Beyond the Nutrition Facts Chart, Part II: Secret of Natural Energy

salmon swimming Almost a century ago, Viktor Schauberger, an author who wrote about the Secrets of Natual Energy, studied the trout’s ability to jump up high waterfalls with little apparent effort (the same is true of salmon). After observing a large trout confronting a waterfall during spawning time on a moonlit early spring night, Schauberger wrote that a large fish:

“…danced in great twisting movements in the undulating water, as it swam quickly to and fro. Then, as suddenly, the large trout disappeared in the jet of the waterfall which glistened like falling metal. I saw it fleetingly under a conically-shaped stream of water, dancing in a wild spinning movement … It then came out of this spinning movement and floated motionlessly upwards … reaching the upper curve of the waterfall. There, in the fast-flowing water, with a vigorous tail movement, it disappeared.” (excerpt from the book, entitled Living Water, by Olof Alexandersson).

Schauberger used this phenomenon as evidence to his theory that trout use some unknown source of energy within the water. The rushing water creates a whirlpool or vortex in the opposite direction of the water flow, and the trout seeks out this energy flow and uses nature’s whirlpool of energy to jump the waterfall.

The high energy form of water is indeed one of the great Secrets of Nature. Part of the process in creating the electron-rich, stable structure of AquaNew’s Watt-Ahh® involves a vortex similar to that of Nature. The result is that the wilderness energy of water is captured inside a bottle for you to drink.

 Read Part I: Beyond the Nutrition Facts Chart: Molecular Water Structure

*Alexandersson, Olof. Living Water: Viktor Schauberger and the Secrets of Natural Energy. Gateway Books. 1979