The Comfrey plant is going to come to the rescue of my chemtrail plants and trees!!


For several years now, since 2023, I have been dealing with the drastic increase in the Chemtrail program, the so-called blocking of sunlight due to global warming (a hoax). My permaculture garden suffered heavily from this: dead shrubs, trees, and plants that refused to germinate, and the extinction of honeybees.

After a call on my podcast, I received the tip to introduce oyster mushroom fungi into the garden. I did this on a large scale in the spring of 2025, but the very dry spring meant that my water supply soon fell short. However, I saw them popping up in my pyramid greenhouse, so I have high hopes that these fungi will still manifest their heavy metal cleanup action this spring.

But I discovered more; in a series of videos about perennial permaculture plants that I published on www.uitdaging.net, I first discovered a forgotten green manure: white clover.

White clover (Trifolium repens) is an excellent choice as a green manure thanks to its unique ability to fix nitrogen from the air via symbiotic bacteria in its root nodules.

This naturally enriches the soil without chemical fertilization and improves soil structure through its deep roots, which aerate the soil and prevent it from drying out or eroding.

The plant grows creeping and forms a dense, low-growing mat that effectively suppresses weeds. It is hardy, blooms from May to September with white, spherical flowers, and attracts bees, bumblebees, and other beneficial pollinators, which increases biodiversity in the garden.

White clover is suitable for almost all soil types, provided the pH is at least 4.5, and requires little maintenance: occasional mowing and watering during drought is sufficient.

Sow it between April and September on bare, weed-free soil. The sowing density is approximately 100 grams per 100 m². This plant is ideal for use between vegetable beds, paths, or as a ground cover in the garden between plants.

Another valuable additional discovery I made was the Comfrey plant. But… all websites were full of warnings. The plant was said to self-seed extremely and become impossible to control in your garden; moreover, lab and animal studies showed that the much-praised thousands-of-years-old medical applications were highly toxic and were even banned in various countries.

My healthy skepticism regarding this led me to the conclusion that I needed to investigate this thoroughly, because if there is so much opposition to an ancient remedy, then they have something to hide.

Firstly, the comfrey plant is an excellent fertilizer for your garden; thanks to its roots growing more than 2 meters deep, it brings up nutrients that are free of heavy metals, and therefore free from the influence of Chemtrails. The fast-growing plant releases NPK fertilizers containing the three most important nutrients for plants: nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K). These elements play crucial roles in the growth and health of plants.

There is a special version of the comfrey plant that does not self-seed, but I deliberately chose the common natural version because removing the flowers in time protects against unwanted self-seeding; however, for the time being, I actually want that in every part of my garden and on every tree and shrub.

About medical applications (thousands of years)

Reports on human toxicity
Although there have been no recent reports of adverse effects from comfrey, several cases of veno-occlusive disease (VOD) linked to comfrey ingestion were reported more than ten years ago.

Limitations of toxicity research
The conclusion that comfrey is not safe for human internal use is primarily based on studies in which high levels of purified PAs were administered to rodents. No systematic toxicity tests or clinical trials have been conducted. Although PA poisoning can occur in humans, this is usually a result of consuming plants other than comfrey.

Source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0165614702021065

My ‘connecting the dots’ suspicion led me to this beautiful plant, which benefits both the garden and the health benefits that people try to keep away from natural remedies that are unprecedented in the medical pill trade—of which, incidentally, only 11% have scientific double-blind substantiation—I read in a now-removed article from BMJ. (Google Translate at the site (right colomn) )

Medical applications
https://www.learningherbs.com/blog/comfrey-uses#gsc.tab=0


Take back your own authority, don’t be afraid of all the negativity, don’t be discouraged. Think about all the things you can do to process what comes your way. Above all, detox, both physically and mentally, because: “We are all part of the universe, and consider all the thoughts you send out and receive.”