Natural water

Water is of great importance to humans, animals and plants. Humans consist of approx. 3/4 of water, which is why the quality of the water we consume is crucial to our well-being.

Only in nature do we find the pure and energy-filled water created by the way it moves. The water becomes clean when it has been a walk through the soil process, where it is cleaned in the rotary process, and is pushed up through the layers again when it encounters warmer water.

In the various soil layers the water passes, it is cleansed and supplied with necessary minerals. The ascent process takes place in a swirling pattern - nature's spiral circuit.

Like everything else in nature, water does not move in straight lines but in spiral circuits.

The water "dies", becomes unstructured, during transport in straight pipes and through sharp turns, as in our water delivery systems.

Since water is the most dissolving product we know, it can also dissolve unwanted substances in, for example, our body. The addition of, for example, chlorine, fluorine and other chemistry and technical treatment of the water can have a negative effect on the water's reconstructive properties, just as certain pumps and pipe systems can affect the water quality in the wrong direction.