosphere around us the living principle
    • surrounded by an atmosphere which contained living oxygen, we
    • oxygen around us has to be killed. And yet oxygen is from its
    • has the task of providing a surrounding for our human external
    • same as that which surrounds us externally. In us it is living
    • the human astral body, is active in the earth's surroundings
    • really of our surroundings consists of nitrogen, the
    • us to have oxygen in our immediate surroundings, both by day
    • and by night. We pay less respect to the nitrogen around us in
    • whole inner being and the nitrogen around us; the right
    • to the life of the plants. The plant growing on the ground has
    • body; but the astral element must surround it on all
    • that grew in the fields around him. No reasonable man would do
    • that. What to-day is growing in the fields around us tomorrow
    • the surrounding Cosmos. All that is living on earth in physical
    • nitrogen is everywhere around us. We hold some of it back.
    • all around you. That is the real process in meditation.
    • of the nitrogen around us. For nitrogen is a very learned
    • is around us is what has particularly interested our dear
    • vision when we look upon a piece of ground covered with flowers
    • Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture IV
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    • meeting-ground whatsoever with modern science on all the most
    • meeting-ground. However, an understanding will have to be
    • merely herbaceous stage. It surrounds itself with rind and
    • development and wrapped itself round the plant. For if any part
    • tree. The soil bulges upwards, as it were, and surrounds
    • soil round the plant. It is untrue that the life of the plant
    • surrounded on the outside by streams of all kinds of forces.
    • feeding-ground in which to develop. This is why the theory
    • fact of its being surrounded with earth, all the currents
    • surrounding soil, and the manure contained in the horn
    • to stir it briskly round the edge of the bucket, until a crater
    • liquid to swirl round in the opposite direction. If you do this
    • or feldspar that has been ground to powder and mixed with water
    • the ground throughout the winter, we leave it there over the
    • is very different, for it has for its background the whole
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture V
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    • and which surrounds its roots, is itself a kind of continuation
    • vitalized by the humus in it to the bark which surrounds the
    • the most important factors. All round the earth are the very
    • in the finest homeopathic doses from the surrounding universe
    • surrounding universe, we must work on our manure, not only as I
    • beneficial effect on its surroundings.
    • are precious) under the ground, not very deeply, in soil which
    • intestines, but directly into the soil, surrounded,
    • into the ground — not very deeply. Then we cover it with
    • are certain things constantly going on around us of which
    • the mesentery of an ox and bury them in the ground for a whole
    • surround them and can of themselves attract what they need. For
    • will become sensitive to its surroundings and able to attract
    • attract what it wants from only a small distance around it. But
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture VI
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    • ourselves how in a particular stretch of ground we can get rid
    • influences, whether they come through the atmosphere around the
    • the plant either to spread into its surroundings or to become
    • surrounding air, whereas the roots absorb the forces
    • only in the atmosphere around the earth. Actually, the workings
    • will have gathered that the soil immediately surrounding a
    • have yielded more and more ground to the microscope. When,
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture VII
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    • of the year hovers around the plants. Indeed, we must learn to
    • attached the branches and boughs. On this ground the
    • existence of a tree? That which is around the tree in the air
    • possessing a far more intimate relation with the surrounding
    • ground is surrounded, as with a cloud. v the astral element.
    • But around the tree, the astral element is far denser. So much
    • the scent of plants growing in the ground, the peculiar smell
    • Now. the tree makes the atmosphere far and wide around it
    • around the tree slightly more dead than it would be
    • around a herbaceous plant. This must be fully borne in mind,
    • the atmosphere around the tree and of the etheric poverty in
    • we look around us, we can find the further connection. It
    • there would be no insects. The insects that flutter around the
    • around it tends to throw off the etheric life whereas the upper
    • sparkling around the trees, we shall therefore use the
    • ‘desire-to-be-a-tree’ of other plants. We shall flutter around
    • surrounds the trees.” Thus, there arose in Nature a
    • herbaceous and cereal vegetation round about. In such
    • will be useful in forming a good breeding ground for fungi. One
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture VIII
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    • physical and etheric body and being more or less surrounded
    • astral element but is surrounded by it. If the plant enters
    • around. Because the senses are centred in the head and take in
    • quantities salts in the soil around it. Let us assume that we
    • difficult conditions owing to the fact that the ground is not
    • level and slanting ground. They require food that will develop
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Appendix
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    • plant fruit trees around arable land.
    • (ground horns and claws of cattle) as a fertiliser. He
    • ground. These differences are of importance for the problem of
    • Turnips and potatoes can be surrounded by horseradish;
    • moisten the ground as deep as the worms go.
    • the field can be surrounded with a border of stinging
    • Steiner recommended that an orchard on peaty ground be treated
    • deep trench can be made around the stem at a distance
    • a. bean and knead it with moist soil from the ground on which
    • and spreading that around the roots of the trees.
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Contents
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  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Preface
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    • speak of agriculture in surroundings where the audience
    • could have around them the things and processes to which the
    • spiritual background of just this profession and with wholly
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Discussion 12th June, 1924.
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    • the ground till they are wanted, even if this means leaving
    • three months after they have been taken out of the ground?
    • ANSWER: On the whole, it is best to leave them in the ground
    • they should be left in the ground till the moment when they are
    • preparation be treated when they have been in the ground all
    • in the ground, you can even throw them out in a heap anywhere
    • wind some hair from the horse's mane around the horns. The
    • rather less quick-lime, in marshy ground rather more because of
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Discussion 13th June, 1924.
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    • QUESTION: Is it not better to store the manure above ground
    • underneath is 3and or clay? Often people put a ground layer of
    • clay where the manure is to be, so as to make the ground
    • same with the thistle. Should we now sow them round our arable
    • closes around it. The exact measurement does not matter. The
    • or should they be evenly spaced around the heap?
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Discussion 14th June, 1924.
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    • say: Take cow-horns and put them in the ground, but to fight
  • Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Discussion 16th June, 1924.
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    • what has been scattered over the ground without having to come
    • underground and rampant one can fight it. You need very little
    • dead. It is likewise surrounded by warmth. Now when the warmth



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