Froxfield of July 10, 2022 and the "descent to Earth" of a
“diamond-backed serpent”
A new crop picture which appeared near Froxfield on July 10, 2022 shows
the clever hexagonal / cubic geometry of a “diamond-backed rattlesnake”.
One of six half-diamond motifs was rotated by 120o to suggest
the snake’s “pointed tail”. Please try to reconstruct this crop picture
yourself, while getting all of its hexagonal and cubic geometries
correct? You may find it to be a difficult task!
Drawn in crops, that “diamond-backed serpent” was portrayed
schematically as “coiled” into a tight ball. Yet in the landscape
nearby, we can see suggestions that he will “uncoil” soon, and start
“slithering” to somewhere else (see
http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2022/cakewood/comments.html).
There is nothing quite so terrifying as wandering through a field
covered by tall grasses, then seeing a “coiled rattlesnake” at your
feet.
Why did the crop artists draw this particular crop picture for us in
July of 2022? It may have to do with a famous metaphor for
extra-terrestrial contact, which the Mayan people encoded into a
spectacular pyramid called “El Castillo” around 600 to 800 AD. When they
built El Castillo and other great pyramids, 1500 years ago, those Mayans
were the most advanced civilization on Earth, while Europe was still in
the Dark Ages.
How did they achieve so much in a short period of time? They seem to
have had help from an extra-terrestrial man called
“Kukulkan” or “Quetzalcoatl”, who travelled around in a rocket ship or
jet plane with a long, wavy, snake-like exhaust. For that reason, they
called him humorously the “flying serpent”. They even
carved representations of him, acting as a pilot for that jet plane, for
example La Venta Stela 19 (see
watch).
At some point in history, their beloved god-teacher flew back to the
stars, while promising that he would one day return. So for that reason,
the Mayans built a great pyramid called “El Castillo” in Chichen Itza,
to remind future generations that Kukulkan would indeed return. When
future generations would see a serpent-shaped contrail in
the sky, coming down to Earth, that would be him!
Millions of people now visit El Castillo on the spring and fall
equinoxes, to see a clever
play of light and shadow along its two staircases. This creates the
illusion of a diamond-backed snake, who
descends “from sky to Earth” as the Sun sets (see
castillo).
The people who run that tourist attraction even put on a light show at
night, to let everyone see how the illusion really works:
Now let us return to the major question here. If some crop pictures
today (such as Froxfield) are being made by extra-terrestrials, perhaps
people of the same distant-stellar origin who visited central America
1500 years ago, might that explain why they would draw for us the
same cultural metaphor of a “diamond-backed serpent”, who
finally decides to return to Earth from space after 1500 years?
Especially after they drew a “Quetzalcoatl Headdress” in crops in 2009,
within which a Wiltshire policeman saw three tall, blond
extra-terrestrial men on the next day?
Yes, indeed, this should not be too difficult for anyone to understand.
Here he comes!
Red Collie
in Sydney
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