Part 1. 2005
...I returned to my plant experiments only in 2003 when my wife, Svetlana, designed a park and magnolia garden and
began to lay them out on our estate in France. For this specific purpose she did extensive research on the diverse types of trees,
conditions for their habitat, compatibility between various breeds etc., down to the finest details. She then created an
amazing design for the park and magnolia garden. We have since amassed a unique collection of trees in our park. Some trees
are rare in Europe while others grow in only one locale in Europe – our park and magnolia garden. In particular, there are
numerous rare breeds in our garden of magnolias, where about four hundred different types were collected; some
specimens exist only as a single replica in Europe. In fact, our magnolia garden is unique in Europe where so many types of
magnolias are collected. However, many of the plants are young, so it would require decades before our park
and garden would attain their full beauty and grandeur. My wife, Svetlana, asked me whether it would be possible to
intervene in any way so that she could still, in her lifetime, admire their beauty and the fruits of our labor.
This reminded me about a past experiment with an indoor plant that had grown and flowered within the space of a few
months, while all its outdoor counterparts took five years to bloom; and how, following this I created an external field that
amplified the biological coefficient by 30 percent in the fields of the USSR. This gave me the idea of creating a permanent
generator similar to the external field described above and burying it in the bowels of the earth beneath our castle. No sooner
said than done. Thus, in 2003, I created an external field generator that provided a biological coefficient close to 30 percent and
placed it under our castle. Since then we have been overseeing the results of the generator’s influence on plants in the park and
garden...
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