Stray Cat
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2006
- Messages
- 6,829
By July/August when the main wheat crop is ready, the hours of darkness have extended and there is enough 'pitch dark' for over 5 hours work.In England, where most of the things are made, it is only dark for 4-6 hours on summer nights, and only pitch dark for about 3 hours (unless there is a moon).
However, there's no such thing as 'pitch dark' above ground, but I know what you mean when you describe it as such.
None of these instruments are used regularly and they have only been recently used by a few circlemakers (within the last 2 years). There are many 'traditionalists' who take nothing but string and stomper boards.With good planning and proper instruments (laser pointers, camera tripods with angle calibrated panning heads, laser distance rules, GPS units, etc) how long does it take to flatten some grain?
No need for this. The designs are worked out to be made 'on the fly'. Sometimes surveyors tapes (or lengths of pre-stretched string) are marked with knots or sticky tape, so that radius measurements are easier to find, but even this isn't necessary as most 'complex looking; crop circles only contain few actual measurements. Mostly the bit you've already done is used to determine the size of what you do next.Most of the refutations try to show how comples those patterns are to construct, and pretend that perpetrators have to do all that in a dark field. ... Nonsense, they can do the construction in broad daylight in a parking lot or soccer field taking all the time they need, then make string templates and bring to the field.