![]() Salah-Eddin Gherbi is astrophysicist by training, spiritualist by nature, and all things sacred geometry by destiny. He has just published his debut book The Etheric Particle 216 Unifying Matter and Spirit. I grab the chance to speak to him about it before the books' launch. ''The numerical universe revealed from Glastonbury, deciphered from crop circles, ancient measures, astronomy, mathematics and physics, bringing a new understanding of the fifth element or the ether. This book presents a unified theory of science, metaphysics, the philosophy of divine nature and geometry, encoding harmonic numbers from the Bible, folklore and ancient scriptures, revealing a unique template uniting microcosm with macrocosm.'' -Salah-Eddin Gherbi When did you first become interested in sacred geometry? I first discovered sacred geometry in Glastonbury around October 2012. I was very curious, reading many books and opening to the subject. I met different people and talked to them about it. One of my biggest influences was Melchizedek. Step by step I started to love sacred geometry more and more. What is it about sacred geometry that you love? I love the mathematics. Maths has been my background since school, where I studied astrophysics. I realised that the bridge between spirituality and science is geometry and mathematics. To me mathematics presents a theory of the unification of everything: all is connected. Just look at the Flower of Life symbol, circles interlocking each other. It's about being in relation to and united with anything in the universe. This of course is different to what we learn at school, we learn that everything is separate, but particles are not separate, they are connected. Using geometry can help us understand the fundamental interaction of everything in the universe. How is your book different? I look at the 4 forces in universe that mainstream scientists agree on: electromagnetism, gravity, strong and weak nuclear energy, and I unify them using geometry. At the moment we think of these forces as separate: we believe that gravity is different to electromagnetism. Scientists miss that they are connected. I look at how these forces work together and talk about the 5th force, the spiral energy. We can clearly see this energy in nature, when looking at a snail shell for example. This is how can we bridge the root of the forces in the universe, and geometry can help. In the book I talk a lot about the ether: the 5th element (hence the name of the book, The Etheric Particle 216). Many deny this as an element, the mainstream does not recognise it as such, but Plato talked about it. He talks about the 5 geometric shapes called the Platonic solids (tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron and icosahedron), and how each shape relates to an element: earth, air, fire, water, ether. The 5th element must be taken into consideration, as it helps us to see we are connected to everything human or non-human. We could call it the spirit element. This message can help people see and experience the spiral as the expression of the ether, which is inside us as well as everywhere in the universe. Tell me about the numbers... My book is about the language of numbers: in a numerological way everything is connected. I give many illustrations of numerological connections. An example is the slope angle of the Great Pyramid at Giza: 51.84 degrees. We can see this exact angle in the rainbow, in the deviation between first and second rainbows. This number (51.84) is also reflected in the Mayan calendar predictions: 5,184 years is mentioned in their calendar cycles. So this same number is expressed in 2 different fields: angles and time. Numbers connect physics, geometry, meteorology, astronomy. There was a time when it was all common knowledge, when everything shared a common source, perhaps the time of Atlantis or even further back. I present in my book those points of common knowledge and come back to the history of that knowledge. One example of this is how embryonic stages are shown through sacred geometry, explaining how the foetus grows. This is one part of the sacred knowledge, but I encompass many fields including biology, physics, alchemy and magic. What are you hoping to achieve? I am doing it for my own interest but also to help people rediscover this ancient knowledge. If we can come back to the science of that time, then we come back to heart centre. We can use the right side of the brain more: at the moment we use too much of the left side of the brain, and not enough intuition. It will benefit the planet to help people rediscover the flow, and use their intuition. I am covering a huge subject from different angles. I may get in trouble from those wanting to stay in the old foundation: I expect negativity as well as positivity, and some will remain neutral. This book comes from my inner perspective, I used much meditative thought, and some research helped me to lay out the knowledge. I use Biblical quotes, facts from other sources and my inner knowledge. I just sit and allow, we are here to receive, we forget to open the door to receive, we ignore it, but it's there. I open my heart to receive. Everyone is divine, everyone can get that message, you are the main source, it's not coming from somewhere else. You are the one who can get access to that knowledge. In the book I insist on my readers feeling the divine connection from within, through maths and geometry, but deeper as well. How can we apply it in everyday life? This book is the theoretical background, my next step aims to bring in more practical work as to how humans can apply this energy and experience it. This will be my next journey, for now I lay out the theory. Don't know what's going to happen. I will probably do some workshops, I did one last week about geometry, representing the relationship between Earth and the Moon. Places like Stone Henge and Giza used the relationship Earth-Moon, and if we go even deeper we can find out a lot about this energy. In future workshops I can apply knowledge of the theory into practical work. Or maybe there will be another book. My psychic friend tells me that my second book will be a best-seller! First one may be slower, but perhaps will still be a best-seller! The universe is opening the doors for me, and it's telling me that this book is only part of my work here. I am just doing it, then letting go and seeing what the next step is. I must do this or I will miss what is coming to me, and there is so much to come. Where can I get the book? It is available now on Create Space and Amazon. (links below!) I am self publishing, and people can access it by choosing print on demand. There will also be an eBook version, but the full printed colour version is better. People need to see the pictures as it's important to visualise. I balance a lot between art and numbers, trying to avoid complicated equations. There is only simple maths for the readers to assimilate. Each person will pick up what they need to from it. I have been writing it for 9 months, like growing a baby! I am about to give birth to a spiritual child, and it will run the lengths of the planet and say hello to many people: hopefully it will pass everyone. I trust the spirit and the flow that it will get where it needs to. How does it feel now its really close? I feel like a mother about to give birth! I feel excitement, nervousness, and total focus on the birth. And as I said it's been 9 months! That whole time I have been guided by spirit, I have given over so much to faith to write this book. I had no resources, just my heart and trust. When we have faith in what we can do for people and for the collective, we are being helped by spirit: I felt and experienced this. I was writing every single day, never giving up, even when I had nothing to live on. When you feel the flow, everything is easy, it is clear you are on the right path. I must mention Michael, my friend. He helped me lay out my book and helped me with my English (Salah is French!). Thank you for all your help Michael! One last thing: What is the one thing you write about that really touches you, the one gem you are giving the world? I am giving mathematical evidence of the divine connection in us, and how we all embody oneness. When I talk about this in my book it opens my heart, and knowing people will read this has touched my heart already. I would like to see our society stepping forward into the heart centre in terms of science, remembering our connection with spiritual world. In Glastonbury many have this awareness, but in other places not so much. People are waiting for hope, light, and guidance. People have been stuck in the same place for so long, this book will stir the nest, and send ripples out to other people and places. I am so excited to see all the different reactions! Well, Salah, I have read the sample of the book and while there are a lot of numbers involved (I am not a number person!), I am extremely intrigued and can't wait to read the rest. Best wishes for this book and for your future. Buy the book now on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Etheric-Particle-216-Unifying-Matter/dp/1527207900/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1492330254&sr=8-1&keywords=the+etheric+particle Create Space: https://www.createspace.com/6980510?ref=1147694&utm_id=6026 Download a sample of the book here: https://universalzeropoint.com/sample/ Link for Amazon coming soon! Many thanks to Ellise Toop for asking great questions during this interview!
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![]() For my MA Ecology and Spirituality, I was given the assignment of writing a reflective journal and critical commentary on a subject of my choice. I chose the question what do people really mean when they say 'I speak to trees'? I am very pleased with how it turned out, so thought I could share it with you. I have taken the references out, but please do ask if you want to know where the quotes come from. At the end is an intuitive drawing of my own, given by the tree outside my window at Dartington. What do people really mean when they say ''I speak to trees''? Excerpts from my Journal: January-February 2017. Jenny said 'Choose a room on this side of the building, then you can see the beautiful tree.' During the welcome party I was given a piece of paper, a wish, which said the words: 'May you grow to know a tree as an old friend’. And so I began to wonder how I would begin speaking to the tree outside my window. Andy sang and played his lyre to the ancient Yew tree, knowing that the tree could hear him. One night we went to watch Pagan Morris Dancing, with a Wassailing ceremony afterwards. We sang to the apple trees and put cider soaked bread on the branches. These traditional folk festivities are for the apple trees to know that they are celebrated and loved, so they will wake up and bear fruit when the season comes. Steph said she had a connection with a Yew tree, close by to the ancient one. We went to visit, and Steph told me that this was the masculine to the ancient feminine Yew that everyone visits. She said when she walked past him it was like a pull she felt in her heart. An intuition. A knowing. And the messages come as feelings. This one told her that it is the masculine that needs healing in the world, more than the feminine. Nicola said 'I was walking one day, and I heard a voice calling out my name.' She looked around and no one was there: she realised a plant was talking to her. I asked her how to talk to trees, and she told me trees are much slower than us, so we must give them time to speak. If a person walks through the forest, everything stops. We must be still and let the forest re-balance itself. Sit under the tree, introduce yourself, and then just write, or draw, whatever comes to you. Stephan said 'touch the trees and plants as if they can feel your touch.' And the daffodils purred when I stroked them. And the tree enjoyed my massage, especially in the knots. And I stood and looked at the trees, in awe, and they could see me and were in awe of me too. Pat said 'I choose rocks for my sweat lodge by asking them politely and with humility to come with me. These are ancient rocks. One rock may have been having a conversation of infinite wisdom for thousands of years with its neighbour. So I reach out to the ancient ones, and ask which of them are happy to help me and my relatives on our humble, human journey. And as I am walking around, some catch my eye, or I get a feeling that they are saying 'yes, I will come with you'. I thank them all for allowing their family member to come with me.' Jenny watches, Andy sings, Steph knows, Nicola hears, Stephan touches, and Pat gives and receives. I have connected with non-human beings before, though not with trees. I am a crystal artist, I can meditate with a crystal, and draw the images and colours that come to me. And so I decide to take Nicola's advice, and I do the same with the tree outside my window. I go to it, introduce myself, wait patiently. It does not take so long before the images come. I collect the images, keep them in my mind, draw them. As I am drawing I realise a simple truth: this is not what I saw. I am so limited by my memory of what I saw, by my terrible artwork, by the medium of my expression: the paper and pencils. What I saw was so alive, vibrant, pulsating, living, that I could not possibly express it in words, or in art. What I drew on my paper was the closest approximation of what I saw, but it does not even come close. And so I must conclude that all the watching, singing, soul-connections, hearing, touching, giving and receiving that all the people I have spoken to have described to me: None of it comes close to the persons' actual experience. And so, I will never know what people really mean when they say 'I speak to trees.' Critical Commentary. In this reflective journal I touch on the subject of animism. Animism is a type of religion that engages a wide community of living beings, with whom humans share the world. Earth holds a wide range of persons, only some of whom are human. 'All that exists lives' and 'all that lives is holy'. Animism could be the first and only universal religion. Quinn believes so, as animism has existed for tens of thousands of years, and is still in place now with indigenous peoples. The word animism itself comes from the Latin word for soul or spirit and views the world as 'a sacred place, and humanity belongs in such a world': humans are as sacred as everything else. Harvey tells us how animists assert that 'it is possible to ''speak with'' and ''listen to'' trees...'. To some in the West this may seem a little far-fetched. But I love Campbell’s explanation of animism. He says that the tag of animism has been so caught up in ideas of classifying religion that the point has been lost. It shows Western separation from the idea: 'behind the term lurked the grounding idea that whereas we [the West] know what is alive and what is not, they [indigenous peoples] don't'. There are two notions of what animism is: one is that indigenous peoples think that everything around them is alive, and the other is that all things have a soul or spirit that makes them alive. Campbell doesn't believe that 'calling one or the other 'animism' marks any great divide between us and them', because we (the West) already take it for granted that animals are alive. So begs the question: what is the difference between talking to my cat, and talking to the tree outside my window? In my journal, Steph spoke to and listened to the Yew tree. She received a message: that the masculine energy of the world needs to be healed, just as much as, if not more than, the feminine. Maybe it was her specifically who was supposed to receive this message, or perhaps she was just open enough to hear what the tree had been saying for many years. Harvey says 'the ''speaking with'' and ''listening to'' trees may not be a pursuit of information, though some Pagans assert trees are willing to communicate in some way things that we would otherwise be unaware of'. So while Steph was not consciously looking for information, the tree was 'willing to communicate' something that she 'would otherwise be unaware of.’ Harvey's italics of how a tree communicates in 'some way', suggests there is no definitive way of communicating with a tree: Steph experienced the communication through her heart and intuition, and others have different experiences. In the language of the Native American Ojibwe people, words are grammatically animistic: different grammar is used depending on whether an object is alive or not. It makes sense, as people can speak with animate objects, but can only speak about inanimate ones. For example, anthropologist Hallowell asks an Ojibwe man whether all rocks are alive: he replies that not all of them are, and advises how to know. If we can recognise a rock’s life, agency, will, or intellect, we can engage in social reciprocity with that rock-being, just as with a human-being. Hallowell observes: ‘relationships are both moral and reciprocal, not only among humans but between humans and "other-than-human persons" as a necessary, vital, and everyday part of life’. In my journal I mention Native American Pat McGabe relating to rocks by asking permission to take some for her sweat lodge. In a similar way, trees can teach us 'the virtue of respect, the pleasure of intimacy and the vital importance of eco-responsibility'. This is exactly what Pat indicates: respecting rocks as beings in their own right; taking pleasure in creating an intimate relationship with them; and eco-responsibility through asking permission before taking, being humble and recognising that the human is entering the world of the rock, not the other way around. If rocks have their own lives, communities, families and conversation, then they have a culture. Bird-David says 'culture is not the preserve of humans, but is evident (when seen as those indigenous peoples see things) among other-than-human persons too'. The animist perspective is that everything lives and is involved in culture, and that culture can include other persons human or non-human. In my journal Stephan Harding invites us to 'touch the trees and plants as if they can feel your touch.' Trees can give and receive touch, just as rocks can give gifts to humans and also receive gifts that initiate relationships. Let’s go back to the idea of eco-responsibility: by giving to the world, we will receive gifts back. 'Animism promises the enrichment of human cultures by fuller engagement with what is too often taken as background or resource available to the construction of culture'. If we can avoid the idea that nature is used to create human culture, and instead realise that nature=culture, then all of life can share in relationship. This is what I experienced with Andy's singing, dancing, and the Wassailing ceremony. We give gifts of our culture: music, dancing, bread and cider, that we may receive the gifts of the trees' culture: the fruit. This is far from using the trees as a 'resource available to construction of culture' (i.e. the apples for cider), but a tradition of equal reciprocity. Snyder’s phrase reflects this: ‘performance is currency in the deep world’s gift economy’. This idea of giving and receiving through performance (the Wassailing rituals), allows humans to understand what it means to lose something they would rather keep (the bread and cider). ‘What the creatures have to lose in the gift economy is their lives. What the people have to lose is their false sense of themselves as superior’. We are taught humility. Pat attempts to 'reach out to the ancient ones’ with this same humility, and this can be applied to any non-human person. 'Being silent so as to pay attention to elders may be matched by practising silence in the woods that are home to many of your other-than-human neighbours'. The exact advice that Nicola gives me about talking to trees: if we are still and silent in the woods we can hear the messages of the trees much clearer. Her method of introducing oneself to the tree first reflects Pat's humility with the rocks. This is also the underlying notion written on the piece of paper I was given, that glorious wish: 'May you grow to know a tree as an old friend.' In the conclusion of the journal I reflect that when people narrate their story, we cannot know what they actually experience. I will never really know what people mean when they say 'I speak to trees.' We can say the same about dream-telling. E. B. Tylor (1832-1917) says that attributing life, soul or spirit to inanimate objects comes from the 'primitive' inability to distinguish between dreams and waking consciousness. If a 'primitive' person dreams about a deceased relative, they assume that the persons' spirit has actually visited them. Out of dreams evolved the 'doctrine of souls and other spiritual beings in general'. Tylor's idea completely ignores: 1. Evidence of spirit visitation occurring in dreams. One Zulu man was visited so often in his sleep that he described his body as 'a house of dreams'; 2. That these dreams are experienced by adult, functioning human beings sharing the same time on earth as us, and that there is no primitiveness, childishness, or ignorance. This language 'simultaneously insists on the veracity of Western notions about personhood and materiality, while denigrating other understandings as childish and/or primitive’. Western belief at the time is that Europeans are the pinnacle of evolutionary development, and the word 'primitive' suggests that indigenous people are from a previous time. Tedlock addresses the misuse of 'typological time', saying that it denies that people are living at the same time, and is used as a 'distancing device'. 3. What people say they see in dreams is not necessarily what they actually experienced. I would like to elaborate on this last point. Tedlock discusses the idea that dreams are mental, private acts, never recorded during the actual occurrence, whereas dream accounts are public social performances shared after the dream. Some dream workers say that they can recover the dream itself through producing a dream-report, but Tedlock believes this cannot be the case. The same principles can be applied when a person describes communication with a tree: the conversation is a mental, emotional or soul-felt private act, rarely recorded during the actual occurrence, and the account of the conversation is shared in an appropriate context. The speaker chooses an audience (usually one open to the idea of speaking to trees), and an auditory or visual modality, with all its limitations. So we get the multi-performance list that I describe in the journal: 'Jenny watches, Andy sings, Steph knows, Nicola hears, Stephan touches, and Pat gives and receives'. Each person describes connections with nature in these ways, in an attempt to explain to the listener what they mean, but the listener can never know what the speaker truly experiences. The issue may be in the limitations of language (or music, or art). Tedlock calls this the 'basic axiom of semantics'- the word is not the object and 'dream narratives are not dreams': neither narrating nor re-enacting can recover dream experiences. Neither narrating nor re-enacting the event of speaking to a tree can recover the communicative experience. I discovered this through my drawing of the tree.
I came to the tree in respect and humility; I asked the tree permission to communicate with it: I gave what I had to give. And the tree communicated with me in a beautiful way. I saw visions of coloured light, purple and gold concentric rings at the top, and lines of different coloured light in a sphere around the bottom. Outside the tree was dark with little spots of light here and there. I realised the darkness is what the tree experiences: it has no eyes or ears to sense the world as we do. Instead the tree senses other beings as energy fields, like little spots of light, as they (birds, wind, grass, insects, me) enter the trees' own energetic sphere. I sensed the truth of the tree, I drew it, and I used words to describe it just now. But no one will ever know what I truly experienced. ![]() I recently attended a talk at Excalibur restaurant in Glastonbury, by Matt Thornton. Matt is the founding director of the non-profit organisation Emoto Peace Project of UK and Ireland, and water researcher trained by Dr Emoto Masaru. The talk was about the most simple subject: water. And listening to Matt, I discovered I know nothing about it! So many little pieces of information have come to me recently about the state of the world, spirituality and how humanity is living today (many of which I have written about on this website), and Matt's talk seemed to bring it all in together. I realised that the fundamental answer to life, the universe and everything is in fact: water. I immediately booked Matt in for an interview, and here is what he has to say... ![]() I met Sue Fletcher through our mutual friend the Fast Track technique practitioner Jaz Goven. Sue and I are currently do a skill exchange, I am helping her with her social media and promotions, and she has put me on her Life Purpose Revealed course. I have now completed the course, and found it a fascinating process. Over 6 weeks of hour long online sessions, as well as a lot of homework tasks, we covered many aspects of life with the aim to discovering our life purpose. The tasks included writing our life story, making a vibrational mind-map, and answering check-list questions about what life skills we have and how we react to change. It was fantastic for me to really sit down and think about all these aspects of my life, really consider the path I have already walked and all the things I can achieve in the future. Sue also gives a lot of advice about using the Law of Attraction, changing thoughts to the positive, and using affirmations. I think this course is excellent because some of these things people do or have done already, but bringing all these skills together into one 6 week course really focuses the energy of the participants. Doing the homework tasks over the weeks was fun, but it wasn't until the very last bit of homework that I really felt a shift. We had to create a spontaneous goals mind map, and split the goals into tangible (things we 'have') and intangible (things we 'feel' or 'learn'), and split them into long term, medium term and short term goals. Suddenly everything over the past few weeks came together for me, and I felt I could really understand the path I am supposed to take. I am so grateful to Sue for creating this course, built out of years of experience and knowledge. Sue has been helping people discover their life purpose, and release blocks in their lives, for 23 years. She strongly believes that all of us have talents, and knows how it feels when that talent is discovered and nurtured. These are the moments that change our lives, and doing so allows us to help other people too. Sue always had alternative views on life, and visited herbalists and osteopaths way back when it was not even heard of by most people. Sue is aware that it can be the smallest thing or the shortest amount of time that can change your life forever. She completed a weekend workshop about 'Changing your life'- and for Sue, it did just that. She was blown away and within two months she felt her life had indeed, changed forever. She began studying Astrology in her 40s. This was the part of the Life Purpose Revealed course that I absolutely loved: my birth chart reading. Sue is unique in bringing the Astrology aspect into Life Purpose Tutoring, and it works so incredibly well. I learned so much from the reading she did for me, and every day things come up in my life the I can refer back to in my chart. It was an astrology reading that led Sue to meeting her husband John, and she also had two dreams about him just before they met! That first astrology reading indicated to Sue that she will teach, transform, inspire and motivate people, and she ended up doing just that! Sue learned astrology and other ancient arts, all of which she has put together to create her Life Purpose course. Sue has qualifications in Life Coaching, Counselling, Training and Development, and Astrology. She feels so blessed to help others,
and is still motivated to continue doing so aged 71. She says: ''Learning astrology has been such a gift to me and I thank the universal energies for giving me that opportunity.'' Sue offers online programs and private Life Purpose coaching sessions on her website www.lifepurposetutor.com and Astrology life readings on her website www.astrologysue.com She also offers free ebooks on both websites, which are worth a read! ![]() I talk to Philip, spiritual gardener and founder of Hortus Spiritualis. Philip became interested in horticulture after being in the military for 9 years, where he was a medic in the royal marines. He left age 25 and decided to do something completely different. Philip became more spiritual after leaving and developed an interest in Buddhism from an early stage. That interest grew alongside a fascination with nature. He feels a great affinity with plants and trees, and loved gardening: he jokes ''it grows on you!'' Philip went through various career stages in horticulture, going to college, working in royal parks and for high end clients. In the last few years he worked alongside Dan Pearson: the garden designer and TV presenter, who is also a deeply spiritual man. He worked in 2006 managing a large estate in Somerset, which included 25 acres of wild flowers and 15,000 trees. Philip found himself exactly where he wanted to be, working not just doing horticulture for local authorities, but able to be at one with the environment. He spent more and more time in meditation in the landscape, hugging trees, talking to plants, and having conversations with nature. Dan then took him onto a project in Berkshire to restore a garden, putting in trees and wild flowers. Creating the lake was an incredible experience, watching how it developed over a few years. The fish appeared naturally via the eggs on ducks feet. In three years appeared an amazing biodiversity set-up, completely different to the landscape before. Philip built gardens in Brittany, near St Malo, designing a garden linked to gites. He included a community area, space for contemplation and meditation, a bbq area, and four individual gardens. In Spain Philip spent time creating a Moorish paradise garden, Islamic in style with water features, orange trees and jasmine. He lived in a Moorish village in Moorish house. He then got a contract for a larger hillside house, where he planted trees, incorporated quiet areas, and grew vegetables. He would like to do more of that, and may go back to Spain. He considers carefully his gardening tools, and doesn't buy off the shelf new tools that will soon be damaged. He has got old fashioned, 50s and 60s steel tools. He also buys Japanese tools, his favourite being a basic 'hori-hori' weeding tool that has a razor sharp edge. This is an all purpose tool for chopping vegetables, digging weeds, and cutting plants. He has a Japanese spade made from one piece of metal called an 'elephant spade'. It's light, strong and solid, and can be used for many things. One of Philip's most admired people is Satish Kumar, head of the Resurgence magazine and Schumacher College in Devon. He had known Satish some years, and tells me he has an incredible aura about him. They had met at a festival and two years later when he met him again, Satish remembered him and greeted him by name. Philip completed an Earth Pilgrim course at Schumacher, and was blown away by the ethos there. The course was only a week but it changed his life. Suddenly all started to click together, networks opened up, and things started moving. He had already been in the area for 15 years, but from one week at Schumacher, Philip was meeting people from all over the world. He had the feeling of being by himself for many years, and simply hadn't met the peer group he now has. He would like to get more involved at Schumacher, as once you have done a course there you can volunteer for food and accommodation, organised like an ashram. He also wants to get more involved in the gardens there, as one of the gardeners does sessions with local prisoners. Glastonbury was the next step and his Hortus Spiritualis business. The idea is to bring spirituality into the garden. This is happening slowly, gaining client by client. Philip is not a hard headed business man, but does it because he wants his clients to get as much as he does from it. He strives to understand what they want and where they are spiritually, asking whether they want a meditation garden or a fun place for children, and tailoring everything to their needs. In 2014 Philip set the wheels in motion, creating the website and Facebook page, and the gardening started last year. Philip created the Living Wall in Excalibur, the organic vegan restaurant in Glastonbury. He believes it is important to have green areas in a space like this, and would like to see more restaurants with the same. He's worked in restaurants and hotels in the past creating these areas, but many of them don't want to pay for maintenance. In Excalibur they are happy to pay him to keep it looking good. |
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