29-Jan-2003
A "New Spin" on Dowsing & Crop Circles
Paul Anderson, of the Canadian Crop Circle Research Network,
tells about the experiences of a CCRN team that recently
inspected cornfields where two crop circles were formed
during 2002. The corn has been cut down, but the fields have
not yet been ploughed. He writes, ?During a dowsing
experiment, the L-rods were observed to often start 'spinning'
in complete, fairly rapid rotations, in the second larger
formation in particular, which was also videotaped;
interestingly, similar accounts of spinning dowsing rods have
come from research teams during ghost-hunting
investigations. While dowsing itself is a much debated
subject, the results were interesting, needless to say.
?Also of interest are numerous stalks bent over about as
much as a foot above the ground, in the largest rectangular
bars of the larger second formation in particular (more than in
other areas of the formation previously visited), some sample
ears of corn from inside this formation which are significantly
more lightweight than controls from outside, birds which did
not feed on any of the fallen ears of corn inside the
formations for about two months after the formations initially
occurred then began to feed normally as well as recent
reports of odd lights over the Mission area including one
making a sharp 90-degree turn on January 16 and others in
the same area. One of the oldest known ancient sites in
British Columbia, Hatzic Rock, is also nearby, dating from
about 1,000 to 3,650 BC.?
Dowsing rods, strange lights, animals avoiding the area,
nearby prehistoric sites?all of this is familiar to those of us
who study crop circle formations in the U.K. But it turns out
the same things are happening much
closer to home.
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