Irish Tower
The Energy Tower and the Irish Tower
The Irish tower, also used in electroculture, is a paramagnetic antenna that collects and concentrates beneficial cosmic energies and directs them into the surrounding soil. Its circular paramagnetic energy field stimulates biological processes nearby, enhancing the health, vitality, and well-being of plants and animals. Soil production is accelerated, and crops benefit in every aspect. Plants increase sugar levels, making them more resilient and less susceptible to pests and frost. In Australia, over a hundred acres of wheat cultivation supported by a large tower yielded astonishing results.
These towers are excellent for organic farming and all gardening systems. They are easy and inexpensive to build, although there are no guarantees about their results, which need to be observed during cultivation.
American doctor Phil Callahan has been investigating Ireland's round towers for several decades. He discovered that Irish farmers appreciate the fertile environment these towers create. Farmers would bring their cows by boat to Devenish Island to graze, feeding on the lush grass around the towers made of paramagnetic stone (stone with low magnetic charge). These ancient towers act like giant magnetic antennas, attracting beneficial energies to the soil, says Callahan, known for his studies on "antennae" in insects. The lands around Irish towers are highly paramagnetic and enjoy great fertility.
Callahan believes that Irish towers act as antennas for extremely low-frequency (ELF) radiation and capture Schumann radiation and solar energies from above. Vital for our health, ELF waves can penetrate water and soil unlike higher frequencies like radiation. To amplify incoming ELF waves, towers must be paramagnetic, and the effect is further enhanced when paramagnetic and diamagnetic materials (those weakly repelled by a magnet) are combined. Irish towers, not surprisingly, are made of granite or basalt stone with wooden floors, perfect materials as they are opposites in paramagnetism.
Some towers, developed by American Jerry Fridenstine, are placed on Earth energy points to act as acupuncture needles for the Earth, drawing beneficial energies into the soil. Reported effects include aiding water percolation into the soil, reducing evaporation, thereby extending the growing season, enhancing microbial activity, and helping soil generation more rapidly.
John Quackenboss from Virginia, USA, developed similar towers. In 1986, he erected a 6-meter high terracotta tube, 12 feet in diameter, filled with basalt gravel and 5 tubes covering 400 hectares. He capped the tubes with a cement cone made of basalt gravel and coated in crushed basalt, bringing the total height to 2 meters. Good effects were observed after 6 weeks. The farm on which these towers were erected experienced higher crop yields, despite drought conditions. These tower properties report higher precipitation and less moisture evaporation. There are hundreds of such towers on Australian farms.
How to Build an Irish Tower
We mentioned that the paramagnetic energy tower can be described as an acupuncture needle for the Earth. When correctly positioned on a natural energy vortex, where the lines of natural geomagnetic energy intersect, it acts as a point of expression and release, increasing the Earth's energy. It is like an antenna that attracts cosmic energy at the level of the lightning field that envelops the biosphere.
The Irish tower "breathes," releasing or drawing in energy based on the needs of the environment; it resonates and releases vibrations as the wind passes through.
The Irish tower in the photo is made of black PVC, is 1.5 meters tall, then filled with a volcanic rock called basalt from the quarries of Orvieto. Tall and vertical trees like the Californian sequoia are organic paramagnetic antennas created by nature. They contain iron particles in their bark that attract lightning energy from the Schumann resonance field.
A 1.5-meter Irish tower is equivalent to about 1,000 tall trees, while a 4-meter tower equals 10,000 trees. When the microorganisms in the soil become saturated with the paramagnetic field, they start increasing in number, digesting the clay beneath the surface soil, transforming minerals, and making them available for plants and trees, consequently strengthening their health and immunity.
The Irish tower enhances fertility and stabilizes the soil. The design follows the line of an Irish tower about 25 meters tall.
The Irish Tower without a conical tip is called an energy tower.
Malta and Basalt Cone for the Irish Tower
For those who want to be even more precise in the cone's angle, the mold should have a 51-degree inclination towards the tip..



New Irish towers under construction
At the EnergyLab center, at the corners of the large 90-square-meter spiral, 4 Irish towers are being set up, one per corner to provide energy to the entire project. Here are the very first photos, digging, positioning, and installation of the first tower.


PVC pipe height 1.50 meters



