Rough Hill of June 24, 2009 showed three distinct symbols for
“volcanic eruption”, “solar flare” and “lunar eclipse of July 7,
2009”
A
new crop picture which appeared at Rough Hill on June 24, 2009
has the overall, superficial appearance of a “mushroom”, but in
fact it tells us far more than that!
Its
upper part closely resembles Sarychev volcano in the Kuril
Islands, which exploded into a huge
mushroom-shaped cloud on June 12-13, 2009, nine
days before the crop picture appeared (see
www.dailymail.co.uk or
earthobservatory.nasa.gov):

In
order to date that volcanic eruption in time, those crop artists
showed us nine “new Moon” symbols across the upper width of
their “mushroom”, because nine days later on June 22, our Moon
was “new”.
Then
in the central part of that “mushroom”, we can see an
approximate repeat of the remarkable crop picture which appeared
at Rutland’s Farm on April 23, 2009, and showed
"solar flares"
(see
rutlands or
rutlands):

The
next crop picture to follow Rutland’s Farm, namely Morgan’s Hill
of April 24, implied that such flares might be emitted
two-and-one-half lunar cycles later on July 7, 2009 (see
comments or
articles).
Finally in the lower part of their “mushroom”, we can see three
"eclipse" symbols moving through space against the distant
background of “six nearby stars". The precise shape of those
three symbols suggests that they were meant to refer to a
penumbral
lunar eclipse, as shown below at upper right:

In
order to identify those “six nearby stars”, we went to the
Wikipedia entry for “lunar eclipse of July 7, 2009”
(see
July_2009_lunar_eclipse) and there they were!
In
summary, a new crop picture at Rough Hill shows three distinct
symbols for “volcanic eruption”, “solar flare” and “penumbral
lunar eclipse of July 7, 2009”. Whether those crop artists are
simply comparing predicted solar flares on our Sun to a volcanic
eruption here on Earth, or whether they mean something more
literal, remains to be seen.
The CMM Research Group
PS
We would like thank Russell Stannard for the field photograph
used here.