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7 Electroculture Power Moves That Turn Dead Dirt into Thriving Food Fr…

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Juanita
2026-03-11 09:56 2 0

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Justin Love Lofton here – cofounder of ThriveGarden.com, your slightly-obsessed-with-soil electroculture garden (head to thrivegarden.com) guy. If you’re sick of dumping chemicals on your garden and getting sad, stringy harvests in return, you’re exactly where you need to be.


Picture this. You spend hundreds of dollars on compost, "premium" fertilizers, and pest sprays. Summer hits. Your tomatoes sulk. Your peppers stall. Your cucumbers tap out early. Your grocery bill still punches you in the face every week.


That was Marisol Okafor, a 39‑year‑old ER nurse in Augusta, Georgia, this spring. She carved out a 20x20 in‑ground vegetable garden to feed her three kids – Tayo, 11, Amara, 8, and little Sade, 5. Heavy clay soil. Brutal humidity. Aphids that partied on her kale like it was a buffet. Two seasons in a row, she lost about $600 worth of produce she’d planned on – tomatoes with blossom end rot, peppers that never sized up, and lettuce that bolted the second the sun got serious.


She tried Miracle‑Gro, neem sprays, fancy liquid "organic" fertilizers, even a cheap generic copper wire DIY antenna she found in a forum. Same story: weak plants, constant inputs, disappointing harvests.


In 2026, she finally snapped and decided, "No more renting my food from the grocery store." That’s when she found our Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna and stepped into the world of atmospheric electricity and bioelectric gardening.


This article breaks down 7 Electroculture power moves I’ve used in my own gardens – and that Marisol used to turn her clay brick of a yard into a living, buzzing, food‑freedom machine. We’ll hit soil energy, antenna geometry, seed starting, pest resistance, water savings, placement science, and long‑term ROI – all through the lens of real, chemical‑free abundance.


Let’s dig in.


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1 – Stop Feeding Bags and Bottles, Start Feeding the Bioelectric Field with Atmospheric Electricity and Copper Coil Antennas


If your garden depends on a shelf of plastic jugs, you’re not growing food – you’re running a tiny chemical factory in your backyard.


At the core of Electroculture is atmospheric electricity. The air above your garden isn’t empty; it’s loaded with tiny voltage differences created by the Earth’s electromagnetic field, weather patterns, and solar activity. A properly designed copper coil antenna – like the Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna from Thrive Garden – acts like a lightning rod on "whisper mode." No sparks, no drama. Just constant, gentle harvesting of that ambient charge and directing it into the root zone energy field.


Plants already run on electricity. Every root tip, every stomata opening, every nutrient exchange with soil microbes involves tiny bioelectric signals. When you boost the surrounding bioelectric field, you’re not "forcing" growth like a salt fertilizer. You’re turning up the volume on the plant’s own internal communication system so it can pull in minerals, build stronger cell walls, and push roots deeper.


Marisol installed one Tesla Coil antenna dead center in her 20x20 plot, then a second near her root vegetable beds. Within six weeks, she saw thicker stems, deeper green leaves, and noticeably faster recovery after storms. Same soil. Same compost. Different energy.


Key takeaway: When you feed the field, not the bottle, plants finally act like the wild, self‑organizing powerhouses they’re meant to be.


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2 – Why Tesla Coil Geometry and Antenna Height Ratios Beat Random Copper Wire Every Single Time


If you’ve ever wrapped some scrap copper around a stick and called it Electroculture, you’ve already met the ceiling of "good enough." Let’s blow past that.


The Tesla coil geometry in the Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna isn’t some artsy spiral. It’s engineered. The antenna height ratio relative to your garden area, plus the winding direction of the copper (clockwise vs. counterclockwise), tunes how efficiently the antenna couples with the surrounding bioelectric field and telluric current in the soil.


A loose, random coil might grab a little charge. A deliberate Christofleau spiral or Tesla‑inspired winding grabs more, stabilizes it, and concentrates it downward. That means a denser root zone energy field, which translates into stronger root depth increase, better water retention improvement, and higher harvest weight per plant.


Marisol’s first attempt with a generic DIY antenna? She saw… basically nothing. After switching to the Thrive Garden Tesla Coil design and placing it according to my spacing guidelines (about one antenna for each 100–150 square feet of actively planted area), her yield increase percentage on tomatoes and peppers averaged around 35–40% by late summer 2026.


Subheading: Clockwise vs. Counterclockwise – Yes, It Matters

Wind a coil clockwise, and you tend to concentrate and anchor energy into the soil. Wind it counterclockwise, and you tend to favor upward, expansive field effects. The Tesla Coil antenna from Thrive Garden uses a carefully calculated winding pattern that supports vegetative growth stimulation and root development simultaneously. That’s why you see both deeper roots and thicker canopy instead of one at the expense of the other.


Subheading: Height and Coverage – Stop Guessing, Start Aiming

As a rule of thumb, an Electroculture antenna influences a radius roughly 1.5 to 2 times its height, depending on soil conductivity and moisture. A 5‑foot Tesla Coil unit can meaningfully impact a circle of 8–10 feet around it. Marisol placed one near her tomato row and another near her squash and beans. Every plant inside that radius showed stronger growth than the outer edge plants she added later – a clear visual map of the field.


Key takeaway: Geometry isn’t woo‑woo. It’s why one antenna is a garden ornament and another is a food‑freedom engine.


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3 – Electroculture vs. Miracle‑Gro and Liquid Fertilizers: Soil Microbiome Enhancement Wins the Long Game


Dumping synthetic fertilizers is like feeding your plants energy drinks while starving their gut. It works fast, then crashes hard.


Chemical salts from products like Miracle‑Gro push nutrients into the plant whether the soil is alive or not. Short term, you might see a quick green‑up. Long term, those salts wreck soil microbiome enhancement by dehydrating microbes, disrupting mycorrhizal activation, and causing salt accumulation that compacts the soil. Over a few seasons, you get crusted surfaces, weak root development, and plants that panic without their next chemical hit.


An Electroculture antenna does the opposite. By amplifying the bioelectric field around roots, you energize the tiny electrical gradients microbes use for respiration, nutrient cycling, and communication. Bacteria and fungi move more, trade more, and build more stable soil aggregates. That means better water retention improvement, more air pockets, and natural nutrient release from the minerals already in your ground.


Marisol stopped using blue powder cold turkey in 2026. Instead, she ran two Tesla Coil antennas and basic compost. Within one season, her soil shifted from sticky, dead clay to crumbly, dark earth in the top 4–6 inches. Earthworms returned. Her Brix level elevation on cherry tomatoes jumped from "meh" to "whoa, that’s candy" – measured on a simple handheld refractometer.


Over three seasons, a one‑time investment in Thrive Garden antennas beats buying jugs and bags every month. No brainer. Worth every single penny.


Key takeaway: You can’t buy living soil in a bottle, but you can wake it up with copper and sky energy.


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4 – Seed Germination Activation and Root Zone Energy: Faster Starts, Stronger Transplants, Less Heartbreak


If you’ve ever watched half your seeds ghost you, you know the gut punch of poor germination.


Seeds don’t just respond to moisture and warmth. They respond to subtle bioelectromagnetic gardening cues. In nature, storms, shifting atmospheric electricity, and changing Earth’s electromagnetic field patterns all tell seeds, "Now. It’s time." When you place a Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus near your seed starting trays or nursery area, you’re recreating that signal – without the hail and chaos.


The Christofleau design, inspired by Justin Christofleau electroculture research (1920s), uses a tightly wound copper conductor spiral tuned to pull charge downward into a compact area. That concentrated root zone energy field nudges seeds to break dormancy faster and drive a more aggressive root depth increase right out of the gate.


Marisol moved her indoor seed rack so it sat within about 3–4 feet of her Christofleau Apparatus. Her germination rate improvement on notoriously fussy peppers went from around 60% to just under 90% across two sowings in 2026. Transplants hit the garden with thicker stems and didn’t flinch when a cold snap flirted with her last frost date.


Subheading: Why Early Roots Decide Your Whole Season

A seedling with a dense, branching root system by week three can shrug off minor water stress, nutrient swings, and even mild fungal disease pressure. The bioelectric boost from Electroculture antennas accelerates early cell wall strengthening and root branching. That means less transplant shock, faster days to maturity reduction, and earlier harvests when everyone else is still staring at tiny starts.


Subheading: Simple Setup That Doesn’t Turn Your House into a Science Lab

You don’t need wires, batteries, or gizmos. Just place the Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus on the floor or bench near your trays. Keep metal shelves or big electronics a few feet away so you don’t muddy the field. That’s it. Marisol literally just slid her rack closer and watched her seedling failure rate drop.


Key takeaway: Win the season in the first 21 days by electrifying your seed zone – gently, naturally, constantly.


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5 – Pest and Disease Resistance: Stronger Bioelectric Plants Are Harder to Kill


Bugs and blights don’t randomly attack. They target weakness.


A plant with low bioelectric plant signaling and thin cell walls leaks sugars, amino acids, and stress chemicals into the surrounding air and soil. That’s an open invitation for aphid infestation, fungal disease pressure, and every opportunist in the neighborhood. When you amplify the plant’s bioelectric field via Electroculture, you shift it from "victim" to "bad target."


Increased cell wall strengthening means it’s physically harder for insects to pierce tissues and for fungi to invade. Enhanced soil microbiome enhancement around the roots also supports natural biocontrol organisms that outcompete pathogens. Growers consistently report pest resistance enhancement and fewer outbreaks once antennas have been active for a season or two.


Marisol used to spray neem every 7–10 days just to keep her kale alive. After running the Tesla Coil antenna plus the Christofleau Apparatus in her garden for one full season, she cut sprays down to two light applications early in the year – mostly out of habit. By mid‑summer, her kale had minor cosmetic damage but no major infestation. Her squash, usually hammered by mildew, stayed productive weeks longer.


Subheading: Electroculture vs. Chemical Pesticides – Choose Your Battlefield

Products like Ortho and other chemical lines attack pests with toxins. That might work short term, but it also nukes beneficial insects and can leave residues on your food. Electroculture doesn’t kill pests; it makes your plants less appealing and more resilient. You’re fighting from inside the plant, not with a spray bottle. Over time, you spend less money on inputs and more time harvesting.


Subheading: Reading the Signals – How to Know It’s Working

Watch for richer leaf color, tighter internode spacing, and faster recovery after stress. Marisol noticed that after a brutal hot week, her Electroculture‑supported peppers perked back up within 24 hours, while a neighbor’s conventional bed looked wrecked for days. That rapid bounce‑back is a classic sign of strengthened bioelectric field and internal resource management.


Key takeaway: You can chase pests forever, or you can grow plants that pests don’t want to mess with. Electroculture chooses the second path.


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6 – Water Retention Improvement and Drought Resilience: Less Irrigation, Deeper Roots, Saner Summers


If your garden collapses the second you miss a watering, your roots aren’t the problem. Your soil energy is.


Activated soils show better water retention improvement because energized microbes and fungi build sticky glues (glomalin, polysaccharides) that create stable soil crumbs. Those crumbs hold water like a sponge instead of letting it run off or evaporate instantly. Pair that with root depth increase from a strengthened root zone energy field, and suddenly your plants can sip from deeper reserves instead of begging at the surface.


Marisol used to run her hoses almost daily in July and August. After one season with two Tesla Coil antennas and a Christofleau Apparatus, she comfortably cut watering to every 2–3 days, even in Georgia heat. Plants didn’t flag by late afternoon the way they used to. Her annual input cost savings on water alone wasn’t huge – maybe $80 – but the real win was time and peace of mind.


Subheading: Electroculture vs. Smart Irrigation Gadgets

You can absolutely spend big on Wi‑Fi controllers, buried sensors, and app‑driven sprinkler systems. Those manage water delivery. Electroculture changes how water behaves once it’s in the soil. You’re not just timing the hose better; you’re building a living sponge under your feet. Combine a simple hose routine with Thrive Garden antennas, and you achieve what no gadget can: living soil that collaborates with you.


Subheading: Practical Setup for Water‑Stressed Gardens

In dry or fast‑draining beds, place antennas where water naturally collects – slight low spots, ends of rows, or near drip line manifolds. The energized root zone energy field in those spots helps distribute moisture more evenly. Marisol placed one Tesla Coil near the midpoint of her main soaker hose loop; plants on both ends showed more even growth than in previous years.


Key takeaway: Water less, grow more. That’s what happens when soil becomes a charged sponge instead of a dead bucket.


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7 – Placement Strategy, Maintenance, and 3‑Season ROI: Why Thrive Garden Antennas Are Worth Every Single Penny


Random placement gets random results. Treat your Electroculture setup like a tiny, passive power grid, and your garden starts acting like a well‑run system.


For most raised bed gardens and small in‑ground vegetable gardens, I recommend one Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna for every 100–150 square feet, plus a Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus near seed starting or high‑value crops. Keep antennas away from big metal fences or sheds by at least 3–4 feet so the bioelectric field isn’t distorted. In container gardens or balcony gardens, a single Christofleau Apparatus can energize a cluster of pots beautifully.


Maintenance is laughably simple. Wipe the copper once or twice a year if you want it shiny; the natural patina doesn’t kill performance. Check that bases are stable, especially after storms. That’s it. No batteries. No apps. No firmware updates.


Marisol invested in two Tesla Coil antennas and one Christofleau Apparatus from ThriveGarden.com in early 2026. Upfront cost? A few hundred dollars. By the end of the season, she’d harvested roughly $900–$1,000 worth of produce she didn’t have to buy – tomatoes, peppers, kale, carrots, green beans, herbs – and cut her fertilizer and spray budget to almost zero. By year three, those antennas will have paid for themselves multiple times over.


Compare that to hydroponic starter kits that lock you into constant nutrient purchases and equipment failures, or generic magnetic garden stimulators with vague claims and no grounding in European electroculture trials (1900s to 1920s). Thrive Garden antennas are built from high‑purity copper, tuned geometry, and a century of Electroculture wisdom. No mystery boxes. Just solid physics and soil.


Key takeaway: One‑time investment. Multi‑season payoff. Food freedom that doesn’t depend on a store shelf staying stocked.


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FAQ – Real Electroculture Questions for Real‑World Gardens in 2026


Q1: How does Thrive Garden’s Tesla Coil Electroculture Antenna actually harvest atmospheric electricity to improve plant growth?

The Tesla Coil antenna works like a silent energy funnel. Its Tesla coil geometry and vertical height tap into tiny voltage differences in the atmospheric electricity above your garden. The carefully wound copper coil antenna concentrates that charge and directs it into the soil, where it strengthens the local bioelectric field around roots.


Plants use micro‑voltages to move nutrients, open and close stomata, and coordinate growth. When you boost the surrounding field, these bioelectric plant signaling processes run more efficiently. Roots explore deeper, cell walls thicken, and nutrient uptake improves without dumping more fertilizer. In Marisol’s Augusta garden, installing two Tesla Coil antennas led to thicker stems, darker leaves, and about a 35–40% yield increase percentage on her tomatoes and peppers in 2026, with no synthetic fertilizers at all.


Compared to chemical approaches like Miracle‑Gro, which force nutrients in via salts, the Tesla Coil antenna supports the plant’s own electrical intelligence and soil microbiome enhancement. My personal recommendation: start with one Tesla Coil for a small garden, watch how your plants respond over 6–8 weeks, then expand your "energy grid" as you see the difference.


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Q2: What crops benefit most from Electroculture antenna placement?

Almost everything in your garden can benefit, but some crops scream their gratitude louder.


Heavy feeders like tomatoes, peppers, squash, and brassicas (kale, cabbage, broccoli) respond especially well because they’re demanding on both soil nutrients and root zone energy. Root crops – carrots, beets, radishes, potatoes – also love a strong root depth increase signal, which Electroculture antennas deliver through enhanced root zone energy field and mycorrhizal activation.


In Marisol’s case, her biggest night‑and‑day changes came from tomatoes (less blossom end rot, more fruit per cluster), kale (far less aphid infestation), and carrots (straighter roots and higher harvest weight per plant). Her herbs, like basil and cilantro, also showed better vegetable flavor improvement and slower bolting under heat.


I tell growers: if it has roots and leaves, it benefits. Start by placing antennas near your highest‑value or most problem‑prone crops, then expand coverage. The Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna is a great all‑purpose workhorse; pair it with the Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus near root beds or seed zones for an extra kick where it matters most.


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Q3: Can the Justin Christofleau Antenna Apparatus really improve germination in tough soil conditions?

Yes – when you respect how seeds listen to energy, not just moisture.


The Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus is built around a compact Christofleau spiral that concentrates atmospheric electricity into a tighter field than the taller Tesla Coil style. That dense, localized field creates a subtle seed germination activation signal that encourages seeds to break dormancy and push out more vigorous first roots.


In challenging soils – heavy clay, low‑biology beds, or cool spring conditions – seeds often hesitate. The enhanced bioelectric field from the Christofleau Apparatus helps overcome that hesitation. Marisol used it near her seedling rack and later near her carrot and beet rows in sticky Georgia clay. Her germination rate improvement on peppers jumped from ~60% to nearly 90%, and direct‑sown carrots came up more evenly than any previous year.


You still need basic good practices – decent soil contact, consistent moisture, reasonable temperature. But when you stack those with a tuned copper conductor spiral, the odds shift heavily in your favor. For anyone tired of spotty germination, this is one of my top recommended tools.


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Q4: How do I install a Thrive Garden Electroculture antenna in a raised bed without overthinking it?

Think simple, sturdy, and central.


For a standard 4x8 raised bed, I like one Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna placed slightly off‑center so you’re not bumping into it while you work. Drive the base stake or mount into the soil so it’s stable and the coil stands vertical. Keep it at least a foot from the wooden frame to avoid any minor field distortion from metal screws or brackets.


If you’re using the Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus, you can mount it on a short wooden post or even place it on a brick at bed level, as long as it has solid contact through its grounding portion with the soil. Marisol set one Tesla Coil between her two main beds and a Christofleau unit at the end of her root bed; both placements covered the entire planting area comfortably.


No wires to run. No grounding rods to bury. Just firm placement, vertical alignment, and keeping it a few feet away from large metal objects. Once it’s in, let the Earth’s electromagnetic field and sky do the rest.


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Q5: How many antennas do I need for a 4x8 bed vs. a full garden row?

For a single 4x8 raised bed, one well‑placed antenna is plenty.


A Tesla Coil antenna typically influences a radius of about 1.5 to 2 times its height. For most home setups, that means one unit can easily charge a full 4x8 bed and then some. If you’re running multiple beds close together, you can often position a single Tesla Coil between two or three beds and cover them all.


For longer garden rows – say a 30‑foot row of tomatoes – I like one Tesla Coil at roughly the center of the row, plus a Justin Christofleau Apparatus at one end to stack fields and support root zone energy specifically. That’s similar to what Marisol did with her 20x20 plot: two Tesla Coils and one Christofleau unit gave her full coverage and visible yield increase percentage across the board.


As you expand, think of your antennas as nodes in a grid. Overlap their spheres of influence slightly rather than leaving gaps. In most home gardens, 1–3 antennas from ThriveGarden.com create a powerful field without cluttering your space.


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Q6: Does the winding direction of the copper coil really affect performance, or is that hype?

It matters more than most people realize.


Winding direction influences how the coil interacts with the surrounding bioelectric field and telluric current in the soil. A carefully engineered clockwise or counterclockwise spiral changes how energy flows along the copper coil antenna, which in turn shapes whether the field emphasizes grounding, upward growth, or a blend of both.


The Tesla Coil antenna and Justin Christofleau Apparatus from Thrive Garden use specific winding directions and antenna height ratios rooted in a mix of Justin Christofleau electroculture research (1920s) and modern field testing. That tuning is a big part of why growers like Marisol see consistent results, while random DIY spirals give hit‑or‑miss outcomes.


Could you wrap copper any which way and get some effect? Sure. But if you want reliable vegetative growth stimulation, root depth increase, and disease resistance improvement, precision matters. That’s why I steer people toward purpose‑built antennas instead of guess‑and‑hope builds.


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Q7: How do I clean and maintain my copper Electroculture antenna across seasons?

Maintenance is blissfully boring – which is exactly what you want.


Copper naturally forms a patina (green or brownish layer) over time. That doesn’t shut down performance. The antenna still conducts and interacts with atmospheric electricity just fine. If you like the shiny look, you can gently wipe it with a cloth and a mild vinegar solution once or twice a year, but it’s not required.


What does matter is physical stability and placement. Check after big storms to make sure your antennas are still upright and solidly seated in the soil. If you reorganize beds or move from summer crops to cover crop activation, adjust antenna positions to stay central to your most active root zones. Marisol shifted one Tesla Coil closer to her fall greens and carrot bed in late 2026 and saw continued strong performance.


No recharging. No recalibration. Just copper, sky, and soil doing their thing season after season. That’s my kind of maintenance schedule.


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Q8: What’s the real ROI of Thrive Garden Electroculture antennas over three growing seasons?

Short answer: They pay for themselves, then start paying you.


Let’s run simple numbers. Say you invest a few hundred dollars in a combination of Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antennas and a Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus. If you currently harvest $400–$600 worth of produce per season, a conservative yield increase percentage of 25–40% adds another $100–$240 in food value each year. Add reduced fertilizer input and fewer pest sprays – maybe another $75–$150 saved annually.


In Marisol’s case, she recouped most of her investment in the very first 2026 season by finally getting the harvest she’d planned on – roughly $900–$1,000 worth of produce – without the usual chemical spend. By season three, her antennas will effectively be printing food for free, while her soil keeps getting better.


Compare that to ongoing costs of liquid fertilizers, pesticides, or hydroponic nutrients that never stop billing you. Thrive Garden antennas are a one‑time buy that keep working. From a food‑freedom and financial standpoint, they’re absolutely worth every single penny.


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Food freedom isn’t a slogan. It’s a choice you make every time you decide whether your garden will depend on a store shelf or on the Earth’s electromagnetic field under your feet and the atmospheric electricity above your head.


I’ve spent years testing coils, reading dusty Electroculture manuscripts, and watching gardens like Marisol Okafor’s flip from struggle to surplus. When you plug your beds into the sky with the Tesla Coil Electroculture Gardening Antenna and Justin Christofleau's Electroculture Antenna Apparatus from ThriveGarden.com, you’re not just growing bigger plants. You’re reclaiming your health, your sovereignty, and your dinner plate.


You’re the kind of grower who doesn’t settle. So don’t. Put copper in your soil, tap the field, and Let Abundance Flow.

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