Mysterious Drug-Resistant Germ Deemed An “Urgent Threat” Is Quietly Sweeping The Globe

Via ZeroHedge

Thanks to the overprescription of antimicrobial drugs and use of antifungicides in crop production, a relatively new germ that preys on people with weakened immune systems is rapidly spreading across the globe, according to the New York Times.

A projection of the C. auris fungus on a microscope slide.CreditMelissa Golden for The New York Times

The infection – a fungus called Candida auris, kills half of patients who contract it within 90 days, according to the CDC – as it’s impervious to most major antifungal medications. First described in 2009 after a 70-year-old Japanese woman showed up at a Tokyo hospital with C. auris in her ear canal, the aggressive yeast infection has spread across Asia and Europe – arriving in the US by 2016.

The earliest known case in the United States involved a woman who arrived at a New York hospital on May 6, 2013, seeking care for respiratory failure. She was 61 and from the United Arab Emirates, and she died a week later, after testing positive for the fungus. At the time, the hospital hadn’t thought much of it, but three years later, it sent the case to the C.D.C. after reading the agency’s June 2016 advisory. –NYT

“It is a creature from the black lagoon,” said the CDC’s Dr. Tom Chiller, who heads the fungal branch. “It bubbled up and now it is everywhere.

In the last five years alone, it it has swept through a hospital in Spain, hit a neonatal unit in Venezuela, spread throughout India, Pakistan and South Africa, and forced a prestigious British medical center to close its ICU for nearly two weeks.

By the end of June 2016, a scientific paper reported “an ongoing outbreak of 50 C. auris cases” at Royal Brompton, and the hospital took an extraordinary step: It shut down its I.C.U. for 11 days, moving intensive care patients to another floor, again with no announcement.

Days later the hospital finally acknowledged to a newspaper that it had a problem. A headline in The Daily Telegraph warned, “Intensive Care Unit Closed After Deadly New Superbug Emerges in the U.K.” (Later research said there were eventually 72 total cases, though some patients were only carriers and were not infected by the fungus.) –NYT

After C. auris reached New York, New Jersey and Illinois, the CDC added it to a list of germs deemed “urgent threats.”

Last May, an elderly man who was admitted to the Brooklyn branch of Mount Sinai Hospital for abdominal surgery was found to be infected with the drug-resistant candida. He died after 90 days in the hospital, however C. auris did not according to the Times. According to tests, the germ was everywhere in his room – to such a degree that the hospital required special cleaning equipment and had to rip out ceiling and floor tiles to get rid of it.

“Everything was positive — the walls, the bed, the doors, the curtains, the phones, the sink, the whiteboard, the poles, the pump,” said Hospital president Dr. Scott Lorin. “The mattress, the bed rails, the canister holes, the window shades, the ceiling, everything in the room was positive.”

Dr. Shawn Lockhart, a fungal disease expert at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, holding a microscope slide with inactive Candida auris collected from an American patient.

Why is this happening?

Simply put, fungi are evolving defenses to resist and survive modern medications.

“It’s an enormous problem,” said Imperial College of London fungal epidemiology professor Matthew Fisher, who co-authored a recent scientific review on the rise of resistant fungi. “We depend on being able to treat those patients with antifungals.”

The C.D.C. investigators theorized that C. auris started in Asia and spread across the globe. But when the agency compared the entire genome of auris samples from India and Pakistan, Venezuela, South Africa and Japan, it found that its origin was not a single place, and there was not a single auris strain.

The genome sequencing showed that there were four distinctive versions of the fungus, with differences so profound that they suggested that these strains had diverged thousands of years ago and emerged as resistant pathogens from harmless environmental strains in four different places at the same time. –NYT

“Somehow, it made a jump almost seemingly simultaneously, and seemed to spread and it is drug resistant, which is really mind-boggling,” said CDC fungal expert Dr. Snigdha Vallabhaneni.

While various theories exist as to why C. auris has made a grand entrance, Dutch microbiologist Jacques Meis believes the drug-resistant fungi are developing thanks to the heavy use of fungicides on crops.

Dr. Meis visited the C.D.C. last summer to share research and theorize that the same thing is happening with C. auris, which is also found in the soil: Azoles have created an environment so hostile that the fungi are evolving, with resistant strains surviving.

This is similar to concerns that resistant bacteria are growing because of excessive use of antibiotics in livestock for health and growth promotion. As with antibiotics in farm animals, azoles are used widely on crops. –NYT

“On everything — potatoes, beans, wheat, anything you can think of, tomatoes, onions,” said Dr. Johanna Rodes, an infectious disease expert at Imperial College London. “We are driving this with the use of antifungicides on crops.”

Keeping it quiet

In 2015, Dr. Rhodes received a panicked call from the Royal Brompton Hospital medical research center outside of London, where C. auris had taken root months earlier. The hospital had no idea how to get rid of it.

Dr. Johanna Rhodes, an infectious disease expert at Imperial College London. “We are driving this with the use of antifungicides on crops,” she said of drug-resistant germs.CreditTom Jamieson for The New York Times

“We have no idea where it’s coming from. We’ve never heard of it. It’s just spread like wildfire,” Rhodes was told, before she helped them clean it up. Under her direction, hospital workers used a special aerosol devices to spray hydrogen peroxide around a room which housed a patient with the germ – with the theory being that the vapor would permeate the entire room.

After one week of saturating the room, they put a “settle plate” in the middle of it with a gel at the bottom that would allow any remaining microbes to grow.

Only one grew back; C. aurisAnd officials were scrambling to keep a lid on it.

It was spreading, but word of it was not. The hospital, a specialty lung and heart center that draws wealthy patients from the Middle East and around Europe, alerted the British government and told infected patients, but made no public announcement.

“There was no need to put out a news release during the outbreak,” said Oliver Wilkinson, a spokesman for the hospital.

This hushed panic is playing out in hospitals around the world. Individual institutions and national, state and local governments have been reluctant to publicize outbreaks of resistant infections, arguing there is no point in scaring patients — or prospective ones. –NYT

And while the Brompton Hospital case did make headlines, the issue remaied largely out of the spotlight internationally – despite an even larger outbreak in Valencia, Spain occurring at virtually the same time at the 992-bed Hospital Universitari i Politècnic La Fe. Unknown to the public or unaffected patients, 372 people had become “colonized” with the germ – meaning it was on their bodies but they had not yet contracted it. Of those, 85 patients developed bloodstream infections, and 41% of those died within 30 days.

And while other prominent strains of Candida have not developed significant resistance to drugs, over 90% of C. auris infections are resistant to at least one drug, while 30% are resistant to two or more drugs.

According to Connecticut’s deputy state epidemiologist Dr. Lynn Sosa, C. auris is now “the top” threat among resident infections.

It’s pretty much unbeatable and difficult to identity.

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52 Comments
Jim
Jim
April 6, 2019 5:34 pm

Scary stuff and not unexpected. Only a matter of time before a flu strain erupts naturally or some psycho unleashes a mutant bug on his own. Just what one needs–another thing to worry about.
Out.

Brian
Brian
April 6, 2019 5:47 pm

Nature finds a way.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
April 6, 2019 6:28 pm

Could solve a lot of problems.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 6, 2019 7:34 pm

There’s a fungus among us.
I had an experience, and it was not fun.
Would wake up feeling tight in the abdomen. Didn’t matter what I ate or when I ate the night before.
Was eliminating habitual foods, trying all kinds of methods to try and figure out the cause, over a year.
Nutritionist had me on a gallbladder supplement. Then Braggs apple cider vinegar. No luck.
Mainstream Doc thought I had too much acid; put me on Prilosec. The nutritionist was aghast. Hell no!
I started losing weight dangerously. Nutritionist advised I get scoped.
Went to get esophagus and stomach scoped, in desperation.
Bottom 1/3 of the esophagus and the stomach showed traces of something.
They took a biopsy sample during the scope, put it in a petrie dish, and it grew. Confirmed.
Culprit?
A form of candida. Fungal yeast infection. Scope Doc wrote me a 21 day scrip, and wiped it out.
I could eat again, and enjoy food once more.
So, what caused it? How TF does one get a yeast infection in their esophagus and stomach?
Don’t know. I never knowingly ingested something foreign or unhealthy. Wasn’t from oral sex.
Nutritionist’s theory? Possibly from a batch of raw almonds or pecans. Mold?
Nuts are healthy fats, so I was, and still am a regular consumer of them.
This article sheds some light on the danger of this stuff; perhaps a different, more lethal strain(s).
Fungicides on crops?
I used to eat grains, cereals and cows milk occasionally. Yogurt, too.
Not any more.
Scary, that now we have another form of plague.
Proper nutrition takes vigilance and discipline now more than ever, but it’s worth it.
Be careful out there.

E. Grogan
E. Grogan
April 6, 2019 7:51 pm

I had candida albicans for years and did tons of research. I finally learned that garlic is a VERY potent antifungal. 25 yrs later, I didn’t have candida again until I was poisoned with carbon monoxide for a year. When I used it again, the garlic still killed it. Garlic doesn’t seem to have developed resistance to it, that may be the thing that would work.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  E. Grogan
April 6, 2019 8:16 pm

How did you take it, EG? Raw cloves? Cooked? Powdered capsule supplement?
Brand? Dosage? Please advise. TIA. (thx in advance)

ILuvCO2@comcast.net
  Anonymous
April 6, 2019 8:58 pm

Crush or chop the garlic and let it air out for 15 or minutes. This activates the enzyme allicin which is responsible for the anti bacterial and fungal properties. Put in luke warm tea and swallow the garlic. Glad I planted a crop of garlic in one of the raised beds in the fall…

Anonymous
Anonymous
  [email protected]
April 7, 2019 9:00 am

thx for the ‘how to’, CO2.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  [email protected]
April 7, 2019 8:28 pm

Garlic and chives are extremely important herbs. Extremely important. I’ve been creating beneficial fruit tree guilds and they are absolute staples for healthy soil — and trees! The nice thing if you do the guild correctly is that they can almost entirely be edible. Garlic, chives, oregano, lemon balm, daikon radish and even nasturtium are beneficial and edible. Nature abhors imbalance.

The ubiquitous use of antibiotics and antifungals are either going to destroy us or be eliminated by sane leaders. We’ll never discover sanity within the current system. It must crash and burn.

ILuvCo2
ILuvCo2
  Articles of Confederation
April 7, 2019 8:42 pm

Please explain the “guild”? interested.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  ILuvCo2
April 7, 2019 9:21 pm

Lots of different combinations. Good starting points though.

https://www.regenerative.com/magazine/seven-parts-apple-tree-guild

https://www.fedcoseeds.com/trees/companion_plants.htm

They’re all important but garlic and chives are my staples. The antifungal benefits of garlic when planted in fruit tree orchards has been known for decades by farmers who wanted to minimize scab. Commercial farming replaced it with sprays.

mark
mark
  Articles of Confederation
April 7, 2019 9:47 pm

Articles of Confederation,

Outstanding post…thanks!

ILuvCo2
ILuvCo2
  Articles of Confederation
April 7, 2019 9:49 pm

AOC, (Shit sorry, Articles), Thanks, I’ve planted garlic for years, but never amongst trees. I Like the fedco business model, and order from them, but their political “cartoons” are reprehensible.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  ILuvCo2
April 7, 2019 9:57 pm

What I’ve learned to do is to take truth and wisdom from wherever I can get it. Like I tell my wife: Hitler was a monster, but he was right about superhighways and efficient postal systems!

Even one of the apple newsletters I subscribe to had a bullshit paragraph about global warming this December. It was an easy paragraph to skip over!

mark
mark
April 6, 2019 9:12 pm

I came across Colloidal Silver through the Prepper Community. I found well respected Preppers recommending it and then researched it wide and deep.

I do my own research and ‘experiment on myself’ when it comes to my health. To date I have refused four different prescription drugs from my doctors and have dealt with every health issue successfully through other means without the side effects the drugs they tried to put me on would have caused.

To date I have found through my experiments and the regular use (5 years to date) that Colloidal Silver has ended my life long average of 2 colds a year…not a single cold in 5 years since I started using it.

On top of that it has also ended my annual upper respiratory chest infections that plagued me most of my life. I went to doctors for 20 years to treat/cure them…nothing ever worked. I had at least one upper respiratory chest infection per year since the late 70’s and twice had two in the same year…wait for it…until 5 years ago when I started taking Colloidal Silver.

Not one cold or one upper respiratory chest infection since.

I am convinced Big Pharma and most of the Doctor’s under their medical complex Government/Big Business pyramid don’t want average Americans using Colloidal Silver to cure and or prevent a host of virial, bacterial and fungus infections because of these two reasons:

Colloidal Silver works and is inexpensive.

Now, I never heard about Candida auris until I read this article. However, I will keep a decent supply of Colloidal Silver on hand if I ever have to deal with it. My first line of inexpensive proven defense.

Here are many links. https://duckduckgo.com/?q=will+collidial+Silver+kill+Candida+auris&t=h_&ia=web

ILuvCO2@comcast.net
  mark
April 6, 2019 9:31 pm

Mark, I use colloidal silver spray all the time, especially up in my sinuses. Works great and the buggies have no resistance. Good call. The best defense I have been using is mushroom spray, I swear by the stuff. I use myco shield by home defense. Two sprays under the tongue and good to go if getting on an airplane or whatever. No colds for two years (except for today dammit when i forgot for awhile). One of the mushrooms is chaga which can be collected up here in the northeast from birch trees and dried. Anyway, I would not be without this spray.

mark
mark
  [email protected]
April 7, 2019 9:16 pm
Gen. Chaos
Gen. Chaos
April 6, 2019 9:18 pm

Gee, if I didn’t know any better, I would suspect this is another CIA/NSA/DS bug released to keep the population in check/under control. Hydrogen peroxide won’t touch it? How about plain ol’ bleach? If bleach will not kill it, then this is an engineered bio-weapon and we are dead.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Gen. Chaos
April 7, 2019 12:05 pm

With all of the criminal activity going on at Ft. Detrick, Md. and other US government biowarfare facilities, it is inevitable that one of their “experiments” would get out of hand.

NtroP
NtroP
  MrLiberty
April 7, 2019 3:14 pm

Check out Lyme Disease, Old Lyme CT, Plum Island

ILuvCO2@comcast.net
April 6, 2019 9:19 pm

This anti-resistant bacterial/fungal shit is truly scary. I think it is planned. I think it is spread through resistance to evil pharms and chemtrails. They are trying to kill us all. Well, only 95%.

Short story. Went deer hunting with my son 6 years ago and got a bug bite on the back of my leg between my butt and knee. Itched for awhile, and then started to grow. Tried all kinds of stuff, manuka honey, garlic, essential oils, etc. but finally went to the doctor on a friday. He lanced it and packed it with antibiotic crap. By Sunday it was the size of a lime. Went to the doctor on Monday and he told me to go home, pack, and get my ass to the emergency room. Next day they removed a tangerine size piece of flesh out of the back of my leg. The worst part was when the nurses removed the packing two day later. I was screaming in my pillow.

I’m all for treating shit yourself through natural means, but this new shit is scary. How the fuck do you prep for shit like this? Fish anti-biotics just ain’t gonna fucking cut it. No way, no how.

And then there are the weaponized ticks all throughout the woods I and my dogs traverse. WTF????? I have tick bites that swell up now and then two years after I have had them. What the fuck is my body?

Maybe the answer is alcohol, lots in the blood stream to kill the mother fucker microbes….

niebo
niebo
  [email protected]
April 7, 2019 7:42 pm

the answer is alcohol

Workth fer me, man!! s,mngv

mark
mark
  [email protected]
April 7, 2019 9:06 pm

[email protected],

Wow…that’s a nightmare story!

I’m just storing/learning about and using natural means to get as proficient as I can for if…when the times comes…and it’s all I have…but your right about some threats. SBD Scary!

My recent tic short story: Had a persistent itch at the bottom of the Boy’s sack…then realized the tiny hard spot could be a tic or testicular cancer…being an optimist I was rooting for the tic…impossible to confirm without being a contortionist so my long suffering wife confirmed the good news and the invader was carefully removed.

I treated it with some dabbed peroxide to no avail as a hard red nodule formed and started growing and got larger and larger.

I get my medical care from the VA and was getting ready to make the call when I went with a Colloidal Silver Gel.

I treated it with Activz 24ppm Silver Gel. Ever so slowly the red swelling tick bite got smaller and smaller, turned into a tiny hard spot dot…so I claimed victory and stopped using the gel. Two weeks later it started swelling and growing again. Back on with the daily Activz 24ppm Silver Gel and it reversed, started shrinking and finally completely and totally disappeared after two full weeks of nightly using the gel while I slept.

Between no more colds, no more upper respiratory chest infections, a cured tooth infection story I haven’t explained, and the disappearing tick (my Boys are still thrilled) I’m turning into a Colloidal Silver junkie!

ILuvCo2
ILuvCo2
  mark
April 7, 2019 9:34 pm

Mark, I will have to check out that particular gel. I’ve been on doxycycline twice in the last few years and it worked, maybe. I HATE pharma, but killing your gut for a few months is better than lyme. Build it back up with probiotics and homemade sauerkraut. I have actually called in a non existent tick bite and got a few dosages of it to store for when tshtf. btw, took 4 ticks each off my GSD’s today, waiting for the tick collars, they are out there man.

BL
BL
  mark
April 7, 2019 9:36 pm

Mark- Never used the gel, thanks for the tip. Where do you buy yours?

mark
mark
  BL
April 7, 2019 10:12 pm

BL,

I bought 4 tubes of it on Amazon last year still have two left.

Good stuff buddy.

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=silver+Gel&ref=nb_sb_noss_2

Hmm…currently unavailable…don’t know why.

I have used this brand a well.

October Sky
October Sky
April 6, 2019 10:23 pm

I am not allegeric to bee products and am able to consume fresh bee pollen granules from a reliable farm. When consumed daily, BPGs work well in my immune system. Plus the nutrients are bioavailable once digestion begins in my mouth. BPGs are listed as antibiotic, antiviral, antifungal and more.

Steve
Steve
April 6, 2019 11:23 pm

You can’t fool with mother nature. Idiots think they know better. Well, they dont.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  Steve
April 7, 2019 1:28 am

Boom.

The blind who will not see
The blind who will not see
April 7, 2019 6:10 am

I’ll say it once, I’ll say it 1000 times. You can run but you cannot hide from the very soon coming immanent judgement of God.

Except by grace and through faith in Jesus alone. God’s only begotten Son.

His judgement has been along time coming on this evil and corrupt world and His patients with us will not last forever.

All be saved by faith in Christ Jesus or all be eternally damned apart from Him.

The blind who will not see
The blind who will not see
April 7, 2019 7:12 am

For Man so loved himself and his sin and his own selfish, corrupt ways, that he continually rejected the love of his creator and His free gift savation by grace and through faith in the gift of His only begotten Son the Christ Jesus and was eternally damned.

Man 3:16

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
April 7, 2019 9:52 am

“Simply put, fungi are evolving defenses to resist and survive modern medications.”

Nothing is evolving. The fungus is either adapting or it has been engineered in a laboratory.

ILuvCo2
ILuvCo2
  grace country pastor
April 7, 2019 10:15 pm

luv ya gcp, but evolving or adapting or engineered, who fuck cares, its all the same to the remnants. Doesn’t matter, same outcome.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  ILuvCo2
April 7, 2019 11:32 pm

Truth matters. And thank you… ?

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
April 7, 2019 10:11 am

Well isn’t this special ! OK all you leftist open border bags of shit now what ? Sure find a treatment and cure but first stop the spread by using extreme measures of health inspections before anybody or any thing (food) enters the country .
I guess this is not serious enough for CNN to cover with a vengeance after all Trump bad gun owner bad blah blah blah !

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
April 7, 2019 12:02 pm

So, its not illegal to cover up the danger you are knowingly exposing patients to? Must be nice to be part of a government-protected cartel like the western medical establishment.

niebo
niebo
April 7, 2019 8:25 pm

I’m going to venture that there are more gardeners at TBP than in a typical section of the population, so maybe some of you have noticed an up-tick in “fungal” infections of plants. I am in the mid-south and, only in the last few years have I had any significant issues – and they were/have been significant as far as impact. First, year before last, my tomatoes got sick, after unusually heavy rains in May, with “early blight”:

fungus Alternaria solani

Early Blight

End of June was down to 5 plants out of 30. Horrible yield. Then, “late blight”, starting in August, wiped out what was left:

fungus-like oomycete pathogen Phytophthora infestans.

http://vegetablemdonline.ppath.cornell.edu/factsheets/Potato_LateBlt.htm

Now I had dealt with late blight in years past, only with tomatoes, but nothing like last year. It killed everything, save for a few pepper plants. Potatoes, tomatoes of multiple heirloom varieties, and multiple peppers.

Early blight is a fungus. Late blight is “fungus-like” an oomycete:

https://schaechter.asmblog.org/schaechter/2009/11/fiv-1.html

And of course, Candida is a fungus, a yeast. And only in the last ten years have I heard of ANY candida, much less this particular “brand”, and it appears to be blowing up, along with some others:

https://www.cdc.gov/fungal/diseases/index.html

So . . . my question: what is causing the “expansion” of our exposure to fungi?

ILuvCo2
ILuvCo2
  niebo
April 7, 2019 9:04 pm

Hey Niebo, try this product. Makes plants strong enough to withstand most fungus.

https://natural-alternative.com/products/beneficial-soil-microbes/79

Tried it last year and did not get blight in tomatoes until september (and never on the hot peppers which I know you adore).

Found this listening to a geeky but great garden show here in the northeast called Paul Parent Garden Club. Unfortunately Paul passed last year but his son has taken over. Paul was the most knowledgeable garden guy I ever listened to.

A wealth of info here: https://paulparent.com/newsletter-archives

Hope that helps. If you have any info on stopping squash vine borers I am all ears. I’ve tried everything.

niebo
niebo
  ILuvCo2
April 8, 2019 2:01 pm

Thank you MUCH for the info, CO2 . . . and, no, I hate seeing the late-morning droop of the leaves of squash/zucchini/cucumber plants. Seems like that is the give-away that they are “got”. Last year I used diatomaceous earth from TSC, just sprinkled it along the vines, but can’t say if it helped because downy mildew, even treated with copper-sulfate, killed squash/zucc. Acorn squash and cucumbers, hanging on fence-row, did much better . . . until the borers got them.

Only reason I had any straight-neck in Aug/Sept is because I planted a batch in June/July.

On a positive note, okra did well.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  niebo
April 8, 2019 5:19 pm

Thanks niebo, think I will try DE again, spreading it carefully. Cant’t get it on the flowers or it will kill the beneficial bees, got gun shy when I last tried. Neighbor is a honeybee keeper, so I am blessed, but want to be respectful of their hives. Will also be more diligent with insecticidal soap. I also try to kill the borer flies when I can. They look like this:
comment image

niebo
niebo
  ILuvCO2
April 8, 2019 7:45 pm

Have never seen a live one, thank you.

I hear you re the bees – have you seen some of the recent discoveries re their “alzheimer’s like” illness that they (THEY) think is causing CCD?

Also – the soap I use is two drops of non-ultra lemon joy and water. Kills stinkbugs in a hurry.

niebo
niebo
  niebo
April 8, 2019 8:16 pm

And, again, re the DE, I can’t say that it actually worked, may have just got lucky, AND it also kills ants, which DO pollinate. Have never had them eat any of my crops, so I was kinda hesitant to use it. I also can’t say that I killed off a bunch of ants, either, because, well, they’re ants and their little carcasses are tiny. . . .

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  niebo
April 8, 2019 11:14 pm

Thanks, niebo, please elaborate on the discoveries on causes of colony collapse disorder. pesticides? plastics? oh wait, I know, it’s global fucking climate change! lol!

niebo
niebo
  ILuvCO2
April 9, 2019 12:15 am

No . . . it’s probably exactly what you might expect:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150608082933.htm

http://www.thefoundationforlivingmedicine.org/where_have_all_the_honey_bees_gone

ALUMINUM in its elemental form is found NOWHERE in nature; we have mined if for a hundred years from alumina or aluminum oxide and “refined” it onto the periodic chart. . . it is so toxic to EVERYTHING that – due to the hand of God or the random act of evolvolutionism – it has NEVER been found in nature.

The same used to be said of mercury, until they discovered droplets of it cinnabar ore -the red pigment that native Americans used to create red pigments in cave paintings.

The same is/was true of elemental fluorine, until it was discovered in 2012:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/07/120705172050.htm

And, they (THEY), as an “-ide compound”, add it to our water and wonder why we all have cancer:

https://www.acsh.org/news/2016/02/14/fluorine-element-hell

Just sayin’

. . .’preciate you, brother

niebo
niebo
  niebo
April 9, 2019 12:20 am

BORON neutralizes sodium flouride in water; i add it to all the water that goes to my beasts and food. Ground uptakes boron and any residual ‘ide compounds, renders them harmless. A year ago we buried a 13 year old great dane. The vet told us at ten that his days were numbered, and that SOB just kept acting like a puppy until the day heart failure got him. just saying. Hate to be “that guy” but . . . MAYBE they are trying to kill us. Lyme is just one of many….

niebo
niebo
  ILuvCO2
April 9, 2019 12:35 am

. . .and one more thing(s) re: Lyme . . . dandelion root, Andrographis, resvertrol, cat’s claw, echinacea (in rounds, ten days on, twenty off), black cumin oil, and TURMERIC (made my own black pepper caps to take with it) . . . have not had to take doxy, clav-mocks(sic), or . . . ? . . . been so long I don’t remember.

Of course, this is not medicinacational advice, cuz I am a high-functioning alcoholic who smokes catnip, chews sage, and licks frogs, so what the fark do I knoooow any67 frowihnf how, righto?

niebo
niebo
  ILuvCO2
April 9, 2019 12:36 am

But hell, if I die in my sleep, I want the info I have gleened out there and Fuck* EVERYBODY who opposes.

TBP rocks

October Sky
October Sky
  niebo
April 7, 2019 10:20 pm

Along with the recommendation from IluvCO2, mustard greens might be key to healthy soil.

HOW WE ARE USING MUSTARD GREENS TO FIGHT SOUTHERN BLIGHT

We reached out to out to Dr. Steven Rideout, director of Virginia Tech’s Eastern Shore Agricultural Research Center , to ask for his expertise on this subject. Rideout’s focus of study is southern blight, and in September 2016 he began to help us to test organic methods that will eliminate this contagious disease. Our objective is to “cleanse” the soil by taking advantage of the natural gas released by certain cover crops, such as mustard greens (Brassica juncea) and rapeseed (Brassica napus), to suppress growth of some soil-borne diseases, including southern blight. The whole process is called biofumigation and is a method that has been scientifically proven to result in a more enhanced microbial biomass in the soil and eventually higher crop yield.

Southern Blight & a Natural Solution

In a similar region as you, I have not faced blight yet, but I am going to plant as much mustard greens as I can this year. I love to eat Swiss chard and kale, sweet potatoes and tomatoes. Plus I attempt to protect them with lavender and borage. Now I am going to add mustard greens. I aslo choose to amend my soil with Agrowinn-Minerals Rock Dust (volcanic).

Anonymous
Anonymous
  October Sky
April 8, 2019 5:27 pm

Interesting stuff on the mustard greens. Wish I could just grow them under the tomato plants, but from the article it seems you have to till them in and cover them. I have gone all no-till, as tilling destroys the soil biogenome. But I will be researching more about cover crops, especially winter kill crops so I don’t have to till them in.

mark
mark
  niebo
April 8, 2019 12:29 am

niebo, IluvCo2 & October Sky,

Three bullseyes in a row. I had a horrible loss of plants last year almost identical to niebo’s experience. My first experience with that type and size of loss. Many in the area were complaining of the same experience at the feed store.

Much insight and good tips…MUSTARD GREENS Protilizer here I come.

niebo, I’ll limp over to the store tomorrow and try not to scare anyone while making my purchases.

niebo
niebo
  mark
April 8, 2019 2:07 pm

haha sorry, Mark, was just making a funny. CO2 fired back a good one at me at the bernie article, lol funny

niebo
niebo
  mark
April 8, 2019 2:08 pm

And great info, OS, thanks!