Yatesbury, nr Avebury, Wiltshire. Reported 10th August
Updated Thursday 13th August 1998
© 1998 Steve Alexander
It's located in a field at Yatesbury across
from the previous circle. It's in the same field as the Meteor hanger.
It appears to be a pyramid, with three small circles at the apex, rather like a version of
a Freemason's symbol. From what I could tell, only a few people have been in the circle
besides my son and myself. We did encounter a car with three people inside, who were also
carrying a lot of corn from the circle. It was neatly laid out but there were quite a few
standing stems peppering the place.
Reported by Kent Goodman
FIELD REPORT
Click on thumbnails to enlarge
Images Copyright 1998 Stuart Dike
It is genuinely very rare to have a Triangle
as a formation itself, and this has to be the biggest to form on its own right, located
directly within the next field over from the Yatesbury Field flower formation. It was an
almost perfect equilateral Triangle, with a very neat floor construction, with three
circles placed around each apex, with a nest circle positioned on the bottom right hand
corner, above the cluster of circles. A fifth circle was swirled within the right hand
corner of the main floor construction, this feature was not repeated on the other corners.
The crop itself flowed in one direction towards the top apex, with a reversed flow of crop
running down the right hand side of the triangle. All of the cluster of circles had a
clockwise rotation, but the interesting aspect to the formation, is that according to the
first report by Kent Goodman, the bottom left and right circles were not originally there!
These must have appeared soon after Kent left the formation? If this is correct, then this
is very important, because these circles must have formed in daylight hours! My
observations are based on the information Kent sent us, on Monday 10th of August.
A rather bizarre formation, but very similar in concept to the Koch formations last year,
and this year! Its like the CircleMakers are showing us a small component based on their
larger designs?
Report by Stuart Dike.