Elizabeth I
Philosopher
It's my understanding that farmers occasionally take advantage of being out in the middle of a big field to relieve themselves, when they feel the necessity to do so.
It's my understanding that farmers occasionally take advantage of being out in the middle of a big field to relieve themselves, when they feel the necessity to do so.
.Limbo.
All of these logistical problems that you see being a problem to explain, really don't need explaining (although they can be). Man made crop circles exist. The logistical problems were surmounted. We know this because Man made crop circles exist.
Cars can be parked anywhere from half a mile away to actually in the field
Gotta pick a location.
Gotta pick a design.
Gotta get the tools.
Gotta go there, do it
and clean up.
Gotta mind the little things. Water
toiletries
parking
Can't mind the weather, though. Rain and mud don't concern circlemakers.
On one hand we have amateur circlemakers sneaking around illegally. On the other hand we have professionals and a media event and permission from the land owner. I think it's worth while examining any differences between these two in light of crop circle characteristics.
Terrence Meaden was the main "weather did it" guy. When the circles became too complex for him to crowbar his theories into, he packed up and moved on.Just a thought. What happened to the early "cereologists" who were serious academics convinced the early circles could be explained by natural phenomena such as vertical whirlwinds?
The other two original crop circle 'experts' were Pat Delgado (who died last year after an illness) and Colin Andrews, who eventually started to realise that there was a massive human element to it all and he moved to America to join the UFO lecture circuit (apparently after a Wiltshire Meeting with Stephen Greer!). He has since made a reappearance (maybe the UFO circuit in the states isn't the gravy train he expected) and does run a website that seems to report urban legend type stuff as fact (some of it including crop circle related bits) that is all presented in his unique, badly written illogical ambiguity with plenty of promises of 'jam tomorrow'.These were the guys who cracked me up most. If there was one thing for sure even then, it was that the circles were deliberate constructs made by intelligent beings. Myself, I looked round at the planet we know about populated by enormous numbers of intelligent beings, and decided there was no mystery. Thesse guys, however, seemed compelled to take a different line against the tide of credulity following the things....
None have ever gone down in a blaze of glory, they just seem to slip quietly out of the scene. Sometimes if one of them upon discovering the truth, decides to speak out about what they've found out, they are character assassinated by the High Order of Croppies and of course, they must have been paid off by the Evil Gummint.I'd love to know how they backed down from their research projects when the circles got complex enough to defy any naturalistic explanation.
Rolfe.
Depends were abouts you are circlemaking I guess. There are some places in the hot spots in Wiltshire where there are 'spotters' on the hills, looking for first signs of fresh crop circles. You don't want to be in the field when it's getting light because of this.I don't know why you would need to confine yourself to the hours of darkness anyway. The sun may be up at 3.30am, but not many people are!
Rolfe.
Terrence Meaden was the main "weather did it" guy. When the circles became too complex for him to crowbar his theories into, he packed up and moved on.
The other two original crop circle 'experts' were Pat Delgado (who died last year after an illness) and Colin Andrews, who eventually started to realise that there was a massive human element to it all and he moved to America to join the UFO lecture circuit (apparently after a Wiltshire Meeting with Stephen Greer!). He has since made a reappearance (maybe the UFO circuit in the states isn't the gravy train he expected) and does run a website that seems to report urban legend type stuff as fact (some of it including crop circle related bits) that is all presented in his unique, badly written illogical ambiguity with plenty of promises of 'jam tomorrow'.
None have ever gone down in a blaze of glory, they just seem to slip quietly out of the scene. Sometimes if one of them upon discovering the truth, decides to speak out about what they've found out, they are character assassinated by the High Order of Croppies and of course, they must have been paid off by the Evil Gummint.
Funny to note that several crop circle researchers (bleevers) have turned into circlemakers but no circlemaker has ever turned into a bleever.
Depends were abouts you are circlemaking I guess. There are some places in the hot spots in Wiltshire where there are 'spotters' on the hills, looking for first signs of fresh crop circles. You don't want to be in the field when it's getting light because of this.
Yes, I'd imagine you'd have to be very careful where you went if you weren't doing it entirely under cover of darkness.
Another thing some of these guys don't factor in though is that a lot of circlemaking seems to go on in late summer and autumn. There's a lot of dark around by the time you're approaching September.
Rolfe.
Terrence Meaden was the only one who was an 'academic' and bearing in mind that at the time the crop circles were just that, simple circles, sometimes two or three of them, but nothing of complex design like we see today. So I guess it was a possibility. Even though he did overstretch a bit as the first formations arrived that had concentric rings and straight lines and he re-drew his idea of the weather mechanism that could make such a thing, he soon was honest enough to realise what was happening and gave it up.That's interesting! I always thought they were the real woos. Postulating the supernatural or aliens is weird, and unnecessary, but postulating a (completely ridiculous) naturalistic explanation because you really, really don't want to consider it might be supernatural or aliens is even madder.
Rolfe.
Talk about arbitrary skepticism. Which is more likely?
1) Pooping in plastic bags
2) Undetectable world spanning subconcious mind-magic?
Gotta pick a location. Gotta pick a design. Gotta get the tools. Gotta go there, do it, and clean up. Gotta mind the little things. Water, toiletries, parking, etc. Can't mind the weather, though. Rain and mud don't concern circlemakers.

Excellent analysis. Glad you could rectify that little mystery.No mystery. The Pyramid builders had very strong sphynxters.
The porta-potty argument convinced me, I'm afraid. No way to argue against that.
No porta-potties = psi. QED

Don't forget the more people you have, the faster it gets done. A crop circle that takes 4 hours to complete by yourself may only take 1 hour if you have 4 people. This also further mitigates poop-bagging.
Excellent analysis. Glad you could rectify that little mystery.