Ayşe continued to explain with the story of how a farmer’s plough had broken on a hard stone poking up from the soil.

“I wonder,” interjected Arther, “if the farmer had been using a Schauberger bio-plough, would it would still have broken?”

Arther was off on a thought tangent, though the bio-spiral plough was designed to duplicate the technique of the mole and perhaps it might have been a more robust structure. What a fascinating man Viktor Schauberegr was http://schauberger.co.uk/

 

…. anyway, the stone that broke the plough turned out to be more interesting than just another big stone.

 

This was c.1963, the year J. F. Kennedy left us while Ned joined us and the year the Göbeklitepe site was first noted in a survey conducted by İstanbul University and the University of Chicago.

 

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