Why was this
new crop picture drawn within a long, curved, natural “gully” in the
field, starting in the approximate location of Stonehenge, then
continuing on toward a square clump of trees nearby?
All three
aerial drone videos show that unusual landscape feature clearly. The
simplest explanation, for such a striking choice of field location,
might be that the “gully” could symbolize a “groove in the Earth”,
made by some heavy flying object as it comes in to
land.
If we study
where this July 16 crop picture was drawn, using Google Earth, we can
see the possible “flight path” of a UFO or “flying saucer”. It passes
first over Stonehenge to the northeast (along its Heel Stone), then
continues downward in a 180o curved fashion toward a large,
square clump of trees due south, and then toward another round clump of
trees due east:
The precise
location of their new crop picture has been outlined in
blue. A long, curved and
diffuse, white line, in the image taken from Google Earth, shows where
the narrow depression or “gully” is located. A few extra copies of the
new crop picture have been placed along that line.
The crop
artist has drawn his “round flying saucer” in the style of “round
Stonehenge”, to suggest that he is “keeping track of time” until he
comes down to land on Earth. This clever crop picture suggests
four more seasons
(1-2-3-4) of “autumn,
winter, spring, summer”, from July of 2020 to the summer of 2021, when
our Sun next rises and shines along the Heel Stone through Stonehenge
itself.
This new
crop picture was also drawn aligned with
sunset in the northwest on
July 16 (please see time 1:30 of
WATCH), to possibly suggest an alignment with
sunrise in the northeast, when
his “round flying saucer” eventually comes down. These are all important
clues to its intended meaning. Nothing has been drawn in crops, or
placed carefully in a field, by accident!
Red Collie
(Dr. Horace R. Drew)
P.S. The
very centre of this new crop picture shows 37 ring-like “standing
stones”, in an approximate imitation of 30 standing stones at Stonehenge
nearby. Those were drawn apparently to suggest
“37 lunar
months”
(which take 37 x
29.53 = 1092.6 days) or approximately 3 solar years (3 x 365.25 = 1095.7
days). Such an approximate lunar-solar relation was well-known to
builders of megalithic monuments all across the British Isles. An
ancient astronomer would place a wooden stake in front of one of those
37 standing stones, every time the Moon became “full”, and so could keep
track of long periods of calendar time accurately (as well as the four
seasons). |