Living Water

Posted by on Sep 4, 2011 in Featured | 1 comment

Living Water

‘Living water sustains life sweetly, dying water is deadly’

Life on earth is sustained by living air and water cycles operating symbiotically. Driven by solar energies, they are the processes enabling  biological life on earth. Without fresh air and water we would surely die.

Air and water are continually refreshed through evaporation, transpiration, condensation, flow and seepage cycles.  Inseparable in the environment, air and water cycles are linked to habitats, communities and their watersheds.

Living water refers to all the live moisture occuring naturally in the air, on the surface and in ground. It is highly mutuable. It can become atmospheric moisture, like clouds, mists and fogs; or take on liquid form in aquifers, springs, streams, seas, rivers or rain; or it can become solid snow and ice. Each time living water transforms from one state to another it exchanges energy in ways that help to regulate our weather and moderate our climate.

From the perspective of growing food, fibre and forests, the secret of living water lies in the energy it carries and distributes throughout the landscape. Traditional indigenous cultures in the Asia-Pacific are based on this perception. They farm teraqueous habitats saturated with water which helps regenerate living air and water cycles.

 

One Comment

  1. hi,i think its most excellant what you are doing and i would like to be more involved
    richard

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