Stoneshifter wrote:
That's just Pete - his surname is Glastonbury - hence the 'g'. He's a kind of custodian of those national treasures around Wiltshire - if he uses a stick sometimes that's because those places attract a lot of weirdos (present company excluded, of course). He had a go at me when I vocally supported crop circles - I mean how can you live down there and not get into that unearthly geometry? But anyway - copyright is more or less dead now - I know it's tough when one's pictures are nicked, but it is also a measure of success. No one will 'nick' crap pictures - that's for sure. I welcome being Googled - particularly if it draws people to my video mashups - but Pete's suggestion to Google your name is not a bad one - here's a decent piece about you (
http://www.visitnc.com/where_to_go_article.asp?r=1&s=1&sg=1&articleid=945 ).
x
dear stoneshifter.
i am intrigued by the photos that i see of crop circles but becouse we do not have them here in appalachia, i know very little about them......
one thing i have learned since going public with my granary theory is that it is disliked by both new age buffs and archaeologists. for once they can agree on something..haaa
i would love to see a crop circle. Here the mountains are covered in dense thick forest and there is no large scale agriculture. maybe one day we will wake up to see a "forest circle" of tramped down tree circles...who knows.
thanks for the link, but like all articles that have ever been written about me, this one is a bit glamorous too. reporters always write about what they want to see.
i envy you for all your close-by megalithic sites. here in america we have native stone carvings, cup and ring drawings, mazes, mounds, and natural sacred sites. the difference is, here there is often a living oral tradition among the native people about what the sites were used for.
i live near judaculla rock (cup and rings with meandering lines) and the ancient village of katuah.
clyde