Telluricaquarian.com is a brand created by Llewellyn, designed to deliver messages around products and services relating to Technology, Design, and Water—with a particular focus on fringe insights into water technology, inspired by water ionisers offered by Enagic®, which electrolytically transform water.
Originally centred around the insights gained from water electrolysis by the said device offered by Enagic®, Telluricaquarian has since evolved. While water electrolysis remains a core interest, the brand has broadened its focus to encompass water in all its dimensions—both scientific and esoteric.
When it comes to so-called “fringe insights” about water—often dismissed as pseudoscience or quackery—we choose to engage seriously. Rather than ignore or ridicule the unconventional, we examine it with austere consideration, aiming to uncover what may have been prematurely & purposefully cast aside
This will be made evident in the additional sections on this page giving centre stage to figures whom you would ought to know of considering the “fringe insights” of which their findings and that which they are known for will be both embraced and have insights presented regarding their respective fidings.
Viktor Schauberger (1885-1958) was an Austrian forest caretaker, naturalist, and inventor who developed unconventional theories about water, energy, and natural systems. Often called the "Water Wizard," he spent decades observing water flow in pristine Alpine forests and became convinced that nature operated on principles fundamentally different from conventional physics.
Schauberger believed that water was a living substance that could be energized through specific movement patterns, particularly spiral vortex motion. He theorized that water naturally wanted to flow in curves and spirals rather than straight lines, and that forcing it through artificial channels stripped it of its vital energy. This led him to design various experimental devices including water treatment systems, energy generators, and even aircraft prototypes based on what he called "implosion" rather than explosion.
During World War II, he was reportedly forced to work on secret projects for the German military, though the exact nature of this work remains disputed. After the war, he continued developing his theories until his death in 1958.
Here are three lesser-known facts about Schauberger:
He claimed trout taught him about water dynamics. Schauberger spent hours observing trout in mountain streams and noticed they could remain perfectly still in fast-flowing water, then suddenly dart upstream against powerful currents. He theorized they were using the water's natural spiral energy patterns to their advantage, which influenced his later theories about vortex motion and energy.
He invented a log flume system that moved timber uphill. Conventional wisdom said logs could only be floated downstream, but Schauberger designed spiral-channeled flumes that created vortex currents strong enough to transport logs uphill over mountain ridges. Several of these systems were actually built and successfully operated in Austria, defying conventional hydraulic engineering.
He believed trees were cosmic antennas. Schauberger theorized that trees didn't just absorb nutrients from soil, but actually drew energy from cosmic sources through their spiral growth patterns. He claimed the spiral arrangement of leaves and branches created natural energy collectors that pulled vital forces from the atmosphere, making forests powerful energy-generating systems rather than just biological communities.
"feel Nature once more; to harken to her voice and to take heed of her subtle movements", and by mimicking nature's indirect, implosive, and cooling motions, humanity can restore the Earth, achieve free energy, abundant food, and a higher quality of life.
Stephan Ernst Riess (1898-1985) was a German-born geochemist, mineralogist, and geo-hydrologist who immigrated to the United States after World War I and revolutionized unconventional water sourcing theories. Working for over five decades, he successfully located over 800 water wells using his unique approach to finding what he termed "primary water"
Coupling our understanding of the discovery of Stephen Riess & solar-powered electrolysis can offer profound transformative implications for energetic sovereignty.
Moses West, of San Antonio, Texas, has brought water to Flint, Michigan, and Puerto Rico – all through his Atmospheric Water Generation machines, which extract moisture from the atmosphere and turn it into water Fridtjof Nansen - Wikipedia. West scaled up a small condenser to create his Atmospheric Water Generator (AWG) and founded his company Atmospheric Water Generator Contracting LLC, with his patented technology that pulls water from the air into the machine
An Atmospheric Water Generator works on the same principle as refrigerators and air conditioners i.e on the principle of vapor compression refrigeration.
The basic process works as follows:
The technology essentially replicates the natural water cycle in a controlled environment, using refrigeration principles to force condensation that would normally occur naturally in clouds and precipitation.