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- Subject: New issue of THE CROP WATCHER (large file)
- Date: 16 Jan 1995 16:28:36 GMT
- Organization: The University of Manitoba
- Lines: 2205
- Message-ID: <3fe6rk$89d@canopus.cc.umanitoba.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: mira.cc.umanitoba.ca
- Summary: ASCII version of The Crop Watcher #23
- Keywords: crop,circles,ufo,skeptic
-
-
- The Crop Watcher
- Number 23 Autumn 1994
-
- Editorial
-
- First let me begin by apologising yet again for the unacceptable
- lateness of this issue. The reason for this delay is quite
- simple. Regular readers will know that in August I visited the
- National Monument Record in Swindon to see if I could find any
- evidence of historical crop circles in the aerial photographic
- archive. To my pleasant surprise I did find something important,
- but unfortunately I have faced a succession of frustrating
- problems in evaluating this important evidence. To begin with, it
- took three attempts and six weeks for my local photographic shop
- to enlarge the wrong parts of the photograph. Then I had to
- contact some aerial archaeologists to gain their professional
- opinion on what I had found. One archaeologist promised he would
- respond by mid November but unfortunately his workload prevented
- him from doing so. I have therefore decided to hold this article
- back to my next issue, something I should have done in October. I
- am very sorry for this and can assure readers that it won't
- happen again. Hopefully issue 24 will be ready for printing by
- late January.
-
- At this stage I must emphasise that the value of the photographic
- evidence I have discovered hangs very much in the balance. One
- aerial archaeologist who has inspected the print is convinced
- that the circular traces are all archaeological in origin.
- However, two other archeologists disagree. You'll have to wait
- and see before deciding for yourselves !
-
- Now onto more important things.
-
- Wiltshire Crop Rings
- in the 1920s
-
- The following article appeared in the Reading-Evening Post on
- August 4th 1994 :-
-
- "Corn Fairies played tricks in the 1920s
-
- Crop circles have been around for at least 100 years, according
- to a Reading woman. The claim comes after circles were discovered
- recently on a farmer's field at Ipsden near Reading. Constance
- Wheeler, 78, of [address deleted], remembers the mysterious
- patterns being discovered in the 1920s when she lived in
- Wiltshire. This contradicts the belief repeated in the media that
- they started appearing about a decade ago. But Mrs Wheeler said
- they were known as fairy circles at the time because no one knew
- who made them.
-
- She said 'I was eight years old when I first heard of fairy
- circles. My uncle, Teddy Lawes, came into tea laughing. It was a
- Thursday market day and he had been with his farmer friends at
- the Bear Hotel in Devizes market place. There they had met a
- farmer who had been swearing like a trooper because he had found
- four big circles and some small ones in his corn'. The farmer was
- shouting what he would do with the person who had made them. But
- Mr Lawes told him jokingly he would never catch them because the
- fairies had made them. He explained that he had seen a spate of
- them 20 years previously and his family had tried to make the
- corn stand up again but could not. Mrs Wheeler said 'I do not
- know what causes corn circles. I do not believe in fairies myself
- but I believe the circles existed 70, even 100, years ago'."
- (courtesy, Reading Evening Post).
-
- This superb account immediately suggests parallels with the
- numerous other claims of historical crop circles which have been
- published in the literature. To take just one example compare
- this account with the claim published by Andy Collins in The
- Circlemakers (pages 104-5). As a child of six Gwen Horrigan
- recalls seeing "fairy rings" at Whitequarry Hill near Kingham on
- the Oxfordshire/Gloucest-ershire border during the early years of
- the Second World War (page 104-5). The circles were up to 50 feet
- in diameter and exhibited swirl patterns and sharp cut-off edges.
- The Kingham circles were associated by local people with fairy
- lights seen in a local wood, which was said to be frequented by a
- witches coven. In 1960, less than 3 kms from this location, two
- concentric rings were found on Bill Edward's farm at nearby
- Evenlode.
-
- It seems significant that both these cases involved circles which
- were described as "fairy rings" but which did NOT involve fungal
- growths. In both cases the witnesses were emphatic that they were
- describing flattened corn laid down in circles or rings. In both
- cases the witnesses describe the fact that the crop was pressed
- down very firmly - something which other witnesses to historical
- crop circles have mentioned in their accounts. Bob Rickard and
- Andy Collins have both wondered whether circular fungal growths
- and crop circles have both been lumped together into one common
- folklore motif - the fairy ring. Doug Bower's admission on
- Cropcircle Communique II that natural lodging can frequently look
- very much like the crop circles he and Dave Chorley began making
- in the mid 1970s again lends credence to the idea that we have a
- masking effect, one which might be capable of obscuring the
- existence of the rare crop circles which have been reported by
- numerous people who have come forward to report historical
- cases. For the official Skeptics the existence of this most
- unwelcome evidence continues to be brushed aside as irrelevant.
-
- This is one of the primary reasons why The Crop Watcher exists -
- to continue researching and publishing evidence which other
- researchers seem so uncomfortable with.
-
- On November 26th 1994 I visited Constance Wheeler to find out
- more about this important historical case. Constance was born in
- 1916 and lived until she was 11 with her two uncles, Edward and
- William Lawes, and her two aunts, Kathleen and Margaret Lawes, at
- Craven House in Devizes. Her mother had secret aspirations to
- become a teacher and, with the help of a local clergyman, she
- secretly took a correspondence course at Reading University.
- Eventually she passed her exams and went to live and teach at the
- Pigott School at Wargrave near Reading. In those days it was
- almost unheard of for young women from rural farming communities
- to leave home and work elsewhere. In 1918 Constance was sent to
- live with her uncles and aunts when her brother was born.
- Originally it was intended that she should only stay for three
- weeks but her uncles and aunts had no children of their own and
- doted on her. They pleaded with Constance's mother to allow her
- to stay a little longer, and as this seemed to suit everyone
- concerned, the arrangement continued.
-
- Constance's uncle "Teddy" Lawes was an important figure in the
- Devizes area in the 1920s and 1930s. He was an auctioneer at
- Devizes market place as well as an estate agent and a property
- valuer. He was in partnership with Harry Ferris and must have
- been an imposing figure, weighing in at 17 stone. During the
- depression years Teddy Lawes valued many farms which went
- bankrupt in the Devizes area.
-
- Constance was probably eight years old when the corn circles
- appeared. This dates the event to August 1924 (during the school
- holidays). Unfortunately although Constance was fascinated when
- she learnt of the appearance of the circles, her intention to
- visit them was thwarted by a great storm which lashed down the
- crop and destroyed most of the evidence. For this reason
- Constance never saw the corn circles herself, but it is clear
- from her story that her two aunts and uncles did. Unfortunately
- they are no longer alive to question, but Constance recalled with
- great clarity the events of that summer as this was the first
- time she had ever heard of "fairy" circles. She particularly
- remembers asking her Aunt Kathleen about the circles. Apparently
- Aunty Kathleen replied that "We haven't heard of these (circles)
- for years".
-
- The circles appeared at Great Cheverell - within a couple of
- miles of Melvyn Bell's 1983 observation of a whirlwind creating a
- corn circle - and the precise location was probably on a farm
- owned by a Mr Shepherd. Unfortunately the Reading Evening Post
- article confuses Constance's description of the 1924 event with
- an earlier event recalled by her Aunty Kathleen (see below) but
- Constance recalls quite clearly that her uncles and aunts
- examined two quite large rings in an unknown crop (probably
- wheat). Like many modern circles the heads of the crop were
- undamaged and there was no indication that the rings were
- man-made. Unfortunately Constance does not recall any mention of
- how sharply defined the rings were but she was adamant that
- according to her aunts all the crop pointed in one direction.
-
- I questioned Constance very carefully about how her relatives
- tried to rationalise the "fairy circles". According to her uncles
- and aunts, no one knew how the rings were made and it was a
- complete mystery to everyone in the local community. By contrast
- the farmer, Mr Shepherd, was convinced that the rings were made
- by vandals and - as the Reading Evening Post article suggests -
- he was very angry and knew exactly what he would do if he caught
- them ! Apparently no one ever came under suspicion for having
- made the circles and no prosecutions were ever bought. According
- to Constance Wheeler Teddy Lawes did consider it possible that
- the rings were made by a whirlwind but this was no more than a
- guess.
-
- Unfortunately the Reading Evening Post article mistakenly
- attributes the "fairy ring" explanation to Constance's uncle,
- Teddy Lawes. However, the claim had actually been made by an
- Irish tinker who had briefly worked in the district. His
- suggestion that Shepherd would never catch the fairies who made
- the circles on his land was treated as a joke by everyone
- concerned.
-
- I questioned Constance carefully about some of the claims that
- have been made about rural superstitions which have been linked
- by some writers with the crop circle phenomenon. She recalls
- nothing to support the claim that crop circles were believed to
- be dangerous to enter or were associated with the Devil. In her
- opinion they were just viewed as an unusual local mystery.
-
- The Earlier Crop Circles
-
- As a child of eight Constance was naturally very curious about
- the crop rings and she eagerly pressed her aunts and uncles for
- more information about the fairy circles they recalled from
- earlier years. This earlier event took place some twenty years
- previously - around the turn of the century - and is also
- referred to in the Reading Evening Post article. This event
- occurred on Constance's grandfather's farm - known to the family
- as Lawes' Farm, but which was was also called Cornbury Farm. This
- farm is still located near Tilshead in the middle of Salisbury
- Plain and retains its name to this date (OSGR SU 005499). The
- earlier event involved six rings in wheat which almost touched
- eachother. Constance recalled her aunt's description of the crop
- being laid down "in perfect rings" which looked as though they
- had been "made by a compass" - exactly the same description used
- by John Llewellyn to describe the double rings he saw at
- Evenlode, Gloucestershire, in June 1960. The rings were laid out
- in a line and the four larger rings were adjacent to eachother at
- one end of the formation.
-
- Cornbury Farm is only four miles south of Great Cheverell and is
- surrounded by the rolling downland of Salisbury Plain. The
- Cornbury Farm rings were not as big as those which featured in
- the 1924 event but were as big as a room - perhaps 15 feet or
- more in diameter. Constance's aunt recalls that they tried to
- lift the fallen wheat with walking sticks and umbrellas but it
- had been flattened so hard that whenever the crop was lifted it
- flopped down again.
- Constance moved to Reading during the 1930s and for many years
- was employed as a civil servant in the Ministry of Works at
- Whiteknights Park, Reading.
- Assessment
-
- Constance Wheeler told her story to the Reading Evening Post
- because although she didn't know what caused the circles recalled
- from her childhood she wanted to contradict media claims that
- corn circles first appeared about a decade ago. It seems quite
- astonishing in the light of numerous repeated consistent claims
- like this that the official Skeptics continue to claim that crop
- circles are "new" and have no reliable historical precedents. It
- seems even more astonishing that the same motifs - the
- association of the circles with the fairy folk - should arise in
- both the Gwen Horrigan case and the Constance Wheeler case. With
- coincidences like this we are surely dealing with consistent
- accounts of a rare natural phenomenon. In the 1920s life in rural
- England was hard and it would have been unlikely that locals
- would have made crop circles for a game. It is important to
- remember that both these events occurred many years before the
- invention of the flying saucer mythology in 1947 so if, for sake
- of argument, these events were both the product of hoaxers, the
- only supernatural mythology available to them would have been the
- Irish tinker's "fairy" rings.
-
- Looking through the UFO Research Manitoba database there are
- several historical accounts of multiple ring formations dating
- back to the 1960s which are comparable to the earlier account by
- Constance Wheeler. In 1967 seven flattened rings appeared in a
- grass field at Duhamel, Alberta (Canada) . The rings were 10
- metres in diameter and 15 cms wide. That same year six concentric
- rings were discovered in a wheat field at Willen, Manitoba
- (Canada). The rings were 3.9 metres in diameter and nearly 2
- metres wide. In 1974 seven flattened rings were discovered at
- Langenburg, Saskatchewan, in a field of grass. The rings varied
- between 3 and 4 metres in diameter and were 46 cms wide. Readers
- will recall that this was the controversial UFO case discussed in
- CW15 and IUR volume 17 no 2.
-
- Both the earlier case and the 1924 case discussed above formed on
- or near rolling downland - one of the prerequisites for Meaden's
- atmospheric vortex theory. The 1924 event took place 36 years
- before an eye witness claims that he saw a crop circle being
- created by a whirlwind on a hot summers afternoon only a few
- miles away. It is known that under stable atmospheric conditions
- natural ring-shaped vortices can form which would be perfectly
- capable of creating the phenomena described by Constance
- Wheeler's relatives, particularly if they were located close to
- hillslopes. It seems clear that these are excellent candidates
- for an atmospheric explanation, although it has to be accepted
- that the involvement of six almost-touching rings in the earlier
- case begs important questions about how multiple ring vortices
- can be generated at the same time. Our thanks go to Constance for
- her courage in coming forward with this important account.
-
-
- Dr W.C. Levengood, John A. Burke, Lab Report No 18, the FE3
- Project and the H-Glaze Report
-
- Yet another major controversy has hit the troubled world of
- "cereology" with the publication of the H-Glaze Report by Dr W.C.
- Levengood and his co-worker John A. Burke, in the United States.
- Readers will already know from lengthy articles in The
- Cerealogist and The Circular about the controversial work being
- conducted by Dr W.C. Levengood and John A. Burke at Pinelandia
- Biophysical Laboratories (an impressive sounding name, but in
- fact merely a laboratory attached to Dr Levengood's private
- address). Over the past few years a number of "Lab Reports" have
- been issued proclaiming the latest discoveries by these
- researchers. As someone with postgraduate training in
- experimental design methods I was naturally interested in what
- Levengood and Burke have been up to !
-
- Lab Report No 18
-
- In "Lab Report No 18" Levengood and Burke describe what they call
- a "Technique for Examining Crop Circle Energetics". Readers will
- recall that one of the major criticisms made against the crop
- circle researchers by sociologists in the "Equinox" documentary
- was this vague use of that term "energy". So far my attempts to
- find out what kinds of "energetics" are being analysed by
- Levengood and Burke have met with failure. In the meantime it is
- perhaps safe to say that as a professional statistician I found
- their description of their methodology confusing and disquieting.
-
- Levengood and Burke claim that they have developed two
- verification methods that are capable of distinguishing "genuine"
- crop circles from fakes. These two tests are the amplitude
- coefficient (also referred to as the "alpha test") and the use of
- seedling development rates (ie growth rates). These tests have
- apparently indicated that "something is altering the rate at
- which ions flow through the affected crop". Levengood and Burke
- state that they have established that trampling cannot produce
- the statistical results they are discovering in "genuine" circles
- because they have compared their test results with results
- produced by provably man-made circles. Strangely, this finding
- didn't stop them from promoting crop taken from Jim Schnabel's
- Dharmic Wheel as genuine products of the rapid heat-inducing
- circle-making mechanism.
-
- In this reviewer's opinion, there are many problems with the
- claims made in Lab Report No 18. To begin with, Levengood and
- Burke appear to confuse the terms "sample" and "population".
- Also, they appear to have exaggerated the importance of the
- results they have obtained. Quoting chances of "less than one in
- a million" for their test results Levengood and Burke do not
- appear to appreciate that it is inappropriate to calculate
- binomial probabilities when ratio data is available.
-
- Reading through Lab Report No 18 I must admit that I have found
- it difficult to understand how these two researchers have
- analysed their data. They claim that
-
- "Each sample run involves five alpha values per trace. The
- current procedure involves six replicate tests on individual
- bracts (each selected from a different plant if available).
- Controls and crop circle samples are ran [sic] in alternate
- tests. The 30 data points (alphas) are entered into a computer
- program ("Statview") which provides a convenient means of
- statistically analysing many aspects of the data population. The
- most reliable, consistent information from the thirty alpha
- values is based on a statistical analysis of the paired, thirty
- data point alpha populations".
-
- Again Burke and Levengood use the term "population" when they
- mean "sample". I have read this statement over and over again,
- and I still don't understand how one can apply a "paired"
- analysis of "six replicate tests" on each plant. A "paired"
- analysis involves comparing two values, not six !
-
- The correct method of analysing the kind of data discussed in Lab
- Report No 18 is to conduct a two-way analysis of variance. In
- this way one can test whether or not there are statistically
- significant differences between samples of crop taken inside the
- formation and samples of crop taken from outside fformations,
- taking into account the natural variations in the alpha values of
- samples in both groups. Such an analysis would only be
- representative of crop circles in general if the samples taken
- were truly independent of eachother within each formation and if
- these tests were repeated in numerous formations chosen at random
- across the world. Unfortunately Lab Report No 18 examines samples
- taken from just one formation, the 1993 ringed circle in oats at
- Albertsville in Canada.
-
- Unfortunately, by taking "six replicate tests" on the same plants
- it is debatable whether or not these researchers have collected a
- truly random sample. For this reason not only have Levengood and
- Burke conducted the wrong statistical test but they may well have
- invalidated any results they obtain because they failed to
- satisfy one of the primary assumptions underlying almost every
- statistical test ever conducted !
-
- However, the greatest problem with Lab Report No 18 is Levengood
- and Burkes' curious decision to alter PROX-10 from a control
- reading into a circle reading in their Figure 4 (approximately
- reproduced in Figure 1 on page 6). This decision cannot possibly
- be justified because it completely alters the outcome of the
- results of the alpha test !
-
- In the top half of Figure 1 we have reproduced Levengood and
- Burkes' results by drawing the average alpha value for each
- sample. Levengood and Burke have drawn a line through the highest
- control average (Cont-7) to emphasise how all the average alpha
- values taken inside the circle and ring are higher. However, this
- decision ignores the fact that PROX-10 - a sample taken in
- unaffected crop close to the formation - produces an average
- alpha value which is higher than four of the six circle and ring
- samples !
-
- If we redraw Figure 1 by correctly treating PROX-10 as a control
- sample (rather than a sample taken from inside the formation),
- then the true test result becomes clear. There is little evidence
- that the average alpha values are significantly higher inside the
- circles and rings than in surrounding, untouched crop. In other
- words, the alpha test provides no evidence of unusual effects.
- This decision to alter PROX-10 from a control sample to a
- "circle" sample is scientifically dishonest, for it alters the
- whole outcome of the experiment. It is true that two of the alpha
- values are higher than the PROX-10 average (CIR-1 and RING-6),
- but in this reviewer's opinion it must surely be expected that a
- two-way analysis of variance will demonstrate that there is no
- statistically significant difference between the average alpha
- values found inside the formation and those found in the
- surrounding crop. I say this because it is clear that there are
- wide variations between the average alpha values in both groups
- (e.g. the average alpha readings in the control samples vary from
- approx. 0.022 and 0.075, whilst the average alpha values of
- samples taken within the circle vary from 0.038 to 0.090).
-
- Unfortunately Levengood and Burke have failed to publish the data
- they used in Lab Report No 18 so I cannot test this conclusion
- properly.
-
- The True Extent of Hoaxing
-
- One of the problems with this research is that it is apparent
- from their own published work that Levengood and Burke seem
- blithely unaware of the true extent of hoaxing in Britain.
- Levengood's recent promotion of Jim Schnabel's Dharmic Wheel
- formation seems an excellent example of the way in which the crop
- circle myth continues to flourish because of the mass suppression
- of pro-hoax evidence by leading cerealogists. Of course Levengood
- and Burke claim to be searching for an infallible method of
- distinguishing real from fake - something we would all love to
- see - but this is no excuse for not having done their homework on
- recent events.
-
- The H-GLAZE REPORT
-
- In July 1994 an even bigger controversy broke with the
- publication of what has been called the H-Glaze Report. The
- author, John A. Burke, begins by claiming that he and Levengood
- have made an "extraordinary discovery" following their analysis
- of some reddish-brown glazed chalk found by Peter Sorensen in two
- formations that lay close to the 1993 Cherhill pictogram.
-
- Sorensen would have preferred to examine these circles
- immediately but - unfortunately - Busty Taylor had to return
- home that evening for an appointment. Sorensen returned to the
- site two days later, accompanied by a neighbour. According to an
- amicable farmer the circles had arrived a week or so earlier and
- that originally parts of the circles had been covered by "a dark
- grey mist" which had been largely washed away by heavy rain.
- When Sorensen arrived both formations had been harvested. The
- first formation was shaped like a tear-drop (in fact like a
- "Nautilus") and exhibited multiple swirls and complex layering
- effects. Sorensen noted that the dust was concentrated inside the
- swirls and resembled soot. As he videoed the formation Sorensen
- largely dismissed the possibility of a prank because the dust
- appeared "almost accidental". However, as he looked more closely
- Sorensen discovered a "reddish-brown, dull glaze" on lumps of
- chalk and pebbles. A smaller concentration of dust and coated
- chalk was discovered in the second formation, a circle with an
- arc, which lay close by.
-
- Levengood's Analysis
-
- According to the H-Glaze Report, Levengood subjected the glaze to
- a spectroscopic analysis. He discovered that the particles were
- composed of iron and oxygen (FE). According to Levengood's
- reasoning this didn't make any sense, because had these
- originated from the soil there should have been traces of calcium
- and silicon as well, but strangely there was none. Microscopic
- study revealed that the glaze was composed of "thousands of
- partially-fused tiny spheres" which contained both magnetite (Fe
- O) and hermatite (Fe O). As the particles were magnetized, the
- "glaze" acquired an "H" - the chemical symbol for magnetism.
- Finding no evidence of a "terrestrial system" that could account
- for such unusual particles Levengood and Burke mounted an
- "extensive" literature search to discover if such material had
- been discovered before. Astonishingly they concluded that the
- only way particles containing both iron and oxygen could have
- appeared in a crop formation was if it had been deposited during
- a meteor shower ! In their preliminary report Levengood and Burke
- go into great detail about how the surface of a meteorite would
- become molten as it enters the earth's atmosphere. During this
- state the outer surface of the meteorite is blown off and
- solidifies into tiny spheres that oxidise (rust) and fall to
- earth. Somewhat conveniently this process is said to take days or
- even weeks.
-
- Levengood and Burke hypothesize that this dust was released
- during an unusually intense Perseid meteor shower, which
- apparently peaked nearly two weeks earlier. During their
- microscopic examination of the particles they noticed "mud-crack"
- patterns and bubbles where the molten meteoritic droplets had
- partially refused. Attempting to explain why the molten droplets
- had failed to burn the wheat Levengood and Burke propose that the
- moisture inside the stems evaporated and produced water droplets
- on the stems, thus insulating them from the effect of the heat.
-
- This "Leidenfrost effect" insulated the stems from burning.
- Levengood and Burke were so excited by their discovery that they
- quickly circulated the H-Glaze Report to numerous sources, urging
- cereologists to "make magnets a standard part of their field
- equipment" to locate more meteoric dust. Furthermore, the authors
- claim that "This incident provides rare, direct evidence for a
- theoretical model of crop formation - the plasma vortex - that
- had previously been indicated only in an indirect way." They go
- on to cite confirmation of their results by stating that the
- affected wheat stems exhibited "dramatic differences" to control
- samples in terms of the alpha test and measured growth rates.
- In their conclusions Levengood and Burke grandly claim to
- represent "the scientific community of the world" and they
- challenge hoaxers to explain how they managed to "scavenge the
- atmosphere for meteoric dust, re-heat it and lay it down just
- right with no contamination". They predict that crop formations
- will appear more frequently following meteor showers than at any
- other time.
-
- The Sting ?
-
- Well, if all the claims made by Levengood and Burke were really
- supportable we would have a major breakthrough which would make
- one giant conceptual leap in our understanding of the crop circle
- phenomenon. However, as we have come to expect in this business,
- the circlemakers were not about to let Levengood and Burke get
- away with such an astonishing claim without some kind of
- fightback - oh no !
-
- On July 25th 1994 Robert Irving wrote to John Burke. Irving's
- letter stated :-
-
- "It is not our primary interest to contradict your findings ...
- It is instead our intention to use your report as textual source
- material for an upcoming exhibition to be held on behalf of The
- Agency Gallery, in London. The piece in question (entitled 'Fe3')
- will comprise a museum style glass cabinet with text displayed on
- the glass. Inside the cabinet, beyond the text, will be a
- standard Oxford University chemistry laboratory bottle containing
- fine-grade iron filings. This bottle was originally addressed,
- labelled, and postmarked to correspond with the crop formation
- which constitutes the subject of your report ... and will be
- displayed in it's original state. Remaining samples of the 'grey
- dust' will also be shown. All text will be fully credited to you,
- citing the tests and conclusions of Dr W.C. Levengood. The
- context of the piece can be loosely summarised by the following
- theoretical equation: If science is incongruous to mysticism, and
- the mystical is represented through art, should 'bogus' science
- be elevated to an art form ? Certainly the gallery concerned
- seems to think so, and our fingers feeling the pulse of a growing
- trend towards millenialist awareness would seem to confirm this."
-
- We have reproduced Irving's own photograph of the laboratory
- bottle on page 8. This bottle was exhibited at a London Art
- Gallery on the South Bank during September and the accompanying
- text is reproduced on page. BBC2's "The Late Show" took an
- interest in the iron fillings exhibit and they filmed an
- interview with Irving during September [for proof, ring Matthew
- Collings at the Beeb]. Meanwhile, a furious argument has
- developed between Levengood and Burke, on the one hand, and
- Irving and Montague Keen, on the other.
-
- Irving has sent samples of the original batch of iron filings to
- Montague Keen and offered them to Levengood and Burke, who so far
- have failed to accept this offer. Irving's intention is to allow
- all three to compare these samples with the glaze discovered in
- the Cherhill formations. Keen has very sensibly suggested that
- these samples, and those found in the Cherhill formations, be
- subjected to an independent test by a reputable laboratory to
- establish whether or not they are one and the same thing.
-
- Tellingly, at the time of writing, Burke and Levengood have yet
- to respond to this offer. Furthermore, both Burke and Levengood
- have failed to supply full answers to a series of detailed
- statistical questions I sent to them during late September
- (letters available as usual).
-
- It is perhaps not surprising that these researchers have refused
- to be drawn into this affair any further considering their
- promotion of "dramatic differences" between Irving's iron
- filing-coated seeds and controls. Were they to do so, and if
- Irving's claims are true, then the fallacy of the much vaunted
- alpha tests would be exposed for all to see.
-
- Conclusions
-
- The H-Glaze Report is yet another amusing story in the
- long-running crop circle hoax, another testament to the failure
- of researchers to attain true objectivity in their work, and
- another telling lesson to the power of the anomaly myth. No one
- can doubt the sincerity of Levengood and Burke, and their
- dedication to their work deserves praise. But this work is
- fatally flawed for two primary reasons - the desperate desire to
- find an anomalous explanation on the part of Levengood and Burke,
- and their seeming naivety when it comes to understanding the true
- extent of the hoax evidence and the mass cover-up of that
- evidence by the believer groups these past few years. Oh well,
- all's fair in love and war !
-
- Stop Press
-
- Dr Levengood has had an article published in Physiologia
- Plantarum 92 - a properly refereed scientific journal of the kind
- that even the Wessex Skeptics presumably take seriously. This
- article again promotes the alpha test and enhanced growth rates
- as measures of how to verify "genuine" crop circles. A full
- article will appear in our next issue discussing this astonishing
- development.
-
- The Wiltshire Crop Circle Farce
-
- Regular readers will already be aware of the numerous claims and
- counter claims about hoaxing in deepest Wiltshire over the past
- few years. It doesn't take a PhD or two to work out that Southern
- Britain is now completely saturated with mischievous yet benign
- "circlemakers" keeping the UFO myth alive and kicking as they run
- rings around the True Believers. These circlemakers have
- infiltrated all the believer groups and - as with Doug and Daves'
- deft tactics - they learn how to satisfy the needs of the True
- Believers by simply listening to them at believer conferences and
- in smokey public houses.
-
- This year your Editor has learnt that there are many new groups
- of circlemakers operating from the Beck-hampton area of
- Wiltshire. These new circlemakers meet at The Barge public house
- in Honey Street (half a mile to the south of Alton Barnes).
- Despite the fact that the general public lost interest with the
- crop circle subject several years ago an entertaining battle
- continues to rage between two directly opposed belief systems - a
- religious war between the growing numbers of circle makers and
- the True Believers desperate to deny the reality of the Great
- Crop Circle Hoax. Where this war will take us, nobody knows.
- On the humorous side The Crop Watcher has learnt that one group
- of True Believers are driving around the darkened lanes of
- Wiltshire in a vehicle marked as the "Hoax Buster" (it has a
- distinctive flashing light and is based on the "Ghostbusters"
- film). In another celebrated incident a well known farmer's wife
- stuffed a potato up the exhaust pipe of a car belonging to Adrian
- Dexter. We have also learnt that during one night of bitter
- recriminations at The Barge plans were well developed to push
- Adrian Dexter's car into the Kennet and Avon canal as a
- punishment for his alleged nocturnal activities.
-
- During interviews with several sources your Editor has been
- informed of numerous names of people allegedly engaged in making
- crop circles. These names include Andy Batey, Rod Dickinson,
- Robert Irving, Vince Palmer, Simon Shedlar, Paul Pilson (??) and
- Lee Winterson. Some of these names appear as bona fide witnesses
- in Andy Collins' controversial new book Alien Energy (to be
- reviewed in full in our next issue).
-
- In a lengthy interview with a "deep throat" source The Crop
- Watcher has learnt that Andy Batey has admitted to making the
- seven legged formation in East Field this summer. From what I can
- tell it is common knowledge that
-
- - Andy Batey claimed that he was intending to make a circle with
- keys at Lurkeley Hill which subsequently appeared;
- - "Paul Pilson" has admitted to overlaying a circle on top of a
- pre-existing "nautilus" at Cherhill in 1994;
- - Lee Winterson has boasted that he made several formations in
- the Alton Barnes area; and
- - Andy Batey has admitted that Vince Palmer has made circles in
- Wiltshire.
-
- Readers may also be interested to learn that Paul Vigay, a CCCS
- Council member and field officer who runs something called the
- Independent Research Centre for Unexplained Phenomena (IRCUP)
- from an address in Portsmouth, mixes with these circle makers at
- The Barge but makes not the slightest mention of this fact in
- Enigma, the magazine Vigay edits and publishes on behalf of his
- "world-wide" research organisation (the letter heading features
- an artist's impression of the alleged "Grey" alien of UFO
- folklore). In a recent letter to your Editor Paul Vigay admits
- that he has seen hoaxers placing "artifacts" inside crop circles
- in Wiltshire. For some reason Vigay refuses to name these circle
- makers or how he seems to know who these hoaxers are. It is
- suspected that Vigay has film of these circlemakers in the
- process of making circles, a claim which Vigay has not denied.
-
- In several extensive interviews with a second "deep throat"
- source your Editor has learnt that a group of around one dozen
- circlemakers are claiming responsibility for having made every
- single formation which has appeared in Southern Britain this
- summer. This claim is supported by the fact that many of the 1994
- formations were based on a common theme - the so-called Scorpion
- - and that some of these designs appear in a booklet titled "A
- Beginners Guide to Crop Circle Making", which has been produced
- by the Wiltshire Circlemakers "with assistance from Fe3" (see
- review on page 19).
-
- Speaking to our second "deep throat" source at length one is left
- in not the slightest doubt about his extensive knowledge of the
- circumstances surrounding the appearance of this summer's most
- entertaining formations - eg the ever decreasing circles at
- Ipsden, north of Reading, a similar formation at East Dean near
- Goodwood in Sussex, and the Galaxy formation near Avebury in
- Wiltshire - to name but three examples. With each formation there
- is a story to tell and an amusing anecdote to recall. With each
- formation there is abundant mirth at the foolishness of those who
- continue to cling to the crop circle faith and who continue to
- deny evidence which the result of the world accepted long, long
- ago.
-
- It appears that this loose group of circlemakers are fascinated
- by the "false science" of the belief-centred cerealogists. It is
- this "false science" which provides the main motivation for the
- Circlemakers' activities. Whilst most people respond to the
- cerealogists' incredible claims with outright derision it is
- clear that the Wiltshire Circlemakers have decided that a more
- appropriate response is to "set up" the cerealogists by faking
- evidence for the alien intelligence believed to be responsible
- for the "genuine" phenomenon. A good example of the circlemakers'
- campaign is the furore surrounding the notorious H-Glaze report
- (see page 8), but it seems clear that other projects have been
- executed and that other, more outrageous projects, are planned.
-
- In an interview with a farmer located right in the heart of the
- Beckhampton area your Editor has learnt that the activities of
- the Wiltshire Circlemakers do not meet with the approval of local
- farmers. Some have spent hundreds of pounds installing new
- fencing in an attempt to keep the circlemakers and cerealogists
- at bay. Many farmers seem surprisingly unaware that the names of
- many leading circle makers are known, that some have confessed to
- having made specific circles and that allegations of complicity
- with local farmers have been made. The farmer I spoke to
- described circlemaking as "mindless destruction". He also felt
- that it was extremely unlikely that genuine farmers would damage
- their own fields.
-
- Unfortunately, because of the terms of his tenancy agreement,
- this particular farmer felt that it would be unwise to speak out
- publicly against the circlemakers and their activities. However,
- he was adamant that once the names of the circlemakers are known
- and once these names can be tied to specific formations then
- actions for trespass and criminal damage would undoubtedly
- follow. The effect of the new Criminal Justice Act, which became
- law in November, will be an interesting additional component to
- this battle of the belief systems in darkest Wiltshire. Until
- this Act came into force circlemakers ran the risk of a civil
- action in the courts. Now, however, circlemakers can expect to be
- prosecuted under the criminal law, with much tougher sentences.
-
- The real question is this - who deserves to be prosecuted more
- keenly - the circlemakers or the cereologists ? The Crop Watcher
- will continue to report on the Great Crop Circle Hoax as it runs
- and runs ...
-
- UFO Hoaxers Confess in Pub
-
- As regular readers already know, the believer groups in
- "cereology" hold many dark secrets. Sometimes your Editor is
- lucky enough to be let in on these secrets. Sometimes these
- secrets come out more by luck than by chance. This story is an
- example of the latter.
-
- In March 1994 Terence Meaden received a 3 page letter from
- someone who has requested anonymity (name and address on file).
- The revelations in this letter again knocks big holes in the case
- that has been made by Colin Andrews, George Wingfield and others
- that crop circles and associated UFO reports are caused by an
- alien intelligence. many sensible people have long suspected that
- some technically minded official Skeptics may have been
- responsible for some of the UFO footage that has been shot in
- Wiltshire. Now "CM" from Wiltshire has handed us evidence which
- seems to support that contention. This is what she has to say :
- "Dr Dr Meaden, Just before Christmas [1993], some friends and I
- were having a bite to eat in The Bear at Devizes and somehow we
- got on to the subject of corn circles. There was a bit of an
- argument going on and we were getting a bit heated !
-
- There was a group of men near us and two came over. They said
- they had seen most of the crop circles and that they provided the
- lights [UFO sightings]. For a moment we were flummoxed, but they
- showed us photos of them in the corn circles with a remote
- controlled model plane disguised as a disc [spaceship]. It
- certainly looked convincing. They said they used torches at
- night, but had used the plane in daylight and at least two videos
- had been made by people thinking the disc was a genuine part of
- the circle mystery. They knew some of the circle makers. They
- thought they were talking to old ladies who would think no more
- of it, but what they didn't know was that I was deeply involved
- with research into the Warminster research of UFOs in the 1970s.
-
- I happen to think hoaxers mar any research and are a bloody
- nuisance at the least !
-
- So I enclose information of the hoaxers at Warminster [a second
- letter], I certainly learnt a lot about trickery on that theme. I
- don't know if it will be of any use to you. I expect the torches
- of today are a bit different to [those of] the seventies. Yours
- etc"
-
- Well ! Unless this is MBF Services-style dis-information it seems
- that we have a potential answer to several celebrated UFO films.
- Readers will recall - for example - that in the Alexander film
- there was a stiff breeze blowing across Alexander's vantage
- point. Could this breeze have masked the sound of a small
- remotely-piloted model aircraft disguised as a tiny disk-shaped
- UFO ?
-
- Circlevision have informed The Crop Watcher that in their opinion
- the Steven Alexander film shows nothing more than a small bird.
- This somewhat surprising opinion has apparently been supported by
- the Ministry of Defence and the Natural History Museum, who have
- both viewed the film.
-
- Further evidence to support "CM" 's claim appeared in the
- Hertfordshire Advertiser last April when one Colin Rogers also
- claimed to have made a small disk-shaped flying saucer which was
- electrically powered. According to the article Rogers claims that
- his device was developed by a private company and was
- photographed by chance witnesses on June 25th 1977 at nearby
- Wheathampstead. Four photographs of the object were taken and
- these are reproduced in "UFOs, A British Viewpoint" by Jenny
- Randles and Peter Warrington.
-
- Now could it be that this is the same disk-shaped flying saucer
- as the one in the photographs which were presented by the men in
- "The Bear" at Devizes? If either of these stories are true then
- many celebrated UFO incidents in Britain involving disk-shaped
- "craft" may, potentially, be explicable. Unfortunately our
- attempts to contact Mr Rogers for a demonstration of his device
- have failed, but following further correspondence "CM" has
- described the claimed hoaxers with the following :-
-
- "The lighting [in the pub] was not very good but one/ of them was
- local by his accent. They spoke of others who helped them with
- the hoaxes. I also gathered that there were people local to Alton
- Barnes who were 'in the plot'. I would be suspicious of the ones
- who were making money out of it. The pilot who would 'be in'
- with everyone was doing very well out of it. There's [also] some
- connection with the 'Waggon and Horses'. They said it was easy to
- make a circle while the field was being watched, by putting the
- 'tools' in the place selected in daylight and creeping in at
- night. I suspect the hoaxers probably have at least one
- accomplice among the watchers...." (letter dated August 23 1994).
-
- So, who can these hoaxers be ? Who is 'the pilot' (Busty Taylor
- ?) ? And who in the Alton Barnes area is making money out of the
- hoaxes ? If anyone else knows anything at all about this group of
- hoaxers or Mr Colin Rogers we will be happy to publish further
- information. Our thanks go to "CM" for sending us this invaluable
- information.
-
- Confession Time
-
- As promised in a previous issue your Editor hereby offers himself
- for public flogging for all his Crimes Against Cereology. For too
- long I have highlighted the crimes of others, their lies, the
- deceptions and the belief-centred nonsense. Well, now its my
- turn. Here it goes !
-
- Looking back over my eight years of involvement with the crop
- circle phenomenon I have to admit that I have very mixed feelings
- about my achievements and failures. I don't think I can hide my
- disappointment that so many crop circles turned out to be
- man-made. Of course it would have been so so easy for me to adopt
- that favourite position of the armchair Skeptics by saying "I
- don't like the look of these circles, therefore they must all be
- hoaxes", but don't believe what you may have read elsewhere, that
- is not how science is conducted.
-
- When I first became involved in circles research in late 1985 I
- quickly learnt from Jenny Randles that some circles were
- definitely man-made. This fact always underlined my attitude
- towards the subject and I took great care to ensure that I left
- plenty of evidence to demonstrate this fact. I always knew that
- some circles were hoaxes and I always considered it possible that
- a great many circles might turn out to be hoaxes. Despite this it
- is instructive to see that some observers (eg Robin Allen in The
- Skeptic, and Jim Schnabel in Round in Circles) have totally
- rewritten crop circle history to omit this fact, for reasons best
- known to themselves. It was blindingly obvious to anyone with the
- slightest grain of intelligence that peculiar circular markings
- in fields could easily turn out to be man-made. I said as much in
- my outrageous 1985 letter to the Editor at TVS News in
- Southampton, when I dismissed all the Cheesefoot Head circles as
- night-time hoaxes perpetrated by low flying helicopter pilots !!
-
- Despite my initial pro-hoax views I quickly became open to
- alternative explanations when I was introduced to eye witness
- testimony, historical crop circle cases and Ian Mrzyglod's work.
- As so many of the early crop circles were relatively simple, and
- as there were some precedents for what was happening, I soon
- accepted that many circles might turn out to be meteorological in
- origin. It was certainly my scientific duty to see just how far
- this hypothesis could account for the evidence, and I am proud of
- the fact that Jenny Randles and myself are the two primary
- researchers who examined this theory and promoted it in the
- public arena. Despite claims made by some observers, we always
- disagreed with Meaden over the extent of hoaxing whilst giving
- Meaden the benefit of the doubt. In the absence of strong pro
- hoax evidence prior to circa 1990 I think we did the right thing.
-
- In those early years I produced several published articles
- promoting both hoaxing and meteorological explanations. As
- speculation goes these articles were reasonable attempts at
- trying to understand some complex issues. However, on reading
- these articles now, seven years later, it is blindingly clear
- that my biggest error in the 1986-89 period was my failure to
- exhaustively test possible circle-making methods and to test
- these methods on the established researchers (a la Wessex
- Skeptics). By failing to do this I allowed myself to be swayed by
- Meaden's atmospheric vortex theory to the point where I accepted
- that many of the relatively simple formations I was seeing were
- "genuine". Of course, evidence remains which suggests that
- Meaden's theory is still valid for some cases, but it is still
- disappointing to realise that I was as guilty of promoting key
- falsehoods as everyone else. Of course, its easy with hindsight,
- but I do have some excuses.
-
- To begin with, I was the only active circle researcher living in
- the Hampshire / Wiltshire area who was open to the idea that
- perhaps many circles were hoaxes. To make experimental circles
- would have been a difficult and risky business given the mystery
- mongering of other well known pundits. The last thing Jenny and I
- wanted to do was to help fan the flames of a silly season story,
- something the New Scientist had already accused BUFORA of doing
- in 1984. Of course, nothing could have been further from the
- truth. BUFORA was the only serious research organisation that had
- even bothered to investigate the phenomenon, and we had already
- spoken out publicly about both hoaxing and meteorology (something
- the official Skeptics have now totally written out of crop circle
- history in their attempts to debunk all crop circle researchers
- and all crop circle evidence). As I was soon to discover, once
- that term UFO is associated with an anomaly a very peculiar
- social reaction occurs whereby anyone associated with that
- anomaly is deemed by the Skeptics to be in league with the Devil
- ! If you don't believe this try reading Robin Allen's vicious and
- inaccurate article in The Skeptic !
-
- During the mid 1980s Jenny Randles and myself demonstrated our
- concern that many circles might be hoaxes by proposing several
- methods of making crop circles. It was in response to our
- discussion of these possible methods (in "Mystery of the
- Circles", BUFORA 1986) that the BBC twice hired heli-copters and
- would-be circle makers to see what could be created under test
- conditions. Again we have never received the slightest degree of
- credit from the Skeptics for our suggestion that researchers
- should attempt to replicate "genuine" characteristics - something
- we were simply not resourced to do ourselves.
-
- Looking back on those crucial early years I believe now that we
- were both severely misled by the poor quality of the 1983
- Westbury hoax, where hoaxers left damaged crop despite making
- their circles in broad daylight. This event substantially reduced
- our expectations of what hoaxers could do at night, particularly
- given the extensive experimentation into methods of making crop
- circles which Pat Delgado discussed at the "Open Meeting" held in
- Alresford. The failings of this evidence mislead us all for
- years. Despite this, we discussed hoaxing in virtually all our
- written work and in almost all our media interviews. It is sad to
- see that our concern with hoaxing at this early stage in the
- development of the mythology has subsequently been totally
- written out of the history of the subject.
-
- Looking back I can see all too clearly what went wrong. One of
- the characteristics of anomaly research is that the moment an
- anomaly is labelled and identified an incredibly emotive debate
- is generated where both proponents and Skeptics adopt extreme
- polarised positions. I saw this happening from a very early stage
- and was quite powerless to stop it. On the one hand we had the
- Flying Saucer Review team insisting that crop circles could not
- be hoaxes and just had to be the result of an alien controlled
- force, whilst on the other hand the official Skeptics were
- insisting that crop circles were not the result of an alien
- intelligence and just had to be hoaxes ! There was no middle
- ground, no reasoned argument about the facts, no understanding
- that in science several anomalies can often be lumped together
- under one explanatory heading.
-
- During this very early stage I was thrown into a vipers nest,
- forced to decide whether the public debate over the cause of the
- circles was more important than the actual investigation of the
- circles. Deciding which of these two options to take was probably
- the most difficult choice Jenny Randles and I faced, but
- ultimately I suppose we tried to do both, with the inevitable
- result that we failed to fulfil both aims. We allowed the crop
- circle mythology to develop into a world-wide hoax whilst at the
- same time we failed to fully test all hoaxing methods. Of course
- its one thing to discuss numerous possible circle making methods
- in print but quite another to actually try those methods in the
- classic scientific manner.
-
- By failing to construct circles I was not only guilty of
- misunderstanding what experienced hoaxers could create at night
- but I was also guilty of promoting the myth that "bent but not
- broken" was synonymous with the "genuine" phenomenon, something
- which has now been proven to be untrue on numerous
- well-documented occasions. I regard these two errors as my
- primary mistakes. However, the fact that I was all on my own,
- both physically and philosophically, meant that the opportunity
- to test these methods and assumptions about what hoaxers could
- and could not do was always restricted, particularly given my
- lack of time and resources.
-
- Being asthmatic I imagine that I might be capable of making say a
- 10 foot diameter circle on my own, but even this would have left
- me totally exhausted and feeling pretty awful for some time
- afterwards. Making several circles to "test" the leading
- researchers would have been a physically challenging task. Of
- course, there were no official Skeptics or Magonians around to
- assist me or to suggest further avenues for research - they were
- too busy sitting at home watching TV !
-
- In the early years I did visit crop circles, but as many appeared
- in the Cheesefoot Head punchbowl and as this area was allegedly
- out-of-bounds to researchers, I never went inside the Cheesefoot
- punchbowl circles - I merely trusted the abilities of my fellow
- researchers (something our oh-so-clever Skeptics have never
- realised !). Had I actually visited these early circles I would
- have discovered Matthew Lawrence's observation that many of these
- "pristine" circles exhibited damaged crop, muddy footprints and
- suspicious underlying tracks (something other researchers
- cleverly managed to miss or cover-up). I did notice a lot of
- damage in the 1987 South Wonston circle but I wrongly concluded
- that because it was so close to the road and housing that it had
- been damaged by subsequent visitors. Would be researchers note -
- you can't do your research from a car parked at the edge of the
- field and you can't assume that the evidence you examine is
- uncontaminated - it normally is !
-
- Looking back on this period I realise now that as Andrews and
- Delgado became increasingly outspoken about the circles they were
- finding, I drew back realising (with utter horror) what they were
- going to do. My caution and concern about their activities
- actually led to me distance myself from the research and
- investigation that I should have been doing. This is not to say
- that I didn't visit circles at all - I certainly did - but the
- fear that I would find myself in the middle of a field with two
- people I deeply mistrusted had a strong negative effect on what I
- should have been doing.
-
- During these early years, as Doug and Dave began making circles
- across a progressively wider area, I was severely restricted in
- terms of time and money. It wasn't until late 1985 that I had my
- first car and I well recall trampling up from the Percy Hobbs bus
- stop in July 1985 searching for my first circles (a quintuplet on
- Gander Down). It was a frustrating experience. However, even when
- I joined forces with Terence Meaden in 1986, it wasn't long
- before the Wiltshire hoaxers began hoaxing and many of their
- circles were a good hour or two away from my home. Unlike many
- other circle researchers, I was unwilling to allow my spare time
- hobby to interfere with my career with frequent nocturnal trips
- and circle-watching activities. I think this attitude was
- perfectly reasonable as there were others who were doing the
- basic investigation and I had high hopes that the phenomenon
- would soon be satisfactorily explained to the public at large.
-
- Little did I know how those pretty little circles I was visiting
- would turn into a Great Filthy Hoax which would spread out around
- the world bringing wealth to a few but disaster to others.
- Looking back on it all now I wonder what would have happened had
- I done the correct thing - given up my job and camped out with a
- pair of infra-red binoculars in the copse half way down
- Cheesefoot Head. What would have happened had I seen Doug and
- Dave coming down the hillside to make a formation ? Would I have
- been brave enough to tackle two complete strangers in the middle
- of the night a mile from the nearest habitation ? Would I have
- been able to persuade these two men to stop their circle-making
- on the basis that they were helping others to discredit "serious"
- UFO research (no, don't laugh) ? Who would have believed me if I
- had obtained this "proof" that their precious circles were
- actually man-made ? Would Andrews and Delgado have stopped their
- reckless promotion of the subject if I had proven to them that
- one of their "genuine" circles was really man made ? Would other
- hoaxers have stopped what they were doing ? Somehow I doubt it,
- and we can just imagine the official Skeptics recompensing me for
- the loss to my career such actions would have entailed.
-
- Those early years were deeply frustrating. I remember having an
- almost permanent headache in the summer of 1987 as I saw what was
- happening. How could I stop what Andrews and Delgado were doing ?
- I was desperate to convince them to think again about their
- extraordinary interpretation of the evidence, but they simply
- ignored the evidence I sent to them and in the end they forced me
- into a position where I was left with no choice but to publicly
- slate them for what they were saying and doing, something I had
- hoped to avoid with my letters to them.
-
- It shocked me to see the way Andrews and Delgado were promoting
- an extraterrestrial solution to the evidence without the
- slightest regard for more mundane explanations or the credibility
- of UFOlogy. I tried on several occasions to convince them to
- think again, but in the end this just made for more trouble in a
- very big way. It was during this period that I would have valued
- some help from the more rational elements of the UFO community -
- perhaps from those clever know-alls at Magonia or even the
- official Skeptics - but instead I was left to do everything
- myself. Of course in real life the cavalry never come just in the
- nick of time, yet now these very same people are the ones who are
- criticising and jeering ! What cowards they were !
-
- So, now it is all over. I witnessed the birth of a social myth, a
- new religion, another extension to the overpowering UFO
- mythology. It was as if I had been there in the late 1940s when
- Ray Palmer and his associates invented the UFO myth with their
- fraudulent promotion of Schirmer's fictional story about aliens
- kidnapping humans into their underground bases. I saw the way in
- which the public were lied to, repeatedly, and how the British
- media, with its exceptional arrogance and stupidity, gave a
- handful of extra-terrestrialists everything they needed to
- promote themselves as world famous researchers. I can never
- forgive these people for what they did. They put UFO research
- back by fifty years with their actions.
-
- Looking back on it all I don't think there is much more I could
- have done. Having made my two main errors I don't think I had the
- resources to work out what was really happening. I don't think I
- could have stopped the world-wide hoaxing that has developed. I
- don't feel that UFOlogy deserves much credit for the way in which
- believer groups like FSR and Quest International leapt to support
- Andrews and Delgado in what they were saying. These people were
- all UFO Traitors who cared for nothing except their own bloated
- egos and their money-making activities. History will recall them
- as such. I know because I was there.
-
- Successes ?
-
- So, what about my successes ? Well I suppose Jenny Randles and
- myself were in there investigating crop circles, analysing the
- evidence and publishing our research before the Skeptics had even
- got out of bed ! We were always alert to the idea that many
- circles might be hoaxes and we were always prepared to accept a
- dual solution of hoaxing and meteorology. In this respect we
- differed from almost all the other crop circle researchers who
- had already nailed their loyalties to single masts. Of course
- science often requires dual theories and we were right to adopt
- such an approach. I suppose we had five main achievements :-
-
- (1) We challenged the popular myth that crop circles were the
- result of a spaceships' landing marks. We countered FSR's
- falsehoods in the public domain in the belief that the public
- were being led down the garden path (something the official
- Skeptics kept well clear of). Our aim was to give the public the
- facts that others chose not to. In doing this perhaps we opened
- some eyes in the scientific community that not all UFO
- researchers are maniacs, that UFOs are neither spaceships or
- nonsense, that in some cases obscure but objectively real
- phenomena may lie behind those reports.
-
- (2) We suggested experiments to test hoaxing methods and we
- published evidence about hoaxing (eg in "Mystery of the Circles",
- BUFORA 1986). We were the only researchers who even considered
- that hoaxing might account for crop circles - a stance which soon
- bought us ridicule and despicable tactics from some of the other
- self proclaimed researchers who had attached themselves to the
- subject.
-
- (3) We tried to rescue some credit for UFOlogy, as we very
- quickly saw the potential for the crop circles to totally
- discredit the serious side of UFO research (as well as the
- historical evidence, which we always felt was possibly more
- representative of the true phenomenon than the more outrageous
- hoaxes which others were eagerly promoting). This was one of the
- reasons behind our aggressive public stance against those who
- accepted without question that crop circles were caused by
- spaceships. In my opinion our best media achievements were
-
- - the 9 July 1989 article in The Times, which challenged the FSR
- team for its unprofessional dismissal of eye witness testimony
- and the extent of hoaxing (another crucially important media
- quote which the Skeptics totally ignore with their rewritten crop
- circle history);
-
- - the item on the ITV network news in 1989 when ITN science
- Editor Lawrence McGinty promoted Meaden's meteorological theory
- and hoaxing as the solution (ditto) - I remember dancing around
- my flat with joy after that one !;
-
- - our part in the 1986 and 1989 BUFORA debates, which were an
- attempt to stimulate a proper scientific debate which (tellingly)
- the Flying Saucer Review team and the official Skeptics never
- reciprocated, but which bought us credit from scientists like Dr
- Paul Mason at the Met. Office in Bracknell, - and
-
- - my first solo "live" TV interview, where I discussed eye
- witness testimony and hoaxing before Doug and Dave came forward
- (TVS News, 19th July 1990).
-
- (4) We also did things that no other crop circle researchers did,
- eg we conducted surveys, examined historical cases and we
- published all the pro-hoax evidence (years before Doug and Dave
- came forward). In effect we evaluated ALL the data, proposed
- quantifiable hypotheses and continually emphasised our belief
- that there was a rational explanation for the phenomenon. We took
- a particular interest in the sociology of what was taking place.
- In short we witnessed the birth of a new supernatural mythology -
- a subject of study in its own right. Despite Robin Allen's
- ludicrous comments in The Skeptic we spent many hundreds of
- unpaid hours of our spare time circulating crop circle evidence
- to researchers all over the world. Science would have expected
- nothing less of us.
-
- (5) We took Meaden's controversial meteorological theory and used
- it to try and explain numerous high strangeness UFO reports. This
- approach is something that proper scientists should still be
- doing, although the Skeptics have treated this work with utter
- contempt whilst failing to explain why these explanations are
- (apparently) so wrong. In my view this is work that deserves to
- be continued, regardless of the jeers of the Skeptics, whose
- failure to properly falsify scientific evidence is legion.
- Note that none of these things were ever done by the official
- Skeptics, who avoided the crop circle debate for ten long years.
- Presumably the Skeptics' failure to contribute to circles
- research was largely due to a fear that they might be wrong ! Yet
- now opinionated know-alls like Robin Allen are actually trying to
- claim the credit for having exposed mass crop circle hoaxing !
- To summarise I think any future historian of the subject who
- works through my 30 box files of crop circle material, my media
- interviews and my published work is going to have a tough old
- time trying to evaluate my "contribution" to the subject. I think
- the real problem is that I could never really made up my mind
- whether what I was seeing was hoaxed or genuine. I never had the
- time and money to do everything I wanted. I know I got a lot of
- things quite wrong, but I also got some things right. To be
- dismissed by Robin Allen as just another True Believer in the
- mysterious circles is perhaps the final insult in the long and
- troubled history of our subject.
-
- Video Review
-
- Cropcircle Communique II
- 'Revelations'
- Circlevision, 60 minutes,
- Available from P.O. Box 36, Ludlow, Shropshire, SY8 3ZZ Price £
- 15 incl p&p (UK), £ 20 or $ 35 elsewhere (NTSC/PAL please
- specify). Please allow 28 days for delivery.
-
- This reviewer predicts that few who watch John MacNish's superb
- new video (subtitled as "The answer to the mystery of the
- cropcircles") will realise that there is still evidence of a non
- hoaxed phenomenon that predates Doug and Dave. Despite this one
- cannot praise highly enough the quality of this video and its
- treatment of the negative evidence. Communique II is a detailed
- and highly absorbing investigation into crop circle hoaxing and
- the claims of Doug Bower and Dave Chorley. MacNish presents ample
- evidence to support his acceptance of their claim with many new
- revelations about hoaxing and the gullibility of the crop circle
- "experts". One of the great strengths of this video are the
- nocturnal sequences showing Doug Bower and Dave Chorley making
- huge pictograms which continued to fool the "so-called experts".
- If you want to see Colin Andrews, Richard Andrews and Pat Delgado
- making complete fools of themselves this is definitely the video
- you need to buy !
-
- Revelations begins by asking who the circlemakers are and what
- are they trying to say. Andrews and Delgado are then introduced
- as two researchers who interpreted the circles as the result of a
- phenomenon which lies "outside science". Colin Andrews is shown
- arrogantly claiming that it is "impossible" to hoax the swirl
- pattern or the dowsing energy, the two characteristic which he
- and others associated with "genuine" crop circles.
-
- I was a bit surprised to see the Operation Blackbird hoax without
- being told that Andrews and Delgado had even promoted this
- shoddy-looking pattern, but this is probably because (unlike
- Meaden or Wingfield, who never appear on film) Revelations takes
- a special interest in the claims and beliefs of Andrews and
- Delgado and there are many other occasions during this video when
- their credulous belief systems are shown to be in error.
-
- In the early part of Revelations the treatment of the Sevenoaks
- pictogram and the West Wycombe hoax competition are important
- subjects that are well treated. Pat Delgado is shown in a rather
- shocked and confused state of mind trying to justify his failure
- to identify Doug and Daves' demonstration circle at Sevenoaks.
-
- This is what he has to say :-
-
- "I classed it as I would lean towards saying it was genuine and I
- feel that its ... its on the cards that it IS genuine, but that
- doesn't mean to say that every other one is a hoax - I'm only
- talking about that one [the Sevenoaks pictogram]. I consider that
- all the others are genuine that we've said are genuine".
-
- Commenting on Doug and Daves' Chilgrove demonstration Jurgen
- Kronig observes that :
-
- "The circle doesn't look too bad, I mean I've seen better circles
- - the corn [is laid] flat, the stems flowing around the stones,
- the bigger stones lying in the field, which wouldn't be used by
- this method they've used here, but nevertheless you have to admit
- that they know what they do and [that] they are able to do
- something amazing [like the] pictograms, for instance."
-
- Next viewers are treated to some close-up views of the West
- Wycombe competition and some of the animated exchanges between
- the Believers and the Hoaxers. This sequence is blessed by John
- Michell's outrageous claim that the crop circles are still a
- complete mystery. This is marginally bettered by Richard Andrews'
- admission when asked how easy it would have been to tell that the
- competition circles were hoaxes had he not been told. Andrews
- replied :
-
- "We would have had to be careful, very careful I think. The thing
- that was missing from them all was that lovely flow that you get
- which makes it look as though its gone down like water - that's
- the only thing really that was missing. If that had been there
- with the winner I think we'd have been hard put really, and if it
- had dowsed it would have been worse."
-
- Again Jurgen Kronig's judgement was that the hoaxers had not
- managed to reproduce the "genuine" characteristics he had been
- seeing in crop circles. Kronig declared that "nothing was bent,
- everything was broken" whilst also noting the lack of flow.
- As the narrator points out, the astonishing thing about the West
- Wycombe competition was that the winning teams were such
- inexperienced hoaxers, yet their pictograms attracted
- considerable praise from Dr Rupert Sheldrake, who had helped to
- organise the competition. Sheldrake himself makes a long and
- carefully measured statement about the value of the competition
- and the unexpectedly high quality of the competitors' circles. He
- concludes that :
-
- "We know for example that forgers can produce £ 20 notes that
- look very like the real thing, but that doesn't prove that all £
- 20 notes are forgeries".
-
- This same argument was used, if you recall, by ITN's Science
- Editor, Lawrence McGinty, on the day TODAY newspaper first
- revealed Doug and Daves' astonishing story to the world.
- The very best aerial sequences in Revelations come later. The
- viewer is introduced to Doug and Dave's unusual nocturnal
- activities and their total scorn towards those people who
- promoted their circles as genuine. Thanks to the sophisticated
- technology used by Circlevision viewers see Doug and Dave making
- huge complicated circles at night through MacNish's image
- intensifier. Then viewers are treated to spectacular aerial views
- of their creations in broad daylight the following day. The
- accompanying music throughout Revelations deserves a special
- mention.
-
- Throughout 1993 Doug and Dave led Circlevision a merry dance
- through the fields and by-ways of Southern England. In one of the
- most impressive sequences Doug Bower's water colour drawings of
- formations are shown juxtaposed on top of the real thing. This
- sequence proves beyond doubt that Doug and Dave made many huge
- pictograms in 1992 which continued to be promoted as genuine by
- the True Believers. My one real regret is that we never see Doug
- and Dave pole-vaulting through the crop at night - now that would
- be something more impressive than any genuine circle !
-
- Perhaps the highlight of Revelations is the full story of the
- East Meon hoax. Richard Andrews is shown accepting Doug and
- Daves' hoax as a genuine formation that displays the same floor
- patterns he has seen during the previous three summers. Andrews
- demands the replication of these allegedly genuine features by
- hoaxers, clearly unaware that Doug and Dave had made the
- formation and been captured on film. Disastrously Andrews accepts
- that if the features he has just seen CAN be shown to be man-made
- then "it is reasonable [to conclude] that all [crop circles] are
- man-made".
-
- Ramming home this victory Macnish then presents Colin Andrews
- insisting that it is "impossible" to manufacture swirl patterns
- and "interwoven layers". Throughout the remainder of this video
- Doug and Dave repeatedly show exactly how such swirls can be
- produced with their stomping method. They also demonstrate how
- accurately they can produce an almost dead straight spur over 50
- feet in length using the famous ringed cap method. This is where
- Revelations lives up to its title. Every time an "expert" makes a
- claim Doug and Dave turn up and knock them down !
-
- One of the major topics addressed by Macnish in Revelations is
- the motivation behind the hoaxing, a subject which clearly
- fascinates him. Jim Schnabel admits on film that his hoaxing
- started as an experiment but grew into something more personal
- and artistic as the believers worshipped the circles he made.
- Schnabel took particular thrill at seeing the effect of his
- circles on the wide eyed crop circle believers he was
- interviewing by day but hoaxing by night. Robert Irving and Pam
- Price are also interviewed as all three send up lighted balloons
- in an attempt to trigger UFO sightings at Woodborough Hill (the
- scene of a major close encounter with a structured spaceship, if
- you recall - see CW22). Pam Price ("Spiderwoman") explains how
- the need to believe in a fantastic solution totally overwhelms
- observers. Of course this is proof of the power of the exotic
- alien mythology generated by Doug and Dave and their many
- copiers.
-
- One more contentious sequence concerns Doug Bower's own
- photographs of all the early circles he and Dave Chorley made.
- The statistics presented are used to demonstrate that these two
- men could have easily provided "the foundation for the whole crop
- circle mystery". Again no mention is made of the documented
- historical cases or the eye witness accounts that have been
- published in the literature. Neither are these cases included in
- the statistics.
-
- Doug Bower insists that there were no sharp-edged swirled circles
- predating "1978", although he accepts that some storm damage
- looks remarkably like crop circles (a somewhat flawed argument).
- This is where a token gesture could have been made towards
- contrary evidence, by including an eye witness or one of the
- better historical cases. As Jim Schnabel is shown admitting his
- belief in an extremely rare but genuine phenomenon despite his
- hoaxing activities this is perhaps the one criticism that can be
- levelled at Revelations. However, as a record of the key events
- of the past few years and of how easy it is to make circles and
- fool the "experts" there really isn't anything on the market
- better than this superb video. Now go out and buy it !
-
- Book Review
-
- A Beginners Guide To
- Crop Circle Making
- With assistance from Fe3
-
- As an example of just how farcical the crop circle subject has
- become, this small illustrated booklet has been produced and
- circulated by a group of leading circlemakers. It seems from my
- reading that the intention of this booklet is to assist amateur
- circlemakers and generally poke fun at the True Believers who
- infest cereology. Whether the farmers who object to circle making
- will quite see it in this way is perhaps another matter.
-
- The Beginners Guide was officially launched at "The Fete Worse
- Than Death", an annual art fair held in London on July 30th. More
- than 40 copies were sold. That same evening it was circulated at
- a meeting of many of Britain's major circle makers which took
- place at the "Who'd a Thought it" public house in Lockeridge
- (near Avebury and Alton Barnes for overseas readers). Readers
- will be amused to learn that Doug Bower and his wife Ilene were
- the Guests of Honour at this unique social gathering. Alert
- readers of The Cerealogist will recall that the original meeting
- place was advertised in issue 12 as the tack room at The Waggon
- and Horses at Beckhampton, but your Editor has been reliably
- informed that this had to be changed at the last minute due to
- growing aggravation between rival groups of circlemakers.
-
- According to the front cover, the Beginners Guide was compiled
- "with assistance from Fe3" (hint, hint). It contains advice on
- topics as varied as the equipment required, ensuring that you are
- not followed on leaving the pub (aptly titled "The Drop Off") and
- on how to create impressive flow and multiple layering effects
- that will convince gullible cereologists of the authenticity of
- the circle. The authors assert that their formations will be
- accepted as genuine by cereologists as long as "(a) you are not
- caught making it, and (b) the pattern represents a shape which
- leading cereologists regard as of symbolic importance, and,
- therefore, useful on the proselyting lecture circuit - e.g.
- mandalas, Atlantean script, etc."
-
- The Beginners Guide contains only 12 pages of text and
- illustrations but this is more than made up for by the good
- humour of its authors. I was particularly amused to read that
- during preparation would-be circle makers should "Dowse potential
- location to establish earth energies. If a formation is located
- on a powerful ley-line this will satisfy later tests for
- genuineness, and aid in curative effects, healings, orgone
- accumulation, angelic visions, benign alien abduction
- experiences, and feelings of general well-being." This seems to
- be based (in part) on the furore which developed after the
- promotion of Doug and Daves' East Meon demonstration pictogram
- (read George Wingfield's account of this cereological contretemps
- in "Alien Liaison").
-
- The authors go on to state that "If the formation is situated
- contra-directionally to the flow of energy, this may result in
- the opposite effects; headaches, nausea, temporary
- limb-paralysis, aching joints, mental illness, deadly orgone
- radiation (DOR) exposure, demonic visions, negative abduction
- scenarios (memory loss, implant scarring, sore or bleeding anii
- [presumably the plural term for anus, PF], navels, and genitals,
- etc), and general disillusionment." Subsequent hints about
- satanism only gives away who lies behind this audacious work.
-
- The authors claim that "In this guide we will give you all the
- information you will need to work with these plants, and
- eventually, with a little practice, produce genuine, dowsable,
- scientifically proven un-hoaxable circle patterns". There are
- drawings of known formations (mainly the more complicated
- patterns) as well as ones which have yet to appear. This reviewer
- was pleased to read that the authors make it quite clear that
- circlemaking is a criminal activity and that (somewhat
- paradoxically) circlemakers should "not move through a field
- without using a tram-line"). The authors seem a little guilty
- about this aspect of their booklet as on page 9 they launch into
- a lengthy justification for their activities, something which
- some farmers may not find particularly amusing. In another
- paragraph it is suggested that circlemakers leave "nasty things"
- inside their creations, eg "hospital waste, dangerous
- radio-isotopes, blood" etc. With sentiments like this it seems
- that the crop circle mythology is far from dead and that this
- battle royale between the True Believers and the circle makers
- will continue unabated for years to come. PF.
-
- A Letter from Shuttleworth
-
- In CW22 we featured the first response to a circular letter to
- Meaden's peer group - those scientists who were publicly
- associated with the 1990 Circles Effect Conferences held in
- Oxford. In our previous issue Dr Tokio Kikuchi of Kochi
- University, Japan, made clear that despite his concern at the
- extent of hoaxing he was still prepared to consider an
- atmospheric solution to some crop circles. Having circulated Dr
- Kikuchi's response Dr John Graham, the Director of Studies at
- Shuttleworth College, Cranfield University, also responded
- (letter dated 30th August 1994). This is what he has to say :-
-
- "Dear Paul, Many thanks for your letter of 19 August. In response
- to your request perhaps I can make a few (personal) points :
-
- (1) The majority of circles/formations are probably man-made. A
- few, simple, circles are very possibly not. However, until
- hoaxers stop hoaxing or we catch a real one "in the act" as it is
- being formed, we cannot be fully certain. I am wary of the
- Skeptics (as I am of many other groups) because, like so many,
- they are trying to get the facts to fit their theory.
-
- (2) Terence Meaden is one of the few to be doing it properly,
- i.e. vice versa. Accordingly, as time goes by and we accumulate
- more evidence, so he will revise his hypothesis until it is
- thoroughly tested. Normal, proper scientific procedure. Hence we
- should expect what he is saying in 1996 for example to have moved
- on from what he was saying in 1993.
-
- (3) I have read Tokio Kikuchi's letter in the Crop Watcher with
- interest. I too am uneasy about the word 'plasma'. Perhaps this
- is just because I have a biological background where plasma is
- found in blood, and I don't know so very much about physicists'
- plasma ! However, the key factor is that some sort of vortex is
- involved - from my own observations of crop damage, both in
- circles and in non-geometric configurations, I feel certain that
- this is the most likely culprit.
-
- I hope these few remarks are of help to you. If you wish me to
- comment further on any specific points do please let me know.
- Best Wishes, Yours Sincerely, Dr John Graham."
-
- The Crop Watcher has circulated copies of this letter and Dr
- Tokio Kikuchi's letter in CW22 to all six members of Terence
- Meaden's peer group as detailed in CW22 page 16 and we await
- further replies with interest.
-
- Letters to the Editor
-
- Writing tosh
-
- Dear Crop Watcher, Let no one - bar the odd author, perhaps -
- again accuse Andrew Collins of plagiary. He's just too good at
- making up the stories himself. 'Alien Energy' is the latest
- example.
-
- For the record: On page 44 Andy talks of me being, 'suddenly
- stunned by a burst of light that emanated from a position
- directly beside (me)'. Actually it came from above, and I didn't
- feel particularly stunned - a little surprised maybe. On the same
- page he writes that my partner saw nothing. This is untrue; if
- he'd asked her, she would have told him that she witnessed the
- same thing I did. On the following page, Andy reports that I told
- him that I, along with three others, 'witnessed a ball of light
- at close quarters'. This is untrue, and the first I've heard of
- such a story. There was a report, relayed to him by a third
- party, concerning an event I'd supposedly witnessed. I promised
- to give him details, but he never got back to me. Instead, he
- simply made the story up.
-
- On page 148 there is an account of a visit to the edge of the
- East Field, Alton Barnes, in which Andy, his partner Debbie, Pam
- Price & I, 'all clearly heard a peculiar noise emanate from a
- position just metres away from where we stood'. Andy goes on to
- describe the noise as, alternately, 'a fishing reel being cast
- ... over the crop ... appearing to curve around in an arc ... and
- heard one final time in the field on the opposite side of the
- deserted Pewsey Road'. 'No-one could offer any simple explanation
- for this unusual event', he says. Well, I could, and I remember
- doing so. I also remember full agreement from Pam & Andy at the
- time. It was clearly road noise from an approaching, then
- arriving, and then departing vehicle. I even remember waiting for
- another vehicle to pass so we could verify the effect. I do not
- recall, however, seeing any 'huge aerial flash' above Knapp Hill,
- apart from the usual head-light play. To anyone familiar with the
- area, this is quite usual.
-
- In the reference section to Chapter 8 (pages 235-236) he takes
- issue with the conclusions Jim Schnabel & I reached in our 1992
- 'Rolling Their Own' piece for The Independent Magazine. Without
- going into depth, it is obvious that Andy has not recently
- re-read the article, did not appreciate the points raised, nor
- has he responded to the numerous offers made to him (at the
- proof-reading stage of his book) to listen to tapes which clearly
- illustrate that UBI possessed a greater, 'flair and enthusiasm'
- for crop circles than Andy describes. Neither has he recently
- spoken to Jim or myself at any length on the subject. It
- shouldn't be necessary to mention that firm evidence would be a
- pre-requisite of acceptance by The Independent. In the real
- world, it's not quite so easy to get away with writing tosh.
-
- A curious aside; researchers not suffering from a short-term
- memory disfunction will remember it was Andy who informed us that
- John Martineau had claimed authorship to Jim's 'Dharmic Wheel'
- formation of 1992, suggesting that it might have been,
- "automatically rolled". Does he still believe this ? I am
- confused. However, should Andy agree to a detailed debate on this
- topic - in any sensible forum - I would be more than happy to
- oblige.
-
- On the subject of our infamous balloon 'experiments' in the
- Pewsey Vale in 1992 (ref Chapter 10 p237); Andy awards great
- significance to their dates - he even suggests, ridiculously,
- that they may have been as late as November that year. Again, he
- made no effort to check. If he had, he would have found the real
- facts entirely inconsistent to the ones he portrays.
-
- There is much true mystery in the world, possibly encompassing
- Alton Barnes - it's formulation is unnecessary. That aside, I'm
- sure Andy's book is highly entertaining. Robert Irving. London.
- PF notes:- Andy Collins will be responding to Irving's letter in
- our next issue, when a full review of "Alien Energy" will appear.
- I can confirm that in late September - two years after The
- Independent Magazine article appeared - I was contacted by Paul
- Randall, one of the members of the UBI, following Andy Collins'
- intervention. Randall alleged that the UBI had never made more
- than two circles and were not Kronig's mythical "A team". I
- readily agreed to attend an open meeting to discuss this claim
- but I have yet to hear from the UBI as to details of this
- meeting. In the meantime I have received a tape recording from
- Irving of various interviews and telephone conversations he held
- with members of UBI during 1991 and 1992. These tapes will form
- the basis of several articles which will appear in future issues.
-
- Other Crop Circle News
-
- IRISH CROP CIRCLES
-
- The Irish UFO and Paranormal Research Association (IUFOPRA) have
- informed us that two grass circles appeared on a freshly mowed
- lawn at a house in the Mourne area of County Down, Northern
- Ireland, on June 25th. The circles appeared within 48 hours of
- cutting and changed shape over the following 72 hours. The
- smallest was 14 feet in diameter whilst the largest, which
- appeared to have a spur attached, was 16 feet in diameter. We
- await further news with interest.
- CALENDAR CATASTROPHE
-
- Colin Andrews' colour poster of the "best" 1993 formations has
- caused one or two people to sit up and take notice ! Colin has
- promoted the two "Bohemian" formations made by the Wessex
- Skeptics (recently admitted to in Volume 8, No 1 of The Skeptic)
- as well as Erik Beckjord's wheelchair symbol !
-
- FRENCH UGMs
-
- Robert Fischer of Saint Max, France, has sent me a copy of issue
- 36 of Lumieres dans la Nuit. This issue features photographs of
- three unexplained ground markings, at Col de Vence, (1985 and
- 1993), Saint-Geniez (Sept 1993) and at d'Aumont (Sept 1993). The
- first traces involved a sunken circle and a grass circle, both of
- which may be unusual fungal growths (??). The middle case looks
- like a classic crop circle. The last case is composed of three
- sets of dark rings on a light sandy soil. The rings almost touch
- eachother and allegedly nothing grows inside them. Joel Mesnard
- undertook an investigation and concluded that they were probably
- hoaxes as the rings were made up of what might be ground tree
- bark which was largely superficial to the soil.
-
- APBO Hoaxers Evade Detection
-
- Readers will recall the appearance two years running of the
- "APBO" hoax near Cherry Burton on Humberside. It occurred to me
- that if these letters were not created by any of the known
- circlemakers (eg Jonathon Richardson, or the Cambridge-based
- Mandelbrot-makers) then perhaps these were the initials of the
- hoaxers responsible. Whilst doing an interview with BBC Radio
- Humberside on August 30th I learnt from the presenter Russell
- Merryman that this hoax appeared on land owned or leased by
- Bishop Burton agricultural college. On September 8th I wrote to
- the college enquiring whether or not this hoax did indeed appear
- on their land and whether or not their students (or perhaps, as
- with the Southwell hoax discussed in CW6 page 28, rival students
- from another college) were responsible. On October 19th Howard
- Petch, the college Principal, kindly responded with the following
- :-
-
- "I have little information to assist your enquiries. However,
- there has been evidence of one small, poorly constructed and
- obviously man-made (with footprints etc) corn circle at Mill Hill
- in 1994. Quite a number of other incidents have occurred over the
- previous few years but we have no idea whether students (our or
- others) were responsible."
-
- Strange but True? ditch Crop Circles
-
- Also, having assisted the "Strange But True?" team at London
- Weekend Television in their research into crop circles, I
- contacted David Alpin, the producer (who I met at the Fortean
- Times Unconvention in June). In a letter dated 25 October David
- states "I decided not to include crop circles in this series of
- STRANGE BUT TRUE? because we did not have an appropriate story. A
- great many subjects have been investigated and rejected in the
- making of our programmes, so that we could present viewers with
- the very best and most fascinating of mysteries to watch and
- decide on". A book, based on the series and written by Peter
- Hough and Jenny Randles, is currently on sale, price not yet
- known !
-
- PLASMA VORTEX ??
-
- Did anyone see the alleged photographs of the Virgin Mary in the
- Sunday Express magazine on November 13th ? "Its a Miracle"
- featured photographs of several locations said to have produced
- miraculous events. According to the text "The Virgin Mary
- supposedly appeared here [at Conyers, Atlanta, USA] in the sky,
- right, to a young woman in 1988. Since then, many other claims
- have perpetuated these sensational scenes of pilgrimage and
- evangelism. Preachers address the vast congregations by
- loudspeaker, and the crowds scan the sky with cameras, hoping to
- capture a divine image, below. A foundation called Our Loving
- Mother's Network has been set up here, partly to keep believers
- updated on the latest sightings". The attached photographs appear
- to show a huge glowing cloud formation with spiralling arms. Does
- this indicate rotation ? If so, is this some kind of plasma
- vortex phenomenon ?
- r.p.v. ??
-
- Also, did anyone see the article in New Scientist, 20 August
- 1994, describing advanced military technology ? The diagram
- included an "unmanned aerial vehicle" (a kind of remotely-piloted
- vehicle) which seems strikingly similar to the drawing of the
- "daylight dumbbell" case reported from Novato, California, on
- April 15th, 1989 (see IUR, Vol 14, No 5, pages 12-13).
-
- Also ...
-
- Did anyone tape Pat Delgado's appearance on TV's "What's My Line"
- in November ? If so I would like a copy please !
-
- One of our "deep throat" sources has informed us that he has
- submitted four sealed envelopes to ITN's "Schofield's Quest"
- which contains predictions of crop formations to appear in 1995.
- It is expected that Schofield - if he can find the time - will
- open these envelopes "live" on TV late next summer.
-
- The Amersham group's hoaxed giant penis near Chequers (which
- featured in many national newspapers this summer) finally made it
- to BBC TV's "Have I Got News For You" on November 18th, when crop
- circle guru David Icke was one of the guests. Curiously Reg
- Pressley was promoted by presenter Angus Dayton as the leading
- member of the Circles Phenomenon Research Group. No doubt Colin
- Andrews will have something to say about this!
-
- Paul Vigay and the Portsmouth News
-
- Paul Vigay of Portsmouth is currently under threat of legal
- action from Circlevision following comments attributed to him by
- the Portsmouth News on July 30th. In a highly contentious
- interview Vigay alleged that he had recently attended a public
- lecture in London when he had a "run in with a pair of hoaxers,
- or 'circle debunkers'" who "showed a sequence of time lapse
- pictures that appeared to show a crop circle being hoaxed".
- According to the Portsmouth News "Paul stood up and said he could
- produce the same sort of pictures with computer manipulation in a
- few minutes". The article continues by alleging that these
- un-named "hoaxers" "backed down" once they had seen Paul Vigay's
- computer-produced images.
-
- According to correspondence in my possession on January 12th 1994
- Paul Vigay wrote to Circlevision to clarify similar claims he
- made at the December 4th BUFORA lecture. Vigay states that "under
- no circumstances have I, either at the BUFORA lecture or
- subsequently, accused you, your husband or his company of lying.
- Also, under no circumstances would I make any statement to damage
- your reputation or inhibit your business. However, it remains a
- matter of fact that photographic and video evidence is less
- effective in today's technological environment, with the latest
- developments in computer technology, both hardware and software
- allowing one to manipulate images in any way one desires. This
- does not imply or suggest that you or Circlevision have used such
- methods, but it should be pointed out to researchers that such
- techniques exist." Of course this is not what Vigay claimed at
- the BUFORA lecture, when he appeared to imply that Circlevision
- was presenting computer-enhanced images of circle-makers at work
- at night rather than real-world images.
-
- With this letter Vigay supplied Circlevision with laser copies of
- a computer-generated image of the Barbury Castle formation as
- viewed from high above the formation. Apparently this image is
- not the same as that shown by Circlevision at the BUFORA lecture.
-
- In correspondence with me Paul Vigay maintains that the comments
- in the Portsmouth News article did not refer to Circlevision or
- the BUFORA lecture. However, he has refused to name the people
- discussed in the Portsmouth News article or the location of the
- lecture discussed. Readers may find it difficult to believe that
- the MacNishes are not the only video makers who recently
- presented a public lecture in London about crop circles. It seems
- even more unbelievable that whilst Vigay accepts that
- Circlevision did not fabricate their nocturnal photographs of
- circlemakers at work this other un-named company did !
-
- Following these developments Circlevision have placed this
- disturbing matter in the hands of their solicitor and asked the
- Portsmouth News and Paul Vigay for an apology. In the meantime
- Vigay has accused Doug Bower of lying about the number of crop
- circles he and Dave Chorley made, and now your Editor has also
- been accused of being a liar (on the public area of the E-mail
- system) following the lawsuit threat bought against me in 1989 by
- Colin Andrews, Pat Delgado and Gordon Creighton ! All this
- material will form the basis of a full article which will appear
- in our next issue.
-
- Rumours & Rumours of Rumours
-
- Colin Andrews has been collared by the CIA in Alresford High
- Street, a secret message was passed on ... perhaps it will appear
- in his third book "The Signs of Change" ... Reg Pressley is
- planning a new crop circle video ... A well known questing
- UFOlogist appeared in court on November 23rd in the East Midlands
- charged with obtaining services by deception.... Rupert and
- Ishtar are on good terms ... John Alexander's wife Victoria is
- trying to obtain a copy of The Informer as Erik Beckjord alleged
- to her that Jim Schnabel is the Editor ... Robert Irving's
- admiralty office is located near Bath ... George Vernon tried to
- appear on Schofield's quest, but Doug Bower and Reg Pressley had
- already beaten him to it ...Chad Deetken refused to accept a
- drink from Adrian Dexter ...
-
- Book Reviews
-
- Time Travel, Fact, Fiction & Possibility
- Jenny Randles
- Blandford, 176 pages, 33 b&w photos, £ 14.99 hb,
- £ 8.99 pb. Read and reviewed on Weymouth beach.
-
- Time travel is a subject that has always caught the imagination
- of the public - well at least since H.G. Wells' classic The Time
- Machine was published in 1895 - and now Jenny Randles has
- compiled a very thorough examination of the subject with this
- well illustrated, thought-provoking book. There is an excellent
- review of the fictional literature on the subject plus a close
- examination of cases where time travel has been claimed as a
- possible explanation for anomaly events. Some of the scientific
- experiments that have been conducted are a bit mind boggling but
- otherwise this is fair speculation backed up by good solid
- research. Buy it !
-
- UFO Quest
- In Search of Mystery Machines
- Alan Watts
- Blandford, 192 pages, 12 b/w photos, 65 line drawings, price £
- 7.99
-
- This really is the most thoroughly dishonest UFO book that I've
- seen for a long, long time. Touted as a "detailed and
- scientifically based survey" this must be the only book in UFO
- history which promotes Alex Birches' faked UFO photographs (page
- 92), David Langford's hoaxed "An Account of a Meeting with
- Denizens of Another World" (page 126), Dave Harris' faked account
- of how a UFO created a crop circle at Butleigh Wootten in 1991
- (page 150) and which also promotes Billy Meier's highly dubious
- claims to have met visitors from the Pleiadies (his photographs
- of the spaceships were shown to be fakes years ago). Add to this
- the promotion of George Adamski's ridiculous claims of meeting
- with Venusians in the Californian desert and the promotion of
- Stephen Pratt's dubious UFO photographs and we get a book which
- this reviewer is quite sure that the Skeptics will use to
- discredit UFOlogy for many years to come !
-
- In my opinion Alan Watts deserves some kind of UFOlogical award
- for having been stuck in a time warp for the past thirty years
- and for doing not one single piece of proper research before
- producing this wicked book. It is bad enough to see UFOlogists
- still promoting the likes of Billy Meier and George Adamski, but
- this book goes so much further that it makes me wonder whether
- there's any point at all in continuing with research into anomaly
- events, given the level of distortion and cover-up perpetrated in
- this book. To give an example of Alan Watts' "scientific"
- approach to UFO investigation, this is what he has to say about
- the famous Mandelbrot formation :-
-
- "The chances of this being a hoax are absolutely nil and it is,
- in my opinion, a waste of time to dwell upon the matter " (page
- 142).
-
- With bigoted, ill-informed sentiments like this it is not
- surprising to see that Jo-Anne Wilder's eye witness account of
- hoaxers making the Firs Farm formation (promoted on page 174) on
- 1 August 1991 is also missing. Like Pat Delgado Watts is also
- under the misapprehension that the Cheesefoot Head circles in
- 1981 were the first circles to appear. I suppose the continued
- perpetuation of this ridiculous error neatly does away with any
- need at all to discuss the Doug and Dave claim. Why bother
- challenging your assumptions when your belief that alien visitors
- are making the formations is elevated to the platform of an
- unquestionable faith.
-
- Like many a True Believer it is revealing to see the way in which
- Watts misrepresents case after case to support his religion, eg
- for some inexplicable reason he omits to discuss the widely
- accepted Skyhook Balloon solution for Captain Thomas Mantell's
- tragic death in 1947 (page 125). In another example the Wildman
- car stop case (page 50) is promoted as an encounter with a
- spaceship rather than an encounter with a light. The Eric Payne
- case (page 103) is presented as an encounter with an invisible
- UFO without the slightest consideration that sensations of heat
- and air pressure are entirely consistent with a natural
- atmospheric interpretation. I could go on and on but what point
- is there ?
-
- Now if you've been foolish enough to buy this disgraceful book I
- recommend that you demand your money back because you've been had
- ! BUFORA should hold its collective corporate head in shame at
- allowing a member of the Association to produce such a dishonest,
- fraudulent book to represent "scientific" UFOlogy. PF.
-
- Advertisement
-
- Alien Encounters
- An Interpretive Approach to the UFO Phenomenon and Crop Circle
- Mysteries by Gordon Millington
-
- A former army officer and college lecturer, Gordon is an
- accredited investigator for the British UFO Research Association
- and a consultant for Flying Saucer Review. He has contributed to
- many publications concerned with the paranormal and has an
- eclectic concern with the possible meanings of such phenomena. A
- limited first edition of Alien Encounters is available now in
- hardback for only £ 9.95 + £ 1.50 p&p. Write to The Leonine
- Press, 8 Burnfield Drive, Rugeley, Staffs, WS15 2RH.
-
- 3rd Stone
-
- A magazine with an upfront, no nonsense approach to ancient
- sacred sites and symbolic landscapes with a nod and a wink to
- folklore, ufology and parascience. Latest issue £ 2.50 from
- G.E.M., PO Box 258, Cheltenham, GL53 0HR. A GEM Publication.
- You'll never hear surf music again !
-
- The NEW UFOlogist
-
- Issue 2 of The New UFOlogist is now out ! See your Editor make a
- complete burke of himself discussing the "GAO" Roswell Report in
- glossy print !
-
- Magazine Round-Up
-
- International UFO Reporter, November/December 1993 issue (Vol 19,
- No 3) contains a fascinating UFO case study from Alberta, Canada.
- From the description offered by David Thacker it is difficult to
- tell what was really seen, and for once even a clever dick like
- me has to reserve his opinion ! The UFO resembled the triangles
- seen over Belgium, the Hudson Valley, New York, and, more
- recently, in northern England. Multiple independent witnesses
- reported seeing a dark triangular-shaped object with red circles
- at each apex. Christopher Allan takes the Roswell UFO crash to
- task, Randle and Schmitt of CUFOS respond.
-
- The Journal of UFO Studies, New Series, Vol 5 (1994) contains two
- articles of interest to crop circle researchers. In "An
- Assessment of the Crop Circle Phenomenon" Joachim P. Kuettner of
- the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research dismisses a
- meteorological explanation for all but the simplest of crop
- circles, because (allegedly) all known vortices create inwardly
- flowing spiral traces rather than the divergent traces found in
- crop circles (so what about expanding ring vortices then ?).
- Amazingly Kuettner claims that nocturnal descending vortices have
- "not yet been observed in the atmospheric sciences". Despite this
- he is happy to leave the door open slightly for a previously
- unrecognised vortex, largely because of Arnt Eliassen's 1991
- letter to Weather. Kuettner suggests that the plasma vortex is
- "scientifically improbable" whilst asserting that historical crop
- rings have a much closer association with UFOs than the
- modern-day crop circles. Jenny Randles and myself hope to submit
- a response to JUFOS challenging some of these statements. It is
- astonishing that Kuettner's article should contain an excellent
- photograph of a crop circle with slanting edges discovered near
- Dellroy, Ohio, on June 28, 1965. There is also a photograph of a
- smouldering circular patch of grass found near Killaly,
- Saskatchewan, discovered on November 14, 1979 after a white light
- had been seen the previous night (not the most persuasive UFO
- association I've ever read). In both photos there is evidence of
- a ring vortex effect - at Dellroy the crop radiates outwards in
- all directions whilst at Killaly the central zone is untouched.
- If these are hoaxes, how did the hoaxers know how to mimic ring
- vortex effects ! There is also an amusing review of the crop
- circle literature by UFO historian Michael Swords. Available from
- the same address as IUR, CUFOS, 2457 West Peterson Avenue,
- Chicago, Illinois 60659.
-
- Annals of the Enquiring, Vol 4 No 3 (July/Sept 1993) contains
- numerous Fortean events and some valuable case material. I was
- particularly impressed to learn that the March 31st 1993
- sightings over Britain, Ireland and the continent had positively
- been identified by the a Dr T S Kelso of the USAF as a rocket
- fragment of COSMOS 2238. Other articles include UFOs and star
- maps, Weeping Madonas, BVMs, psychometry. Issue 19 contains
- photos of the two crop circles at Seaforde, Northern Ireland,
- which were found last August. This issue contains a statistical
- analysis of UFO waves, case studies of frogs falling from the sky
- (complete with whirlwind association) and news of the video of
- the Exmoor Beast. £ 6 for 4 issues. Write to 8 St John Street,
- Wells, Somerset, BA5 1SW.
-
- MUFON UFO Journal, Feb 1994 issue contains a statistical analysis
- of the content of abduction reports by Dan Wright. Psycho-social
- UFOlogists will take great comfort from the finding that 95 % of
- abductions occur in the witnesses' own home (often the bedroom),
- as this seems to support the theory that abductions are altered
- states of consciousness akin to lucid dreams rather than
- objectively real events. A second article examines an important
- radar visual case involving a reddish light that paced two
- aircraft in successive incidents over Paraguay. No, I can't make
- out what it was ! Glenn Campbell perceptively reviews Bob
- Lazaar's claim to have seen captured alien technology on a top
- secret US base. March issue continues with Dan Wright's
- statistical analysis of abduction cases. Wright's conclusion -
- that "numerous entity types have been visiting our planet with
- some regularity" - must be the most ridiculous statistical
- inference made throughout recorded history ! Kevin Randle and
- Donald Schmitt present a chapter by chapter precis of their
- latest update on the controversial Roswell case. Fred Whiting
- describes his part in the current US Government Accounting
- Office's investigation into the Roswell affair. The April issue
- again concentrates on the pro Roswell debate, with Kent Jeffrey
- appealing for UFOlogists world-wide to sign the "Roswell
- Declaration" (no, your Editor didn't). Write to 103 Oldtowne
- Road, Seguin, Texas 78155-4099.
-
- Enigmas, the Journal of Strange Phenomena Investigations, issue
- 24 Vol 4 contains many fascinating in-depth research articles on
- subjects as diverse as poltergeists, man-beasts in Australia,
- alien abductions and another Nessie sighting. The highlight of
- this issue, for me, is an update on the Bonnybridge UFO wave,
- detailing Malcolm Robinson's concerted attempts to solve an
- intriguing UFO video case. Issue 37 Vol 5 Keith Basterfield
- summarises the state of abduction research in Australia, the UFO
- conference at Falkirk, hauntings and stigmata, UFO cases. 44
- pages A5. £ 10 for 5 issues per year. Write to 41 The Braes,
- Tullibody, Clackmannanshire, FK10 2TT, Scotland.
-
- Phenomena, published by SOS OVNI, the leading French group.
- Available from SOS OVNI, Boite postale 324, 13611 Aix-en-Provence
- Cedex 1, France. A small English supplement is provided if, like
- me, you can't read French. Jan/Feb 1994 issue contains important
- revelations about the origin of the famous UMMO hoax and the
- controversy surrounding Jose Pena's confession. There is a
- summary of the proposal to set up a UFO reporting centre for the
- EEC. Details are supplied of a classic CE3 at
- Tronville-en-Barrois in the east of France. A family of five
- witnessed a luminous dome-shaped object, two bright lights,
- ground traces and even entities. A sixth independent witness to
- the scene claims to have seen a car with its headlights on and
- the driver walking around with a powerful torch. It transpired
- that the driver was on the run from the gendarmerie and had
- stopped at the precise spot where the alien craft was reported.
- The full case report will be published in a later issue of
- Phenomena but it is clear that this case illustrates how complex
- social processes within the family contributed to the group
- misperception involved. Issue 20 (March/April) contains a dubious
- ground trace case involving a bright light and a circular ground
- trace. There are also reprints of articles on the Williamette
- Pass photo (from IUR) and a mass outbreak of mystery helicopters,
- unidentified helicopters, UFOs and animal mutilations in the San
- Luis Valley, Colorado. Issue 22 contains a major article on the
- Face on Mars and a photographic case from Normandie.
-
- The Ley Hunter, 121, £ 1.75 per issue. This excellent issue
- contains many constructive articles examining earth mysteries,
- ley-alignments and sacred sites as well as links with natural
- light phenomena and other anomalous phenomena. This excellent
- issue contains two well researched articles on ghost routes and
- corpse roads as well as an annotated map showing the location of
- 11 fairy mounds in County Sligo. Coincidentally the fairy mounds
- are all located within 6 kms of a steep escarpment. Is this
- because the ancients witnessed illuminated plasma vortices
- forming in the lee of these hills and rationalised them in terms
- of the prevailing fairylore motif ? Ray Cox has a letter pleading
- for clemency over the crop circle phenomenon. There is an
- important summary of Devereux's latest work with the
- International Consciousness Research Laboratories following his
- field trips to Hessdalen and Marfa (where Devereux and Ohtsuki
- agree that "at least 90 per cent" of the Marfa Lights were
- believed to be mirage-type refraction effects of car headlights).
- Devereux makes some important comments on his latest thinking
- about the postulated plasma vortex. At Hessdalen Devereux met
- four Russian scientists who described their laboratory-produced
- plasmas. A paper was presented on behalf of an absent Chinese
- delegate describing observed vortex behaviour in
- experimentally-produced plasmas and in photos of the Hessdalen
- lights. Devereux met with our own Prof. Ohtsuki and had some
- enlightening discussions with him. Devereux concludes "Out of all
- these conversations, ..., a number of subtle factors relating to
- light phenomena came more clearly in focus for me. One of these
- was the possibility of light phenomena leaving ground traces on
- suitable surfaces. I have held (albeit with increasing doubts) to
- such a possibility all through the crop circle hoo-ha, and had
- all but relinquished it. But enough data came together for me
- during the conference, ..., to convince me that there may well be
- something in the matter, and will be proceeding to explore it
- further." Available from PO Box 92, Penzance, Cornwall, TR18
- 2BX. Three issues per year for £ 5.25.
-
- Erik Beckjord
-
- Regular readers will already know of John Erik Beckjord, the
- intrepid Bigfoot hunter and "Director" of the "UFO, Bigfoot and
- Nessie Museum" of Marina del Rey, California. Beckjord first shot
- to crop circle fame with his ancient "TIFFINAG" interpretation of
- crop circles appearing in Wiltshire in 1991. Beckjord responded
- to what he believed were messages from alien beings by creating
- the "TALK TO US" message in a field near Avebury. According to
- MUFON UFO JOURNAL, issue 301, Beckjord claims to have received "8
- responses" to this message. In the Washington Post (3rd July
- 1991) Beckjord has even tried to flog photographs of Senator
- Edward Kennedy's Face on Mars in an attempt to attract publicity.
- Some animated letters from Beckjord have appeared in MUFON UFO
- JOURNAL, numbers 279 and 281.
-
- At 10:30 pm on August 19th Beckjord rang me from the Barge public
- house to allege that I am the Editor of The Informer and that I
- have libelled him by accusing him of fabricating his photographs
- of the Loch Ness Monster ! Beckjord claimed that he had exposed
- me at a public meeting attended by 50 people !! He subsequently
- repeated these false claims in writing where he states "Now what
- is this crap you write [in The Informer] ... Total nonsense and
- irrational. You write garbage, in an attempt to insult, yet avoid
- libel, at same time. You can't do this and be clear you dumb yob.
- Your writing is convoluted, turgid and idiotic. Not university
- level. State your insults clearly. Eschew obfuscation. P.S.
- Informer #7 Not up to level of #6 (Schnabel). J.S. edits better
- than you do. This issue was weak. Your Vigay & Macnish article is
- bullshit clouded in mindless drivel. Not clear as is C.W.".
- So, if I read these allegations correctly, in between having a
- full time job, editing The Crop Watcher and co-editing The New
- UFOlogist, it seems that I am producing The Informer in my sleep
- !
- In another scribbled messages Beckjord writes "Too bad you piss
- off so many people - you could otherwise socialise at The Barge
- and at conventions - but instead you must sit at the fringe -
- outside, outcast - pity." A third note states "Everyone now knows
- about you-know-what, and that you refuse to reveal where you got
- your B.A. degree (if at all) - pity." So, as you can see,
- Beckjord appears to be alleging that I have lied about having a
- university degree. If you want a copy of my degree certificate
- (Sheffield 1982) or my postgraduate diploma (Kent 1983) please
- let me know and I'll send you copies !
-
- I have since discovered that Beckjord made a similar drunken
- phone call to Jayne Macnish at Circlevision on the same night as
- he made his threatening phone call to me. According to Jenny
- Randles Beckjord pestered her repeatedly in an attempt to obtain
- my telephone number, even though it is freely available in the
- telephone directory.
-
- In a press release dated August 15th Erik Beckjord alleged that
- all the crop circle researchers are "major rat(s)" who are
- victims of an alien experiment to evaluate our psychology and
- social systems. Apparently we humans are "experimental animals"
- who are "destroying our cages" . With sentiments like these it is
- not surprising that Mr Beckjord currently has extensive legal
- problems.
-
- The Crop Watcher has learnt that Associated Press have paid Peter
- Hough damages for breach of copyright following their widespread
- publication of the Ilkley Moor entity photograph, which was given
- to them by Erik Beckjord following one of last year's crop circle
- conferences. Presumably Associated Press will attempt to recover
- their damages from Beckjord when he returns to Britain this
- summer. In the meantime Beckjord is alleging that a team of
- lawyers are working flat out on his behalf, without pay, to deny
- that Hough owns the copyright to the Ilkley Moor entity
- photograph.
-
- Finally I have learnt from one of my subscribers that when
- Beckjord rang me from the Barge he boasted that I had accused him
- of being a liar ! If anyone has a tape recording of Beckjord's
- allegations against me I would be very grateful for a copy. In
- the meantime I am still awaiting a written apology from Beckjord.
-
- NEXT ISSUE
-
- CW24 will be out by February 1st. Highlights will include the
- historical crop circle photographs discussed on page 2, a review
- of Alien Energy, a reply from Andy Collins to Robert Irving's
- letter in this issue, the result of my investigations into the
- astonishing event involving Colin Andrews and two army
- helicopters at Alton Barnes on July 21st, plus a possible
- literary reference to more historical crop circles. Oh yes, we
- will also be examining Levengood's article in Physiologia
- Plantarum 92 !
-
- THE CROP WATCHER
-
- The Crop Watcher is an independent non-profit-making magazine
- devoted to the scientific study of crop circles and the social
- mythology that accompanies them. Articles appearing in The Crop
- Watcher are copyright to the named author and should not be
- reproduced with first obtaining written permission. Articles
- appearing in The Crop Watcher do not necessarily reflect the
- views of the Editor or other contributors. Readers are welcome to
- submit articles for publication. Offers of exchange magazines are
- always welcome.
-
- SUBSCRIPTIONS
-
- The Crop Watcher is published four times a year. Each issue costs
- £ 1.50 (UK subscribers) or £ 2.50 (overseas subscribers). A full
- year's subscription costs £ 6 (UK subscribers) or £ 10 (overseas
- subscribers). Please make cheques payable to "Paul Fuller", NOT
- "The Crop Watcher". Overseas subscribers should send cash in
- pounds sterling. All correspondence should be sent to Paul
- Fuller, 3 Selborne Court, Tavistock Close, ROMSEY, Hampshire,
- SO51 7TY. Articles appearing in The Crop Watcher are copyright
- to the named author and should not be reproduced without first
- obtaining written permission.
-
- RECOMMENDED PUBLICATIONS
-
- "Crop Circles, A Mystery Solved" by Jenny Randles and Paul
- Fuller, Robert Hale Ltd (2nd edition), ISBN 0-7090-5267-7, price
- £ 6.99.
- --
- Chris Rutkowski - rutkows@cc.umanitoba.ca
- University of Manitoba - Winnipeg, Canada
-
-
-