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What Is Orgonite? Beginner’s Guide to Cloudbusters

Orgonite in one paragraph

Orgonite is a modern composite: synthetic resin, metal shavings or powders, and a quartz crystal under mechanical pressure while the resin cures. The piezoelectric quartz sees stress as the resin shrinks; the metals create distributed interfaces. In our workshop language, well-made orgonite behaves like a small, durable field engine you can bury, pocket, or mount on a mast.

DOR, POR, and plain English

Writers in the Reich and post-Reich traditions contrast dead orgone (DOR) with positive orgone (POR). You can treat those labels as directional shorthand rather than laboratory SI units. What matters operationally is whether people perceive an improvement in how a place feels after balanced gifting: sleep, birdsong, weather openness, and human nervous systems are the messy instruments we actually have.

Craft quality beats crystal woo

A flashy crystal on Instagram means nothing if resin never reached full cure or metal floated to one side. Beginners should learn to read finish: dull tacky surfaces, puddles of unmixed hardener, and hollow knocking sounds are honest failure modes. Fix the pour before arguing metaphysics.

Three classic shapes

Towerbuster (TB)

A small muffin-sized piece you can drop near a mast, fence line, or gutter downspout. It is the entry tool. Cheap to make in bulk, easy to hide, hard to kill with weather if you pour cleanly.

Holy hand grenade (HHG)

A cone or multi-facet desktop or garden piece with more mass and often a tighter feel in the hand. Good when you want a stronger local node without building a full mast unit.

Cloudbuster

A tall array of parallel pipes mounted to a heavy orgonite base and grounded into water according to the classic Croft pattern. People use cloudbusters when they want to work sky-scale openness rather than only a single tower footprint. This is activist weather work in the tradition Reich named and others adapted.

What a cloudbuster is not

It is not a toy you wave at clouds for Instagram. It is a serious instrument that ties into water grounding and large metal mass. If you buy rather than build, learn mounting, earthing, and neighbour etiquette first.

Chemtrails, towers, and keeping your rhetoric useful

People arrive angry at aerial spraying programs or at microwave clutter. That anger is understandable; sloppy science essays are not. We anchor beginners in mechanics: a cloudbuster is a physical stack of metal and resin tied to water, not a meme. The more precise your language, the harder it is for sceptics to dismiss your effort as pure fantasy.

Getting started responsibly

If you want a ready-made spread of TBs and a few larger pieces without guessing recipes, start with our Massive Orgone Starter Pack. It exists because beginners kept asking for a single box that mirrors how we actually gift in the field.

Where to place your first towerbuster

Pick one obvious stress point: the closest tower you can legally access, a transformer yard sightline, or your own bedroom window line to a mast. Bury the TB shallow with the crystal aiming up or down according to taste; cover it and walk away. Come back in a week with fresh eyes. Adjust placement rather than microwaving the same spot with ten pieces on day one.

When to graduate from TBs

If a single site keeps feeling heavy after disciplined gifting, consider an HHG at the residence and research whether wider atmospheric work matches your ethics and budget. Moving up a tier is not a personality flex; it is acknowledgement that some interference patterns span kilometres, not metres.

Gifting ethics on private land

Ask before you bury on someone else’s farm. Offer to show the piece. If they refuse, walk away. The history of orgone work already includes enough legal paranoia; we do not need fresh trespass charges in 2026.

Metal choices without superstition ladders

Copper conducts prettily; aluminium is light for freight; steel survives knocks. Debating which shavings “feel strongest” is fine after your pour quality is stable. Before that, every metal loses to sloppy curing.

Moisture, freeze-thaw, and Africa’s climate bands

Highveld thunder, Cape wind, and Karoo dust each stress resin differently. If you gift near ocean spray, favour heavier coats on outdoor mounts. If you bury, slope trenches so water drains away from the piece instead of pooling on flat bottoms.

If nothing seems to happen

Wait longer than a weekend. Document weather and local tower changes. Sometimes the environment shifts because maintenance crews rotated equipment—not because your TB failed.

Maintenance after burial

Every year or after floods, check shallow burials for exposed tops caused by erosion. Re-cover or relocate instead of hoping mulch aesthetics equal function.

When to photograph “before” states

Sky photos age poorly as evidence, but timestamped horizon shots still help you remember mast density when neighbours later claim “nothing changed.” Keep the files organised by season so comparisons stay honest.