About the seventh sense of animals

Morphogenetic fields, telepathy, earth radiation, magnetic fields and moon phases.

A morphogenetic field.......
is a "global consciousness". We simply call it instinct, without really realising what a highly complicated marvel of nature we are dealing with here.
According to Rupert Sheldrake, the morphogenetic field is a kind of database of the universe. according to this, " the learning of a certain behaviour by a certain number of members of a group is automatically transferred to all members of this group, even if there is no spatial and temporal contact between them".

Back in the 1960s, I was unconsciously confronted with this phenomenon, which was unknown to me at the time. At that time I had a very good Rauhaarteckel bitch who was known far and wide for her work on the red track. For professional reasons, I had to leave my dog and my parents' house. we were 500 kilometres apart. Visits home were limited to approximately every 6 to 8 weeks. Every time I visited home without prior notice, my mum would say:"I knew you were coming, the dog showed me."
A few minutes before I arrived, my dog jumped to the door, barked and whimpered. I didn't take what my mum told me very seriously. Until she got a visit from her sister-in-law and suddenly said to her:"Klaus is coming soon."The sister-in-law didn't see or hear anything from me until the door opened a few minutes later - and I was there. She just stammered : "How is that possible?"

A few years later, I got a hunting opportunity that lasted for years in a very good red deer hunting ground in Styria. I also helped with the winter feeding. When the professional hunter and I drove to the feeding area in his off-road vehicle, the red deer were already moving towards the feeding area and came into view straight away. We both had the same car, a Suzuki LJ 80. One day, the hunter said to me:" Pleasedrive ahead and make preparations for the feeding, I have to get to a funeral quickly." So I drove to the feeding site and parked my vehicle in the same place as the hunter parked it every day. The initial preparatory work was exactly the same as his. Only the game didn't come into sight. It was only after a good hour that I saw red deer. Before I picked up my binoculars, which were hanging on a post a few steps away, I heard the hunter's car. The deer had heard him long before I did. Since then, I had been thinking about the connections between my dog, the deer and telepathy in animals, as I hadn't heard much about morphic fields before.

However, these positive incidents could also have negative effects, e.g. if the deer or another animal has to fear for its life. Animals often remember negative experiences for the rest of their lives. An acquaintance of mine took his hunting dog, which was only a few months old, with him when he checked the traps he had set. He made the young dog"sit " a few metres in front of the trap with slight coercion.Years later, the acquaintance let hunters and beaters run out during a driven hunt. When the dog suddenly "sat" without any command, he remembered the trap check from earlier.

How can we prevent our game from becoming more and more stealthy?

While hunting, we unconsciously come across this research, which has not yet been proven in biology, by the Englishman Rupert Sheldrake. I try to compare my years of observations while hunting with Mr Sheldrake's research.

In any case, many of his research results coincide with our observations, which are usually made subconsciously while hunting.

My main concern is to come to terms with this fact, as I hear it almost every day:"Game is becoming increasingly stealthy and cautious." Our human instinct is almost atrophied, but our intellect is globally more mature. But the mind doesn't get us much further during the hunt. Hunting instinct is more in demand here. You have to think a little more about the behaviour of the game . Some generations of hunters before us had fewer problems. They could not rely on the latest weapon technology and night vision devices and artificial light sources that penetrated the darkness.

Anyone who has ever hunted with a Bushman in Africa or an Indian in North America will have realised how helpless we modern hunters are compared to a native whose instincts have not yet completely atrophied. For example, he sees tracks where we see nothing at all. It smells the game, recognises mysterious vocalisations, calculates escape directions and distances etc. Today's civilised hunting guides, for example in Africa, would be helpless if they had not learnt from the Bushmen's instinct. One of my clients was speechless when an Aborigine showed him that he had felt a tasty lizard 30 cm under the desert sand. No tracks, no changes in the sand and the native actually pulled the lizard out.

Here are some examples of unsolved mysteries that we experience while hunting.

A herd of sows, a pack of roe deer, a herd of stags or a herd of chamois flees or is in the troll, as soon as the lead animal is in sight, they all stop, even if they are running in front of the lead animal and have no visual contact with it.

Or we sit on the high stand with absolutely certain wind and completely silent. Nevertheless, the game throws up during grazing and secures exactly in our direction. (The game feels observed by the morphic fields).

The reverse case. You are stalking through the forest and have the feeling that you are being stared at by a piece of game. Especially if you are stalking noisily. If you are stalking quietly, the game will be gone anyway. Out of the corner of your eye, you suddenly see a piece of game standing in the cover staring at you.

You only really realise this phenomenon of morphic fields when you observe a flock of starlings, pigeons, ducks or other birds flying synchronously from a high seat. They all change direction at the same time in a fraction of a second and yet their wings do not touch. You often see the same thing on television with large schools of fish.

Morphic or morphogenetic fields are already present in the DNA of plants, animals and humans (almost atrophied in humans). It has been found that game living under constant hunting pressure passes this potential danger on to unborn life . This means that when a newborn is born, it knows immediately that its life is in danger. The opposite is true in the case of wild game. This has also been experienced in research on big game both inside and outside national parks.

Almost every week we hear and see in the press about wild boar and foxes that enter towns and villages without any fear. In my opinion, it's not just the prospect of getting food more easily here, but much more the realisation that they can't be pursued here with a weapon. I myself know of a case in a very small farming village where foxes rear their prey under log piles, even though there are ideal forests with fox dens all around.

The constant checking of fox and badger dens by local hunters with earth hounds was simply too much for the foxes and so they moved to places that were less dangerous.

The animals' memory for time is also almost completely unknown to us. But a research result by a certain Dr Gustav Eckstein, a psychology professor from England, should give us food for thought. He found that his cat knew exactly that the "old man" always had his day off on Mondays and that she knew that she got something from his snack at 7.30 pm. Otherwise, the cat was a stray. The professor noticed that she left the estate every Monday (after her snack) at 7.45 pm on the dot and he followed her. In the nearby women's hospital, she jumped onto a certain window sill where she watched the nurses playing bingo for a full two hours during the break. After the game, she disappeared again until the next Monday-the next Monday and so on, always at exactly the same time. Other cats in this small town also knew exactly when the fishmonger arrived every fortnight - only on Tuesdays just before 12 noon. As if on an invisible command, all the cats in the neighbourhood were there on time.

I only mention this because I am often asked whether our wild boar can read the hunters' car licence plates. In other words, whenever we enter our hunting ground at the weekend, the game is late, very cautious or doesn't come out at all.

As an example, I will give you a typical case of early warning in a good wild boar district. A hunting ground in the new federal states and the leaseholders live in the Ruhr area. The hunting tenants call:"You absolutely have to come, the sows are causing a lot of damage every night." The tenant or tenants travel there with a few friends on a moonlit weekend.... and... there was not a sow to be seen, despite a permanent hide. Despondent, they went home again on Sunday evening and on Monday the calls started again:"Lots of sows are back and causing a lot of damage."

The different behaviour of the game when a car approaches is also serious. I have observed for years that the . Behaviour when a farmer checks his fields in the evening than when a hunter in a car is on his way to a hide.

Just think about the start of the roebuck hunt. You have regularly seen a huntable buck until the end of April and then where is it on 1 May when the shooting season begins?

After years of observation, I've realised that the deer know when it's the weekend. I have asked farmers to keep a conscious eye out for game while they are working in the fields. I was then told that they had seen this or that game at 10 - 12 or 14 o'clock. These reports coincided with my knowledge of the area. During the week, I did the cross-check with success. At the weekend, however, when one or two hunting guests arrived, the game was almost invisible. Once the guest had left and I checked the hide a day or two later, the buck or bucks were standing near their stand as if on a platter.

It is therefore important for us to give the game plenty of rest. We had the best example after the political change. Before the fall of communism in the new federal states, deer would often run out into the meadows and fields in broad daylight and at an escape distance of around 80 metres. That was the danger zone for the shotgun slugs used in the former GDR. I travelled to the new federal states immediately after reunification and was very surprised to see deer, fallow deer, wild boar, mouflon, roe deer and fox in broad daylight.

Then the hunters came from the West and leased hunting grounds, some of which were very cheap. And now comes the big puzzle for me. Within a very short time, the game from Rügen to the borders of the "former West" knew that the bullets were now flying differently, namely much further and the flight distance immediately changed to 300m to 400m .This was so serious that I jokingly said: "I think the deer over there already has a mobile phone".

I wanted to find out for sure and leased a hunt in the new federal states and tried to hunt the way hunters hunted there before reunification. The success was astounding. A lawyer I knew (government hunting adviser) happened to drive through my hunting ground on business during the day. He rang me up and said: ,, Now I'm driving through the most beautiful and game-rich corners of Thuringia, but without seeing any game and I come through your hunt and see game standing everywhere, how do you do that. "

Well, it wasn't a big secret. I just gave the game plenty of rest and hunted selectively, mainly with the help of decoy hunting . It changed abruptly after five years when I hired a new gamekeeper who had a lot of time on his hands and was constantly travelling around the area. From then on, the game felt totally insecure and started to come out at dusk or at night.

You probably know the old and wise saying:

" A hunting ground can be stalked empty quicker than it can be shot empty."

Night vision devices and other artificial light sources do the rest to make the game even more stealthy.

At one of my seminars in the Ruhr region, three hunters approached me and described the following case: An old boar was observed several times as it carefully pushed its head out of the thicket at a hide and immediately looked at the blind 80 metres away. If the pulpit was occupied and the window only a few centimetres open, he was gone. But if the gap was closed, he came out - but always keeping an eye on the window. It was impossible to open the window while he was present. Every report by a German wildlife biologist states that sows are only able to recognise or eye something accurately at a maximum distance of 40 metres. In my opinion, this is not true. If I contradict the wildlife biologists, I am met with suspicion. This means that, especially in Germany, there must be proof that can be read in black and white. For me, there are only two possibilities in this case. Either the wild boar has had a negative experience as a young boar or as a stag, or it is surrounded by a strong morphic field.

We are dealing with borderline research here. For example, even the school researchers cannot explain why the seventeen-year cicadas from North America live exactly seventeen years in the soil as wingless larvae and then, exactly after seventeen years, almost all of them hatch on the same day and at the same time to shed their skin and begin their wedding dance as winged cicadas. For four weeks, they lay their eggs and die. A few thousand kilometres to the south, the cicada only needs 13 years. Researchers still do not know why.

We could write pages and pages about this internal clock of animals. Another serious example. North of the coast of the Mexican state of Tamicco, over 40,000 sea turtles arrive every year to lay their tasty eggs. From the endless expanses of the ocean, they find their "regular spot" within metres . Here's an interesting fact: coyotes from the hinterland often travel up to a hundred kilometres to arrive at the same time as the turtles. However, if the sea turtles are delayed due to unknown obstacles (changes in ocean currents, storms, etc.), the coyotes also arrive on the coast later. A telepathic masterpiece. Otherwise, you don't see any coyotes on the coast.

But let's stay in our latitudes with the sophisticated consciousness of nature. Just think of the well-known saying: "A good year for mice is a good year for foxes." How does the uterus know when it receives sperm in January whether there will be many mice in the spring? The same applies to the breeding of birds of prey.

In this context, it is perhaps easier to explain why the sows leave their home territory despite being fed and fattened with acorns. You may only have the sessile oak in your territory and the sows need the ingredients of the English oak, for example, at a certain time. They instinctively know where these can be found and often migrate many kilometres to feed there temporarily, only to return to their home territory later. This also solves the riddle that keeps every wild boar hunter busy: "Despite well-stocked feeders ,at a certain point in autumnthe sows move afew metres past a feeder without accepting it."

Above all, I would like to draw the reader's attention to the fact that it is worthwhile to think a little more about the mysterious instincts of the animals, although there are enormous limits here.

The phase of the moon has just as much influence on the behaviour of the game as the bad weather zones, even if these are still 500 km away, but that is also a chapter in itself.

Just one example: On the afternoon of 12 November 1972, foresters, hunters and farmers observed that roe deer, sows, red deer and fallow deer in northern Lower Saxony were becoming very restless. They left the forest and fled into the open fields close to the villages. Nobody could explain what this meant. At this time, 1,500 kilometres away, a severe storm was brewing over Ireland, which only arrived in northern Lower Saxony the next day and uprooted 60 million trees at 170 km/h. Even the barometer still showed nothing unusual. Even the barometer showed nothing out of the ordinary. A few packs of wild boar also took refuge in low thickets without any large trees nearby. Although so many trees fell, hardly any game was harmed.

Whenever I invited an important guest onto the buck, I always asked at my parents' house, which was 500 kilometres west of my hunting ground, what the weather was like there, because the electronic tension field, e.g. of a thunderstorm front, is felt by the wild animals and makes them restless and many a "sure-fire" buck does not show up.

If you are interested in the influence of morphic fields and the telepathy of animals, I can recommend this book: "The Seventh Sense of Animals" by Rupert Sheldrake, published by Ullstein Verlag. Unfortunately, the book: "The Sixth Sense of Animals" by Günter Karweina is no longer available.

The minds of many people in the third millennium are already atrophying, partly due to the unlimited flood of opinions presented by the media. On the other hand, technology and electronics are achieving incredible things. For many people, however, technology means that their innate common sense is largely no longer in demand. Independent thinking is being pushed back more and more. The best example is that a young waitress needs a calculator for three jobs nowadays, as she has already lost the ability to do mental arithmetic.

The generations after us will probably have to fall back on a certain instinct if, for example, oil can no longer be extracted or drinking water becomes scarce. Over the millennia, some human cultures have already perished because they destroyed their own livelihoods. However, most animals have survived for millions of years. In just a few decades, we will realise that you cannot eat and drink stocks and money. (See the current rapid economic growth in China, which is already experiencing drinking water problems).

The book by Jared Daimond on this subject is particularly recommended: ,. Collapse", why societies survive or perish.

A few examples that reach the limits of school research.

A few years ago, a factual report went around the world that the cat "Stromy " ran 3,218 kilometres from Solwang in California to Georgetown in Minnesota to get back to his beloved farm after his mistress had moved. He crossed all the obstacles and lost half his weight.

Two years ago I made tape recordings of the deer rut in a large deer enclosure near Salzburg. The 70-year-old owner of the enclosure told me about a recent incident. A stag born in his creel became an unloved bully from the age of 7. He attacked everything in his path. The owner decided to sell it. The stag was anaesthetised in the evening and taken to a fence 24 km away as the crow flies. After the stag woke up from the anaesthetic, it leapt over a two-metre-high fence and was back at its home enclosure the next day. It had crossed both the motorway and the Salzburg-Vienna railway line, swum through the Salzach and left other federal roads behind it without any damage.

The "intrusion" of Bruno the brown bear into our civilised Germany caused great excitement. As long as there are bears in Italy, Austria and neighbouring Eastern Europe, they will keep coming back to Germany. It is not without significance that we repeatedly come across the following names: Bärenschlucht - Bärenklamm - Bärenkreuz - Bärenspitz - Gasthaus zum Bären etc.

In my opinion, these are ancient remote changes that must be associated with strong earth rays, earth magnetic fields and, in some cases, special underground watercourses. As a radiaesthesiologist, I deal with subterranean watercourses, earth rays and the like. Whether my dowsing rod, my pendulum or my one-handed rod - I can locate any wild change. I'm sure you've already experienced new forest plantations being fenced in. Depending on the size, a forced change was then created. Nevertheless, the forest owners were surprised that the forced crossing was not accepted but perhaps 20 metres away the game tried to get under the fence. Here I could have levelled out the forced crossing to the exact metre. I can prove this anywhere and at any time. When a moose tried to cross the motorway near Bayreuth in 2006, Bavarian television brought me to the "crime scene". Here, too, I was able to confirm and follow the elk's path through the pendulum to the amazement of the TV crew.

By the way, all animals use game trails. If you approach a wood ant heap with a pendulum or rod, you will immediately realise that it is built on a crossroads of earth rays and that the paths of the workers from the heap only go in the directions in which the earth rays run.

Earthquake early warning

The interesting book: " When thesnakes awaken" by Helmut Tributsch is unfortunately out of print. Tributsch was studying natural science in South America when news reached him in 1976 that his parents' house in Friuli had been completely destroyed by an earthquake. He travelled there immediately, but found his relatives alive. Since then, he has been interested in the early warning system of animals that can sense earthquakes in advance. He researched and enquired about actual events all over the world and interviewed eyewitnesses and contemporary witnesses. Just one example from the 272-page book.

In Friuli, a whole herd of stags and deer were suddenly seen running out of the forest towards the village, unafraid of people. Horses broke free from their stables and dashed off into the open countryside. Cows and pigs screamed terribly. Rats left their hiding places. No one could explain this behaviour of the various animals and seven hours later the severe earthquake struck the Friuli region.

I myself was in Monte Negro at the beginning of the eighties. Older people there told me that they had observed unusual behaviour from the snakes. They crawled out of their hiding places onto the terraces of the houses and shortly afterwards there was a severe earthquake in the region.

And what about the 2004 tsunami in the Indian Ocean? Almost all the wild animals were able to save themselves and flee inland because their early warning system worked.

When it comes to the mysterious instinct of the animal world, we humans are still faced with a great puzzle.

Moon phases (basic rules for hunting, forestry and gardening enthusiasts)

Fertilise only when the moon is full and waning. (Fields, gardens, but also houseplants). The soil absorbs the fertiliser immediately. This prevents it from being washed away into the nearest rivers

Non-combustible wood (rioting in pulpits) is felled on 1 March after sunset, regardless of the position of the moon or the sign of the zodiac

Non-rotting wood (perches) should be felled on 7.1 / 25.1 / 31.1 / 1.2 and 2.2, if the moon is still waning, the wood will not rot or worm. Wood felled from 31.1 to 2.2 will become rock-hard with age. The last two days of March with a waning moon and in the zodiac sign of Pisces are also absolutely certain, but this rarely happens. Alternatively, the days mentioned above

Setfences and poles (high perches) on the waning moon or the new moon. They strengthen themselves

Non-shrink wood (pulpit boards) is felled on St Thomas' Day, 21 December between 11am and 12pm. This is the best felling day of all. After that, it is essential to only fell when the moon is waning

Tear-resistant wood should be felled at the same time as the Christmas trees (3 days before the 11th moon) Alternatively, 25 March, 29 June and 31 December. Wood felled on these three days should still retain some of its top in order to carry the sap to the top and lay the top downhill on a slope.

Christmas trees and branches for Advent felled on the 3rd day before the eleventh moon retain their needles until after Easter. Store in a cool place after felling. Spruce trees naturally lose their needles more quickly than fir trees.

Onlyprune plants and hedges (cut out high seats) when the moon is waning

Remove weeds when the moon is waning. The counter-test is easy to do when the moon is waxing, all weeds sprout again immediately.

When sowing and planting lettuce, leeks and spinach, always choose the waning moon and also pay attention to the leaf days: Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces.

The same principle also applies to celery, carrots, onions and radishes. Pay attention to root days with a waning moon: Virgo, Taurus, Capricorn, You can't pay attention to everything for various reasons. However, the phases of the moon should always be observed. You only need to water very little.

Pruningfruit trees on a waning moon

Grafting when the moon is waxing, shortly before the full moon. It is best if this phase falls in the zodiac sign of Aries, Leo or Sagittarius (fruit days)

Treatdiseased or stunted trees immediately before or at new moon, i.e. remove the tip above the next suitable side branch. The side branch will develop into a new tip. This also applies to flowers or houseplants. Doing the same just before or during a full moon will cause the plant to die

Seedlings (hunters should tell their hunting companions) are planted on a maiden day with a waxing moon without any problems. If a plant does not grow properly, cut off the tip at the new moon. By observing this planting time, you also avoid game browsing

Clearing and thinning out (clearing days) (stalking paths) 3 April / 30 July and the Achazi day on 22 June. If the moon is waning, nothing grows back and the roots usually rot.

Operations should only be carried out when the moon is waning.

Theinfluence of the moon phases on washing, hair cutting etc. has been proven. I am only concerned here with the influences and effects in connection with the outdoors.

Basics: When the moon is waning, the juices draw more to the root, the earth is receptive, it breathes in. When the moon is waxing, the juices and above-ground growth increase and exhalation predominates.

Hunting bucks, stags and other gameis difficult when the moon is almost full to full. For many animals, the full moon is the trigger for reproduction. It is the best "mating time" par excellence, as the body "holds on" and "stores" better. Our game is so active at night during the mating season at full moon that it dozes off tired and lethargic during the day. The success of barking or roaring is low.

Anyone who doubts this should think about why corals only reproduce at full moon, why the larvae of the mayfly on Lake Victoria (inland lake, independent of the tides) only hatch at full moon, why bristle worms on the open sea only reproduce at full moon. For the sake of completeness, I would like to mention the mating and migratory behaviour of migratory eels and golden hamsters as further examples that have been scientifically proven.

All grazing animals (including roe deer and stags) react more violently and frighteningly at full moon. They are more nervous than usual and develop an extraordinary sense of danger. Every horse owner can confirm that their charges are overly nervous during a full moon and often react in panic.

The hunting dog (any dog), whether young or old, copes best with a change of owner during a new moon and gets used to its new owner more quickly.

It is easier to teach a dog a training programme when the moon is waxing. You should demand what you have learnt when the moon is waning. This also explains why hunting dog handlers often despair at the test. The dog has mastered everything before the test but has failed during the test.

An ailing or weak dog is easier to nurse back to health when the moon is waxing and the healing process will be quicker and more successful.

At the new moon, all game comes out more peaceful and calmer. This is particularly noticeable with roe deer and stags. If you are wondering why on certain evenings the game comes out without caution and starts grazing immediately and on other days you observe how the game secures itself at the edge of the forest for a long time before it comes out, you should look at your lunar calendar at home. He will be surprised how this rhythm applies in nature.