Husk,Husk! How RYE you are. WHEAT can't be sure about this. A rather CORNY question to ask. Strange BRAN of humor you've got there. I can BARLEY figure it out myself. They will find out when it's the RICE time,OK! Hmmmm, You planted a SEED in my mind. Actually, it's three cereal killers. They are called Snap, Crackle and Pop! I can see that there is a KERNEL of hope for those who have replied to this thread. Be aware that some items above are spelt incorrectly. This item really goes against the grain... The clan gets together in certain weather conditions to do their work and enjoy the interest it attracts. But it is all about the stars and the ritual that keeps this secret society developing their patterns. It would be interesting to know who is in this secret society, but it is an old society. As the reports of crop circles have been around for a long time, the society might reach back to the Dark Ages, when food was scarce. Perhaps the members simply needed the rye.
Slaves were brought in to work on farms.
Sometimes, when there was a full moon, enslaved people worked in the crop fields farming
Southern colonies were given over to large-scale agricultural operations, what today we might call industrial agriculture, where large tracts of land were given over to a single cash crop such as tobacco, rice, sugar, or indigo. The most common crop was cotton. Instead of having machines to do the planting and harvesting, the work was done by armies of slaves.
very hard work; long days; crop failures; severe weather; possibility of losing farm
Though the Incas adored gold and silver, they had no use for money. That is why all the taxes had to be payed by work or labour or a share of each farmer's crop.
Crop circles are rarely the work of aliens; most crop circle makers are residents of the country where they are producing the crop circles. What these pranksters and vandals are trying to convey is that they are clever and stealthy. They must be stealthy, and therefore no real statistics can be compiled, because if their identity is known, they will be charged with trespassing and destruction of property and forced to pay the owner of the crops for the destruction.
From the standpoint of "timeline" there can be many answers. Crop circles have been appearing for centuries, if not millennia. The bishop of Lyon was summoned to the king of France in the year 800, in order to explain the weird patterns that kept appearing in the fields surrounding Lyon. People feared the work of the devil. There is historical record concerning the forming of a ring in grass near Assen in the north of the Netherlands, in August 1590. According to eyewitnesses the ring was formed by dancing, mythical, humanoid beings and it involved a swirling gust of wind. "The circle remained from the day after... till the next winter when the plough cut it out". The earliest known crop circle image is the "Mowing Devil", a woodcut made in Hertfordshire, England in 1678 and can be found at the related link. In 1686 Robert Plot's National History of Staffordshire was published, in which several pages were dedicated to the crop circle phenomenon, and the oldest photo of a crop circle was taken in 1937. If timeline is referring to when the crop circles appear; the typical season runs from approximately July to August, but circles do appear in other months. Agricultural crops are not the only place circles are found. There are tree circles, meadow circles, sand circles, and ice and snow circles recorded, to name a few. The best website to view crop circles is the Crop Circle Connector, at the related link below.
Because all circles are similar.
Yes
Drawing accurate circles and part circles in surveying, mathematics and geometry in schools and at work where planning is involved.
rub white wine vinegar on the circles
The Greek word for killer is "δολοφόνος" (dolofónos).
There are many ways that scientists can use circles in their work. They talk about cycles using circles for example.
heck no it doesn't work! I still look like I got my eyes punched out!
Information is placed in two or three large intersecting circles.
blood works best
This phrase means that if you don't put in the necessary work and effort, you will not see the desired results. Just as hoeing a field is crucial for a successful harvest, putting in effort and hard work in any endeavor is essential for achieving positive outcomes.