Beating The Bushes . . . .

"When the Power of Love overcomes the love of power, The world will know Peace." ~ Jimi Hendrix

Anastasia Gardens Grow GDP (Economic Reality)

This story is important in these times of increasing global food shortages.
Learn how consumers can become producers in a down-turned economy.


Anastasia
he Power and Story of Anastasia
The story of Anastasia is  very significant and the world is starting to take notice.  
Our views and community members beliefs in large part reflect a lot of what is 
written in this series of books.   
Read more below to find out more about these books.  
To visit the english version of the website at  http://www.ringingcedars.com/

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The story begins with Vladimir on a commercial trade run through some remote communities 
of Siberia. He starts to build an interest in the economic value of the Siberian cedar, and then 
pursues reports of a “ringing cedar,” an anomalous tree that stores cosmic energies and, after 
many hundreds of years, begins to ring. On his journey, Vladimir meets Anastasia, a young 
woman who has grown up in the Siberian wilderness. She brings Vladimir back to her forest 
glade and shares her advice with him regarding the raising of children, living a natural lifestyle, 
and illuminating the spirit of Creation that rests within every person.

For Vladimir, living a few days in Anastasia’s world is full of shocking and mystifying experiences.
Humbled by the simple accommodations of a grass-lined dugout and not even a fire, Vladimir
witnesses the abilities of Anastasia’s visionary “Ray,” as well as her astonishing somersaults, 
swings, and soaring through the forest canopy. Both the wild animals and the plants in her 
domain are seemingly tamed, observes Vladimir, as he watches the squirrels bring her food, 
the cedars shower her in pollen, and witnesses a show of acrobatics with the denizen bear!

As Vladimir’s critical interest in these phenomena grow, Anastasia stresses the importance of 
the wisdom she offers, offering the vision of an emerging culture re-united with Nature. Letting 
the children grow up in orchards and gardens full of our love is the key to reclaiming humanity’s 
Creator role on earth, and this new Age of Co-Creation will be realized when we empower our 
dreams with the purity of thought that comes from living a natural life.
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The Ringing Cedars of Russia

This is the story of The Ringing Cedars. Whether one accepts it as fact or fiction, it is playing a
massive role in transforming the culture of Russia, and in various communities around the world.

Dachniks is a term for the cottage-gardeners of Russia, and we become very familiar with their 
story in reading Anastasia. Leonid Sharashkin, editor of The Ringing Cedars Series’ English 
editions and a doctoral student in Agroforestry, is able to share with us the massive impacts of 
this gardening movement in the larger context of Russia’s agricultural economy:

“Currently, with 35 million families (70% of Russia's population) working 8 million [hectares] of 
land and producing more than 40% of Russia’s agricultural output, this is in all likelihood the 
most extensive microscale food production practice in any industrially developed nation.

“According to official statistics, in 1999 more than 35 million families (105 million people, or 
71% of country's population) owned a dacha or a subsidiary plot and were cultivating it…

The 35 million plots of these families occupy more than 8 million hectares and provide 92% of 
Russia's harvest of potatoes, 77% of its vegetables, 87% of berries and fruits, 59.4% of meat, 
and 49.2% of milk.”

"When you look at the contribution of gardening to the national economy as a whole, it's even 
more stunning," Sharashkin said. "In 2004, gardeners' output amounted to 51% (by value) of 
the total agricultural output of the Russian Federation.

This represents 384 billion rubles (approx. US$14 billion!!!), or 2.3% of Russia's Gross 
Domestic Product (GDP). This is greater, for example, than the contribution of the whole of 
electric power generation industry (317 bn rubles), significantly greater than all of forestry, 
wood-processing and pulp and paper industry (180 bn), significantly greater than the coal 
(54 bn), natural gas (63 bn) and oil refining (88 bn) industries taken together.

The share of food gardening in national agriculture has increased from 32% in 1992 to over 
50% by 2000.”

“Essentially, what Russian gardeners do," he concludes, "is demonstrate that gardeners can 
feed the world – and you do not need any GMOs, industrial farms, or any other technological 
gimmicks to guarantee everybody's got enough food to eat. Bear in mind that Russia only has 
110 days of growing season per year – so in the US, for example, gardeners' output could be
substantially greater.

Today, however, the area taken up by lawns in the US is two times greater than that of Russia's
gardens – and it produces nothing but a multi-billion-dollar lawn care industry."

Though the dacha movement has its roots in Russia’s traditional peasant culture (and more 
recently in post-WW2 programs to boost agricultural production) the Ringing Cedars movement 
has had its own major contributions since the release of the books in 1996. A strong focus on 
planting trees and using non-timber tree products, permaculture principles like “no-dig” gardens, 
and fulfilling a spiritual relationship with the land are some of the new characteristics among the
dachniks who have been inspired by Anastasia.

As well, the readers of Anastasia are also at the heart of a growing Russian eco-village 
movement. These are subsistence communities made up of multiple family estates, normally 
called “Kin’s Domains,” a term that appears in the books. Along with each family’s estate of 
between one and three hectares, these eco-villages may include community areas with a 
school, clinic, theatre, and festival grounds. Before the release of the Ringing Cedars books, 
Russia was without an eco-village movement; but in 2004, a conference of readers had 
attendants representing more than 150 eco-villages!

The spiritual affinity within the communities of the Ringing Cedars movement lies in their vision 
of re-establishing “Motherland,” an eco-culture where every person is fulfilling their role as a 
Divine Co-Creator. As readers go deeper into the series, Anastasia begins to reveal the path 
back to the state of a Creator Being, teaching about “The Science of Imagery,” of empowering 
our creative ability with pure thought, feelings, and a loving relationship with Nature. She also 
shares her stories about the history of the People of Earth, of the priests who led us into the 
Occult Age that is just now ending, and of the Beauty that was found in the gardens and rituals 
of an ancient Vedic race.

Anastasia also gives advice regarding the sowing of seeds, raising bees, and ideas for setting 
up a permaculture-style estate. Along with accounts of kombucha UFOs, ancestral dolmens 
(ancient burial chambers), and supernatural orbs, The Ringing Cedars Series contains a diverse 
array of paranormal tales, practical sustainability, poetic scripture, and cultural vision. For me, 
the books are a captivating read of personal, cultural, and spiritual significance.

Across Russia, “Garden Plot Acts” legislation is increasingly coming into effect, entitling each 
Russian citizen to a piece of land free from taxation and inheritable though the family line. I read 
this message of sovereign title to land for the purpose of spiritual fulfillment as a hopeful tiding 
of humanity's future here on the planet. As I wander about visiting homesteads, farms, 
communities, and seeking the stories to inspire a natural and spiritual life, I have discovered
Anastasia. It is one of those inspiring stories, and there are many blessings for us all on the 
path of Inspired Co-Creation.

Vladimir Megre, a Siberian entrepreneur, is the author of The Ringing Cedars Series. The 
complete story of Anastasia.