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As Archangel Boel (Boul, Booel, Bohel), she was known an a First Heaven Throne Angel of impeccable bearing, adamantine loyalty, and lofty viewpoints with exemplary behavior patterning abilities and highest principles communication skills. As Archangel Bodiel (Dohel), she known as a local universe central sun benefactress who presided over the sixth dimensional heaven, where she focused on enabling whole families, tribes, and kinfolk to accelerate their personal and group Merkaba development Archangel Boamiel was also a responsible keeper of the knowledge keys of four winds four corners gateways, divine revelatory magic. As such she will be in the forefront of anchoring the higher dimensional heavenly sphere paradisiacal energetics on the planet.
As an Archangel Boamiel brings
wholesome consideration, collected support, and substantial development to the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation.
She advocates and instructs apprentices of augmentation with encouraging
exuberance, as they progress, step by step, from cloaked catastrophic patterns
to clear providential prototypes.
The Sacred Site focal point of Archangel Boamiel and the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation is White Rock Lake Park, which is an urban oasis located about ten minutes from downtown Dallas in Texas, U.S.A. Established in 1929, there are six playgrounds and eleven miles of trails around the lake, which has a shoreline of 9.5 miles. There are about 1,442 trees like Cottonwoods, Oaks, Pecans, and Sweet Gums in the area; as well as, remnants of the Bottomland Forest and the Blackland Prairie. The White Rock Lake watershed, which is situated in both Collin and Dallas Counties, is thirty miles long and generally about four to five miles wide. The lake, which originates in a Collin County pasture near Frisco, has nine primary tributaries. White Rock Lake Park provides habitat for more than two hundred species of birds, twenty types of amphibians, nineteen varieties of fish, thirty-three varieties of mammals, over a hundred species of plants and grasses, fifty-four kinds of reptiles, and forty-nine kinds of trees. Some of the wildlife who make the White Rock Lake Park and the old fish hatchery that has been designated as an urban wildlife preserve their home include: bass, bobcats, catfish, crappie, ducks, horned toads, lizards, loons, minks, pelicans, possums, rabbits, raccoons, rattlesnakes, red foxes, salamanders, seagulls, skunks, squirrels, swans, and turtles. Popular with canoe and kayak enthusiasts; as well as, sailing clubs, White Rock Lake Park is also a great place to bike, bird watch, fish, picnic, run, sightsee, and walk. Historic buildings constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s are available for special events.
There are several parks in the environs of White Rock Lake including Flagpole Hill (94
acres), Lake Highlands Park (25 acres), Lakewood Park (17 acres), Norbuck Park
(101 acres), and Tokalon Park (10 acres). The Dallas Arboretum is also nearby... Archangels of Twelve Universal Rays
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