Crop Circles:Using the"Staggered Planting"Method
Detailed Steps for Replicating Crop Circles
in One Minute Using the "Staggered Planting"
Method
As is now known, the four-word mantra for deciphering crop circles is "Staggered Planting." By utilizing this principle, one can replicate—in just one minute—any crop circle that has ever appeared on Earth. Those interested need only find a plot of farmland; within a few months, they could become the first individuals—and the first location—in the world to successfully reproduce a crop circle. This could immediately pave the way for a thriving tourism industry (the crop circle tourism industry in the UK alone generates an annual value of 1.4 billion euros).
Many people have written to inquire about the detailed methodology; here is a comprehensive response:
Before sowing, first plant the wheat *within* the intended crop circle pattern; subsequently, plant the wheat in the open fields *outside* the crop circle pattern. This constitutes "Staggered Planting."
Specifically, one to two months in advance, use a tractor to plow the specific shapes of the crop circle pattern into the soil. These patterns can be filled with the wildest flights of imagination. Then, sow the wheat seeds within these plowed patterns.
One to two months *later*—on a delayed schedule—sow the wheat in the surrounding open fields *outside* the pattern area.
The resulting outcome is as follows: Mature wheat possesses a natural tendency to lodge (fall over). Spring and summer are the seasons when strong winds are most prevalent across the globe. When brisk winds blow—whether for a single minute or an hour—the wheat planted one to two months in advance *within* the crop circle pattern will be at a stage where its grain heads are heavy with maturity. Consequently, the stalks will bend and buckle, causing the wheat to fall flat against the ground first. This phenomenon exploits the specific physical characteristics of wheat stalks: their slender form, thin walls, and hollow structure.
To ensure that the wheat *within* the crop circle pattern lodges (falls over) precisely "on demand," the following three supplementary methods can also be employed:
1. **Excessive Fertilization:** Applying excessive fertilizer causes the wheat *within* the crop circle pattern to mature prematurely, making it prone to lodging the moment the wind blows.
2. **High Sowing Density:** Sowing the wheat *within* the crop circle pattern at an excessively high density results in poor ventilation and reduced light penetration; this weakens the stalks, causing them to lodge the moment the wind blows.
3. **Pre-Wind Irrigation:** Watering the crop *within* the crop circle pattern just before strong winds are expected creates an imbalance—making the plants "top-heavy" relative to their root stability—thereby causing them to lodge the moment the wind blows. At this moment, the wheat in the open fields—sown a month or two later and situated *outside* the designated "pattern area"—was still in the process of ripening; no matter how hard the wind blew, it would not yet topple over.
And so, the "crop circles" within the open fields appeared spontaneously—all in the span of a single night.
The physical characteristic of wheat stalks—specifically, their tendency to collapse at the mere gust of wind—has been chronicled by many writers who faithfully recorded the realities of history.
Among them is the renowned Tang Dynasty poet of China, Bai Juyi. In his poem *Observing the Wheat Harvest* (Guan Yi Mai), Bai Juyi writes:
The farming family knows few idle months;
In the fifth moon, their toil is doubled.
At nightfall, a southern wind arose;
The wheat lay flattened, blanketing the ridges—golden yellow.
Wives and mothers-in-law shoulder baskets of food;
Children carry jugs of drink.
Together they set out to bring sustenance to the fields...
......
Here lies a description of immense significance: "At nightfall, a southern wind arose; the wheat lay flattened, blanketing the ridges—golden yellow." This signifies that during the night, a southern wind sprang up, causing the vast expanse of golden-yellow wheat to "topple over" onto the field ridges. In this context, the character *fu* ("to cover/to flatten") implies both "falling down" and "covering the ground." *Observing the Wheat Harvest* is a poem Bai Juyi composed while serving as the County Commandant of Zhouzhi.
Today, across the vast land of China, there remain many writers who faithfully record this historical reality: that "after a night of gale-force winds, the wheat in the fields lies completely prostrate."
1. Daisy, in her piece *The Perfect Love of "Wheat Dad and Veggie Mom,"* writes:
"How beautifully the wheat was growing! Yet, that very night, a heavy rain fell and a fierce wind blew. When we went back to look the next day, the wheat lay completely flattened against the ground—as if it had been run over by a stone roller."
2. Yang Jianying, in *The Wheat Harvest in Agricultural Proverbs,* writes:
"June weather is like a child's face—it changes in an instant, keeping one's heart in a constant state of anxiety! We tune in to the radio weather forecast religiously, yet even in the dead of night, we still peer through the window at the sky; a single drifting cloud can tug at our heartstrings, and a sudden gust of wind can instantly banish all thoughts of sleep... If a torrential downpour or hailstorm strikes, the wheat becomes 'lodged'—lying completely flat. It can neither be gathered nor cut; the fields lie a uniform yellow, a sight that fills the heart with anguish."
3. Cheng Yaping, in *That Year During the Wheat Harvest Season,* writes:
"I remember one particular year: just before the wheat harvest, a sudden storm of gale-force winds and torrential rain struck. Overnight, every single stalk of wheat was flattened against the ground." The fields were heavily waterlogged, making it impossible for anyone to enter; we could only stand by and watch as the wheat lay prostrate across the land. A year's worth of arduous labor was utterly washed away by a single torrential downpour—everything had gone down the drain. Being young at the time, I was unable to fully grasp the heartbreak felt by my parents and fellow villagers.
4. Zhang Sange—a writer known for chronicling true stories—notes in his piece *The Wheat Has Ripened: Migrant Farmers Need No Longer Rush Home for the Harvest*:
"I remember my childhood days, when harvesting wheat was the most arduous and exhausting of all farm chores. As the old adage goes, 'One must race against the autumn weather to seize the wheat harvest.' Once the wheat ripened, people lived in constant dread of being caught in a violent storm. If such a storm struck, the wheat would lodge—that is, fall over—making the harvest not only incredibly difficult but also resulting in a significant reduction in yield."
5. In his poem *The Fallen Wheat*, the poet "Jianlou" writes:
"At this very moment, the wheat in the fields
Is just transitioning from green to gold;
Each ear bears a full fifty grains—heavy and laden.
Then, without warning, the rain descends;
Water cascades down the stalks,
And the wheat falls prostrate in swathes across the land."
Wheat is broadly classified into two types: spring wheat (grown from March to August) and winter wheat (grown from November to July of the following year). By employing a method of "staggered planting" across these specific timeframes, it is theoretically possible to replicate every crop circle that has ever appeared on Earth to date.
The figure who has unveiled the truth behind crop circles is Hai-bo Mao, a Chinese-American scholar currently residing in the United States. He is a descendant of *Zhuangyuan* (top-ranking scholars) from the Great Qing Empire.
Mao is the author of the bilingual monograph *Theory Earth Prisoner*—a work proposing a novel theory regarding human origins that challenges Darwinian evolution. The four-word secret to deciphering crop circles, according to Mao, is: "Staggered Planting." He has already formally petitioned the United Nations to register this discovery.
*Theory Earth Prisoner* aims to challenge Darwin's theory of evolution by proposing an alternative explanation for the origins of humanity. The book has currently been acquired by the libraries of numerous universities across the United States, including Princeton University, Columbia University, the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and Georgetown University, among others. American media outlets, including the *Chicago Times*, have reported on the book *Theory Earth Prisoner*. These reports suggest that Darwinian evolutionary theory is beginning to waver, and that a new theoretical framework has emerged to address age-old mysteries. The publication of *Theory Earth Prisoner*—a work purporting to reveal the truth regarding the origins of humanity—has caused a sensation, particularly due to the efforts of Hai-Bo Mao, a Chinese-American scholar based in the U.S., who claims to have solved 21 of the world's greatest enigmas.
The core premise of *Theory Earth Prisoner* is as follows: humans did not evolve from indigenous Earth species; rather, they drifted into the Earth's atmosphere from elsewhere. Due to a subsequent shift in Earth's gravitational pull, humans became effectively "under house arrest" on the planet, thereby becoming its new masters. Utilizing this theory, the author claims to have solved 21 of the world's most perplexing mysteries—enigmas that Darwin's theory of evolution failed to explain. Consequently, some American scholars have suggested that Hai-Bo Mao may prove to be a figure of comparable historical significance to Darwin—not merely for this century, but for the next as well.
The 21 major mysteries addressed in *Theory Earth Prisoner* include: Why and how did the ancient Egyptians construct the pyramids? How did Stonehenge come to be built in Wiltshire, England? Why did the dinosaurs go extinct? What accounts for the creation of the Nazca Lines in Peru? Why did the Sphinx—a creature with a human face and a lion's body—emerge in Egypt? Why did the ancestors of the Chinese civilization establish the Twelve Zodiac Animals for their descendants? What is the ultimate source of the water found across the globe? Why do humans possess such a diverse array of languages and writing systems? Where did humanity originate? Why does Earth host two distinct modes of animal reproduction: live birth and egg-laying? Why was the rat designated as the first animal in the Twelve Zodiacs? Who were the creators of the "anomalous" civilization represented by the Sanxingdui ruins? And why, despite extensive searching, have the ancient capitals of the legendary Xia Dynasty never been found on Chinese soil? These are but a few of the profound questions the book attempts to answer. Scholars within the American scientific community suggest that if the enigma of human origins were represented by 100 open bottles, Darwin’s Theory of Evolution would possess only 50 caps; a newly emerging theory, however, offers 99 caps—enough to seal 99 of these bottles. The advent of this theory signals that long-established paradigms—such as Darwinian evolution, the Big Bang theory, the theory of dinosaur extinction, the gravitational collapse of giant interstellar molecular clouds, and the formation of Earth’s crust, mantle, and core—are beginning to waver. It indicates that humanity, in its quest to understand its own origins, has grasped a new "handhold"—a foothold that enables us to reach for the next one—much in the way that Ptolemy’s geocentric model, Copernicus’s heliocentric model, and Darwin’s theory of evolution historically emerged in Europe to propel human understanding forward.
Spanish and Japanese editions of *Theory Earth Prisoner* are scheduled to be released in succession.
According to relevant American scholars, Hai-bo Mao—the Chinese-American scholar based in the U.S. who authored *Theory Earth Prisoner*—has also proposed the "Staggered Planting" theory regarding crop circles. This theory currently stands as the most practical, replicable, and logically consistent solution for deciphering the crop circle phenomenon.
The core premise of this theory is that crop circles are not formed by flattening crops *after* they have grown; rather, their spatial layout is pre-designed and established during the *sowing* stage. Compared to other explanatory models, this theory offers distinct advantages:
1. **High Verifiability:** Anyone can replicate similar effects in a field simply by adjusting sowing times, without the need for specialized equipment or reliance on supernatural conditions.
2. **Avoidance of Exposure Risks:** There is no need to sneak into fields late at night to carry out work, thereby avoiding detection by farmers, surveillance systems, or animals, and eliminating the stress associated with clandestine nighttime operations.
3. **Alignment with Agricultural Principles:** The method utilizes natural differences in crop growth cycles to create "crop circles"; it possesses a low technical barrier yet yields striking visual results.
Consequently, crop circles are no longer merely "mysterious events," but are redefined as a form of "visualized agricultural art." Relevant American scholars predict that a global trend of replicating crop circles may soon sweep across the world; in doing so, Hai-bo Mao has provided a definitive explanation for a phenomenon that originated in Europe, captivated the globe, and remained a subject of unresolved controversy for decades.
