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Windmill Hill of July 25, 2012 may represent a “lunar crescent” over a “trident”, to symbolize a conjunction of our Moon with planet Neptune on August 3-4, 2012
Our Moon will come very close in Earth’s sky (or conjunct) Neptune on August 3, 2012 at 2200 UT. Essentially then, this new crop picture shows a “trident” in which its “three spears” have been replaced with a “lunar crescent”!
A slight curvature down the long axis of Windmill Hill, from one end to the other, may match a similar curvature in the sky path of our Moon along the solar ecliptic, for one month during late July or mid-August of 2012 (as seen from latitudes 15 to 20o N on Earth):
...Continued
My one photo above shows a lady from Oregon looking at her compass which was going haywire.
Originally posted by Human_Alien
As a crop circle believer meaning, I do believe many of these are NOT are man-made hoaxes, how do you know OP that 1) this is the work of Greys and 2) they're throwing down iron?
Please don't spin theories into facts. There has been no proof at all as to who makes these or how they are made.
We must always rest on consideration and never conclude.
Thanks for the thread though!
S&F
Originally posted by Phage
My one photo above shows a lady from Oregon looking at her compass which was going haywire.
www.cropcircleconnector.com...
Doesn't say "go crazy". Doesn't say exactly explain what it means by "haywire". "Going crazy" implies it was spinning around or something. "Haywire" could be anything; pointing in the wrong direction, needle not turning at all...
Pretty silly looking compass. Maybe she didn't know how to read a compass. Maybe it was broken. Wouldn't be the first time.
edit on 7/28/2012 by Phage because: (no reason given)
The photos in this report were taken in a wheat field south of Beaumont. This instance of lodging occurred during the period of rapid growth when the seed heads were filling out. The farmer, Andre Goudreau, says the crop goes down every year in this field in the same place. With his permission my husband, Mike Arndt, and I took photos and collected some plant and soil samples.
Node changes in lodged wheat were typical of the node changes found in crop circle formations. We found bent and elongated nodes as well as many expulsion cavities.
Originally posted by PlanetXisHERE
Temporary Temples also has a excellent compendium of crop circles going back for more than a decade, and have a couple of other great aerial views of the one in this OP:
www.temporarytemples.co.uk...
Originally posted by Eurisko2012
Lady from Oregon is watching her compass go crazy.
I wish i was there to tell her why.
- Compass Goes Crazy -edit on 28-7-2012 by Eurisko2012 because: (no reason given)edit on 28-7-2012 by Eurisko2012 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by dayve
Originally posted by Eurisko2012
Lady from Oregon is watching her compass go crazy.
I wish i was there to tell her why.
- Compass Goes Crazy -edit on 28-7-2012 by Eurisko2012 because: (no reason given)edit on 28-7-2012 by Eurisko2012 because: (no reason given)
Why?
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by PlanetXisHERE
Interesting you should use that image. It comes from this site.
www.cropcirclequest.com...
The site discusses the similarites between stalks found in lodged (randomly downed) wheat and crop circles.
The photos in this report were taken in a wheat field south of Beaumont. This instance of lodging occurred during the period of rapid growth when the seed heads were filling out. The farmer, Andre Goudreau, says the crop goes down every year in this field in the same place. With his permission my husband, Mike Arndt, and I took photos and collected some plant and soil samples.
Here's the caption to your image:
Node changes in lodged wheat were typical of the node changes found in crop circle formations. We found bent and elongated nodes as well as many expulsion cavities.
Congratulations. You debunked yourself.
edit on 7/28/2012 by Phage because: (no reason given)
The grain fell in repeating patterns. Almost all grain was bent at the top node. The base of the plants fell in one direction and the top sections (from apical node upwards) fell in another. Areas of downed crop that appeared on the surface to have all the grain lying in one direction almost always had the lower internodal sections of stem lying in one direction and the top stem sections lying uniformly at an another angle.
Trying to imagine how this could have happened, we speculated that perhaps the grain was knocked down all in one direction by wind, grew upwards from the top node and then fell a second time from the top node at a different angle from the weight of the seed head. A local farmer disagreed with that theory. He said, "No, it goes down all at once like dominoes. Once it's down, it doesn't come up again."