August 6th, 2008 · 1 Comment
Sometimes, during my free time, I just wander around the Web and look for juicy bits of news to read or post here. Sunday was one such time. And I hit pay dirt.
Clicking around the Web, I happened upon one of my favorite sites, Crop Circle Connector. When I did, I found that a crop circle image that had been posted, updated with another circle and then removed had come back!
http://www.temporarytemples.co.uk/
The first part of Avebury Manor from July 15, 2008 showed our complete solar system of nine planets on an upcoming date of December 21-23, 2008, when the Mayan Long Count calendar will end. One week later on July 22, 2008, a second crop picture appeared in the same field; but no one has yet deduced the meaning of that second picture, because its symbols are so complex.
After lengthy study, it now seems that the second part was meant to tell us more about the near-future events of December 2012: not on the dates of December 21-23, but one week earlier on a new Moon of December 13. Looking first at the overall picture, we can see on the left a “bright comet” entering our solar system, and on the right an expanded view of lunar orbit near Earth: …
As you will see at the site, it is a beautiful formation, but we at YOWUSA have a different interpretation than the good people at CCC do. While the CCC members see this as the moon rising close to an incoming “bright comet” on or about December 13, 2012, YOWUSA has a different interpretation. And it has to do with Planet X and the loss of Pluto.
But, rather than spoil the message for the readers, I will withhold the YOWUSA interpretation for the moment, leave the interpretations up to you, the readers and close with…
Catch you on the backside!
Janice Manning
2012 and Planet X Bulletin

Tags: Astronomy · Brown Dwarfs · Crop Circles · Extrasolar Planets · Near Earth Objects · Planet X / Nibiru
Both Russia and Canada have sent their powerful Northern Fleets to the Norwegian island of Spitzbergen. Why are both powerful navies interested in a small, unremarkably featured island in the Arctic Ocean? And are they turning their big guns and missiles outward or towards each other? Perhaps an old favorite US television show suggests an answer. I provide the following example for you to enjoy without any bias.
In Star Trek, the original series, one episode showed that the USS Enterprise, under the command of Captain James Kirk, received orders from Starfleet to take a small fleet of starships to a nearby space outpost to guard it. The Klingons received a similar order. But what were they guarding? The secret of a planet whose core, mantle and inner crust was solid, virgin dilithium? Kivas and Trillium? A new source of unlimited energy? No.
They were guarding “Quatro-Triticale,” a new, highly productive strain of wheat. Thus began the Trekkies’ indroduction to those sweet, furry and also highly productive little Tribbles.
But Svalbard is not a space station, and it is so well-protected that no smuggler, not even the most creative Cyrano Jones, can find his or her way into it without approval. So what are the Russians and the Canadians doing there?
Perhaps this article received from SpaceWar.com might shed some answers.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) July 14, 2008
The Russian Navy on Monday said it was boosting its combat presence in the Arctic, including near the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, amid increased international interest in the region.
“The Russian Navy has restored the presence of combat ships of the Northern Fleet in the Arctic region, including in the region of Spitsbergen,” the Navy said in a statement.
Navy spokesman Igor Dygalo was unable to say the last time combat ships were in the region, but described the latest patrols as part of a “significant expansion of the activities of the Northern Fleet.”
So what happened to the tribbles at the end of the show? Well, after those that remained alive showed extreme distaste for Klingons and infested the Enterprise, Engineer Scott transported them all to the departing Klingon ship, where they would “soon be no tribble at all.”
While watching Kirk getting swamped by a tidal wave of mostly dead tribbles was hilarious, I hope the Svalbard seeds fare much better than the Quatro-Triticale did.
Catch you on the backside!
Janice Manning
2012 and Planet X Bulletin

Tags: Articles · Earth Changes · Oceanic · Planet X / Nibiru · Situational Awareness · Survival Skills · Web Sites