
Try riding an airplane one time, and fly it over a very large wheat field. What do you see? I guess you would see a lot of wheat (obviously!). That looks pretty normal until you pass by another wheat field and you see circles formed in the body of wheat, as if some grandmaster created those symbols on a giant canvas of wheat. These are called crop circles.
Crop circles are basically patterns created over fields of wheat, barley, rye, maize, which are flattened to create the patterns. These patterns are very elaborate and very complicated, and were once thought to be undoable without some sort of divine or extraterrestrial power. Today, however, instructions on how you can use special tools that can be found near you may be employed to create your very own crop circles.
But then again, there are really patterns that are too complicated to just make on your own. Furthermore, some assert that the slanted or warped crop growth nodes are evidences that there is, indeed, extraterrestrial origin to some of these crop circles. Some of the mroe basic designs may have been, indeed, created by human. But who knows which ones are not created by human beings anymore. Some suggest that the circles may have been formed by microwave or spinning plasma vortices, something that are not usually seen in farms.
Years back, I remember seeing the famous film, Signs. Since I was too young to understand back then, I really fell for the idea that the crop circles were really made by aliens who are planning to send out messages to human beings. As a child, I found it to be a bit disappointing to learn that crop circles are not really created by aliens and that the source is still debated up to this point.
In the meantime, let us just appreciate these crop circles while they are still there. We don't know how they originated, but they are surely a great view for the eyes.
It is interesting that some people still believe in an old and never substantiated hypothesis: namely that all (or most) modern crop pictures are locally human-made. Last summer four filmmakers from California saw a huge 300-meter "Quetzalcoatl" crop picture appear silently near them, in the early morning of July 5, 2009.
My wife and I visited Wiltshire in August, and while we were there, three new crop pictures quickly and silently appeared, two in daylight, with no humans visibly present, and containing many details that would not be possible to carry out by hand, no matter how long some local fakers took.
Finally, Andrew Pyrka and Paul Jones captured pictures of perhaps two dozen strange-looking extra-terrestrials, some large, others small, near newly-made crop circles: see www.cropcirclewisdom.com. None of his films have been altered or modified in an artificial way, except to adjust levels of brightness (I checked many of his original 6 MB camera files persomally).
Thus in summary: (1) the vast majority of crop pictures from last summer (and in years past) do not appear to be locally human-made, and (2) direct photographs of the e.t. crop artists (or some of them at least) have been posted on the Crop Circle Wisdom website.
Why do they show us artistic pictures in a field, rather than landing on the White House lawn, to be gunned down in a hail of bullets? I believe the answer is quite simple: many native tribes on Earth, who have not become excessively urbanized, will sing a song or draw a new piece of art, if they wish to communicate some idea to outsiders. The e.t. crop artists seem to me to be of that kind: artistic and/or musical geniuses, who are also way ahead of us in science and technology, and who are very concerned about the perilious human future on Earth, but really pose no military threat. We should pay attention to what they ae telling us.