Credible people telling of incredible
things.
This is the center, the goal, even
the “mission statement” of this book.
And Colin Andrews is in a unique place
as the premier authority on the crop
circle phenomenon.
When one reads Colin’s findings, it is
self-evident that he is such an expert. But
this is not all: He is also an intelligent, kind,
spiritual gentleman with whom it has been
a pleasure to work. Sometimes, a book can
act as a catalyst for change. I think Colin
would agree with me that if Crop Circles:
Signs of Contact inspires even one reader
to be more environmentally conscious, then
we will have done our job. There is probably
no greater mission for us all.
It has been an honor to work with Colin
Andrews on this book, this “report to the
world” that has been two decades in the
making. Crop circles have meaning, and
that, in as succinct a way as this sometimes
prolix writer can state, is the essence of this
book’s mission statement.
There are real crop formations all over
the world, and science does not know how
or why they are formed. There is hard scientific
evidence that some circles are undeniably
not manmade. Changes in the
plants that cannot be duplicated in hoaxed
circles; odd sounds that have been recorded
in authentic crop circles; and, perhaps
most astounding, the sudden
appearance of enormous formations in
mere minutes—creations that would take
many men many hours to produce appear
in minutes. Skeptics have their work cut
out for them—I ask them to read the chapter
in this book about the 900-foot Julia
Set near Stonehenge that appeared in a
span of 45 minutes before leaping to
manmade conclusions.
This book is Colin Andrews’s story,
and I am grateful to have been sitting
around the particular campfire where and
when he decided to tell it.