Thursday, June 24, 2010

Celtic crop circle comes to Cornwall

Published: 9:35AM GMT 01 March 2010

Henry Petherick, son of obstruction engineer Caroline Petherick, balances on tip of the centre mill of the Mysterious Sevenfold Labyrinth Henry Petherick, son of obstruction engineer Caroline Petherick, balances on tip of the centre mill of the Mysterious Sevenfold Labyrinth Photo: SWNS

At the tip off the cliffs on top of the fishing pier of Looe ramblers will find a "seven-fold labyrinth" assembled by a internal landowner.

The South West Coast Path, that overlooks St George"s Island, was the interlude point for Joseph of Arimathea and his nephew Jesus on their approach to Glastonbury, according to internal legend.

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Caroline Petherick, has outlayed the past year formulating the "crop round with Celtic twist".

The 60 feet far-reaching turn settlement was desirous by a identical pattern at Tintagel on the north Cornish seashore and is pronounced to issue from Palaeolithic times.

It took dual days to move the fourteen tonnes of dirt and weed and cost about �500 to build.

Ms Petherick, who describes herself as a "wordsmith" does not ask for remuneration but there is a tip box for donations next to report about the pattern"s significance.

A penetrating dowser, Ms Petherick chose the place for the quartz and line-up station mill after utilizing discovering rods to find the intersection in between dual "energy lines".

She said: "You can go and lay there and realize the earth isn"t such a bad place after all. It"s a peaceful wish for people to enjoy."

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