Geopathy and earth grids, Hartmann, Curry, Benker nodes, groundwater
Geopathies play a fundamental role in electroculture: randomly placing antennas, menhirs, or worse, your garden is a bit like navigating blindly. It often happens that we plant various vegetables like zucchini, peppers, eggplants, cucumbers, and they just won't grow. We blame the soil, fertilizer, or the plants themselves when the real cause lies in geopathies. I can bring many cases to your attention, but let me start with my own plot of land. There's a particular area where I tried planting various vegetables every year, but they never thrived. Everything changed when I discovered radiesthesia. The dowsing rods indicated the flow of an underground river about 60 meters away that feeds the well. Upon discovery, I harmonized the water frequency with arches positioned in a cross directly above the garden bed. This allowed the plants to start growing without issues. As it was a forced environment for the plants, in the last year, I chose to move part of the garden to a quieter area. Finding a geopathy is not always complicated: a plant that doesn't develop, withers, or bends its trunk in an unhealthy way to protect itself from harmful energy, etc. All this, hoping it's not a Curry knot that will inevitably lead to its death. Positioning an installation is also no small matter. Geopathies play a crucial role because they emit energy that is put at our service through the use of antennas and menhirs that amplify and positively transform the emitted energies if everything is done correctly.
Now, let me tell you the story of wild boars. The land where I cultivate my garden belonged to my late father-in-law. His brother was the family gardener and every year he struggled to cultivate good vegetables for the family. But there's one thing I remember: his constant complaints about various animals that invariably destroyed part of his work, especially wild boars. For a few years now, my wife's uncle is no longer with us, and so I took over the garden along with the wild boar problem—a foreseen tragedy. In 2020, I decided to purchase an electric fence to protect the crops, complete with wire, control unit, battery, and support poles. Everything was ready to be installed. Due to a lack of time and minimal damage caused, I postponed setting up the electric fence for the next year. So, I arrived in April 2021, the month I started electroculture. Due to a shortage of time and minimal damage, I postponed installing the fence throughout the season. Until the fateful day of February 24, 2022, the day I installed my first antenna in the first garden bed, connected to a buried galvanized wire for its entire length. The next morning, I found a surprise: the wild boar had been active during the night. The garden bed was completely devastated, but not randomly. Its intention was to eliminate the galvanized wire by unearthing it entirely. I sought an explanation for this somewhat anomalous behavior. Did the earthworms cause it? Maybe they surfaced, attracted by the energy, and the boar smelled them? But the animal targeted the wire directly; could the energy have bothered it? The fact is, it was the last day I saw the wild boar until the end of October; eight months of peace and tranquility. Never happened in the previous years until, due to a series of works and expansions that likely disrupted the energetic balance of the environment, the wild boar reappeared. After some thought, I again concluded that the problem arose due to the addition of a poorly positioned antenna placed in the wrong spot, without using dowsing rods. I didn't figure it out immediately, and for four days, the troublemaker continued to do as he pleased until the enlightening idea came. The incorrectly placed antenna created an energy imbalance. I understand that this statement may sound fanciful, but from the day I moved the antenna, the wild boars never appeared again.
Speaking of energy balance, let me tell you another case of geopathy that emerged in the last two years in a central Italy area. After years of successful kiwi cultivation in this area, something changed. Many plants started drying up without an apparent reason. Agronomists and experts couldn't find the triggering cause, and as a last resort, a farmer called me to discover the mystery behind this devastation. I immediately thought of a geopathy, and I was not wrong: the pendulum began to move on the printed map of his 18-hectare estate. A large underground lake appeared in the entire area about 60 meters deep. I personally went to verify the presence of water using dowsing rods. Verifying geopathies is the first thing to do before starting to plan any garden to avoid unpleasant surprises later on.
Geopathies and earth grids
Romans, before constructing their homes, would assess sun exposure, wind directions, water sources, and the chosen area's protection from mountains. They would bring flocks to graze in the chosen location for a couple of months, observing their health, particularly their livers, to determine where to build the village. This ancient wisdom introduces the topic of geopathies.
Geopathy is a disorder caused by natural or artificial radiations that can trigger diseases, sometimes severe like cancer. This concept has been discussed in international congresses, where oncologists confirmed that the effect of radiation can manifest with the onset of tumor diseases after latency periods ranging from 2 to 30 years.
Approximately every 2 square meters on Earth's surface, there are subtle emissions of ionizing gamma rays from the subsurface. The theories about how these radiations develop may vary, but their existence is known.
The German doctor Ernst Hartmann observed that mice placed in certain points of his laboratory died, while in neutral zones, they lived without issues. The choice of location, building orientation, and exposure to sunlight are fundamental concepts in architecture, but today, they are not decisively so, even though they are at the foundation of our health.
We can affirm that geology has indeed been rediscovered by scientists like Hartmann. Others have rediscovered what was normal in ancient times. The Etruscans, a smaller civilization than the Romans, had true degrees, if we can call them that, where individuals specialized in techniques to find mineral deposits or drinkable water, for example. These were specializations that required years of experience, something that is impractical today.
The Etruscans transferred many notions to the Romans, who turned it into their own science. If we look at aqueducts or the Pantheon, for example, they were not randomly built; there was a study on energy. They had observed, for instance, that water treated with particular energies did not develop bacterial proliferation. This can be defined as a form of chlorination, without knowing about chlorine; this demonstrates how the Romans were great students of geobiology.
Geology in the Middle Ages
Throughout the Middle Ages, there was extensive knowledge of this science. Medieval churches were always placed above intersections of watercourses, especially where the priest positioned himself, inside the circular apse, because he had to have a role, let's say, of God on earth. Therefore, his capacity for prayer and capturing the maximum attention from the faithful was emphasized—much more attentive and involved.
Italy also has a rich history of geology. However, in 1300, a papal bull considered this science a demonic art, and those who practiced it risked their lives, accused of witchcraft. Consequently, an entire world of knowledge disappeared.
Hartmann, Curry, and Benker Networks
But what are we exposed to daily? What is in our homes that we can't see and, in many cases, in the majority, can't even feel?
In a household environment or workplace, there are neutral zones and disturbed zones.
Hartmann Network
We can envision a series of grids, virtual walls, such as the Hartmann network, named after the aforementioned doctor. These are energetic walls, about twenty centimeters wide, spaced 2.5 meters horizontally and 2 meters vertically. Their direction extends from north to south, from east to west; the lines intersect, creating nodes. This energetic disturbance is one of the most famous, but there are others like the Curry network and the Benker network. Additionally, there are particular points called positive and negative energy vortices.
If we wonder about the consequences of these natural and artificial electromagnetic alterations on our health, we can respond that any physical or psychic energetic issue can be produced by these natural and artificial energies. Not to mention how our houses are constructed: a network of reinforced concrete turns them into a Faraday cage where the natural electromagnetic field is annulled, depriving us of several benefits, and, on the contrary, we live in conditions that strongly stress our organism.
Curry Network
The Curry grid develops at a 45-degree angle from the north-south perpendicular. Its size is approximately 50 cm, with intersections occurring every 3.5 meters. It is larger than the Hartmann grid. If a node affects our body for several years, it can trigger even more severe health problems compared to those caused by a Hartmann node.

Benker Network
It is a cubic grid, appearing as a large cube with all sides measuring 10 meters long and a depth of approximately 1 meter. Like the other aforementioned grids, it doesn't bring anything good to our health.
Interaction with the grids
Grids can have various interactions with each other. For example, if a Hartmann node overlaps with an underground stream, which doesn't have a linear orientation due to being a watercourse following its hydrographic direction, it effectively becomes a cancer node. This is because, after several years of fixed exposure above this node, tumor-related pathologies can emerge.
The intersection of a Curry node with a Hartmann node is called a Star Point. The energy of the two nodes adds up negatively.
Geopathies protection? How can we defend ourselves?
It is essential to remember that for the "pathogenic" action, it requires several consecutive hours on radiant points without moving the body, especially on the bed or a sedentary workstation.
Defending ourselves from geopathies is possible by taking countermeasures. It is crucial to notice when something is wrong, typically manifesting various symptoms, such as waking up tired. In these cases, it should trigger a realization that maybe one is sleeping in the wrong area, and attempts can be made to change position or move the bed. There are good and bad zones, and it's rare for a house to have only bad zones. Trying to move is the first thing to do, and then harmonization can also be attempted. In essence, it's like putting a plug to prevent energy from entering and leaving that point, but only in emergencies, where changing the situation is not possible in any way.
Harmonization? Let's Put a Plug
Flat spirals placed in the rotation direction of the controlled node with a wand or pendulum; Jerusalem crosses and crossed arches above water tables, watercourses, and faults serve as harmonizing "plugs." However, everything must be controlled and positioned well to avoid disturbances of all kinds, unbalancing the energetic harmony. This system should only be used in genuinely urgent cases, such as when it is not possible to move the bed or office desk. The energy that must enter and exit from somewhere else must still flow.



