A slightly
different interpretation, involving the clockwise orbital paths of our
Sun and Moon as seen from Earth, as they move into alignment to create a
partial lunar eclipse on August 8, 2017
Regarding
the crop picture at Willoughby Hedge on May 4, 2017, might we perhaps be
seeing a schematic image of our “Sun” and “Moon”, both rotating
clockwise around a central “Earth”, rather than just the “Moon” rotating
by itself? Each full rotation of our Moon, from North to South then back
to a North node, requires 27 days or one draconic month:
This is
essentially the same geometry which was suggested by a ring of 27
circles, drawn in crops at Oliver’s Castle on April 24, 2017 (see
olivers comments or
olivers articlesl). There two movable markers for “Sun” and “Moon”
could rotate around a central “Earth”, over a monthly period of 27 days,
so as to predict solar or lunar eclipses (see
stonehenge eclipses or
stonehenge-eclipse-predictor).
At
Willoughby Hedge, the two orbital geometries which we might refer to as
“Moon” (on the left) or “Sun” (on the right) resemble the prediction of
some “partial lunar eclipse:, as noted by a dashed blue line:
Our “Sun”
and “Moon” nearly align as two “circles” of equal size, on opposite
sides of a central “Earth”, but not quite! This is what happens during a
partial lunar eclipse.
The date of
May 4, 2017, when this crop picture was found, marked a passage of our
Moon through its North node. If we count forward in time by seven
more nodal passages: from May 4 N to May 19 S, May 31 N, June 15
S, June 27 N, July 12 S, July 25 N or August 8 S, then we find a “real”
partial lunar eclipse on August 8, 2017.
The
Willoughby Hedge crop picture shows a matching “seven circles” in both
of its outer, curved parts. This might be meant to suggest that our Moon
will rotate from N to S, or from S to N lunar nodes, seven times before
the partial lunar eclipse of August 8, 2017 takes place. It should be
emphasized that we do not know whether this crop picture is paranormally
real, or else locally human-made.
Red Collie
(Dr. Horace R. Drew) |