What are your favourite/least favourite places in Australia and why? | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 27202787 Australia 02/10/2013 05:32 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The creepiest place I had ever been to is Port Wakefield, SA, I had the feeling of being raped and eaten, no one wanted to help and got out of there pretty quickly. People just stared, just creepy. Too many nice places, always remember fondly Sofala and Carcoa NSW. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 05:34 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 05:35 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The creepiest place I had ever been to is Port Wakefield, SA, I had the feeling of being raped and eaten, no one wanted to help and got out of there pretty quickly. People just stared, just creepy. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 27202787 Too many nice places, always remember fondly Sofala and Carcoa NSW. I found myself in a small town once, up in the mountainous south of NSW and felt strange scared there and didn't know why.... until I saw the signs pointing to the local abattoir. It was an abattoir town.. you could really feel it. |
Judethz
User ID: 20521597 United Kingdom 02/10/2013 05:43 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: AUSTRALIAS Mysteries and Secrets. AYERS ROCK. The Tennant Creek - Alice Springs - Pine Gap Nexus, and more. ...................................................................THE PROCESSIONAL HIGHWAYS OF THE REGION By land perhaps the most interesting approach is along the aptly numbered Highway 66, the Barkley, from the east. About 25 miles northwest of Mount Isa it comes under the infulance of 19.47º Lat and stays there until it joins the 87, or Stuart Highway that goes south through Tennant Creek to Alice Springs and further southwards. It's at this point that the 66 becomes an occult processional way, cunningly disguised as a modern road. For about 340 miles as the crow flies, or 500 on the ground. The 87, or Stuart Highway stays within (just about) 40 miles of either side of ley line 133.44º Long to Alice Springs. One obvious "unholy cargo" would be nuclear waste to the facility that is north of Tennant Creek. Other cargo would likely be new high tech equipment to be installed at Pine Gap and elsewhere. After the occult ceremonies and on an auspicious date. Just by coincidence (I'm sure) the 87 passes through Wycliffe Well, which is billed as the UFO Capital of Australia. Here is a short video which also has some good shots of the general landscape. :devilsmar: ................................... [link to www.youtube.com] Last Edited by Judethz on 02/10/2013 05:45 AM |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 05:46 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: AUSTRALIAS Mysteries and Secrets. AYERS ROCK. The Tennant Creek - Alice Springs - Pine Gap Nexus, and more. Quoting: Judethz ...................................................................THE PROCESSIONAL HIGHWAYS OF THE REGION :people1::alicetc: By land perhaps the most interesting approach is along the aptly numbered Highway 66, the Barkley, from the east. About 25 miles northwest of Mount Isa it comes under the infulance of 19.47º Lat and stays there until it joins the 87, or Stuart Highway that goes south through Tennant Creek to Alice Springs and further southwards. It's at this point that the 66 becomes an occult processional way, cunningly disguised as a modern road. For about 340 miles as the crow flies, or 500 on the ground. The 87, or Stuart Highway stays within (just about) 40 miles of either side of ley line 133.44º Long to Alice Springs. One obvious "unholy cargo" would be nuclear waste to the facility that is north of Tennant Creek. Other cargo would likely be new high tech equipment to be installed at Pine Gap and elsewhere. After the occult ceremonies and on an auspicious date. Just by coincidence (I'm sure) the 87 passes through Wycliffe Well, which is billed as the UFO Capital of Australia. Here is a short video which also has some good shots of the general landscape. :devilsmar: ...................................The Devils Marbles Been there...beautiful...at the right time of the year. |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 05:48 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I always remember wycliffe well from the story about the english couple who pulled over to help someone with their car and then he tied them up and threw them in the back of his truck but the girl escaped and the bf was never seen again and they never found his body. The nearest place to them was wycliffe well wasn't it? I can't remember their names either but the story was a horrible one. She like ran and hid under a bush until the guy got sick of looking and drove off with her bf in the back. |
Judethz
User ID: 20521597 United Kingdom 02/10/2013 05:50 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ............................................. TENNANT CREEK - THE TETRAHEDRAL HYPERDIMENSIONAL 19.47º :51: Most people are aware of Area 51 and that it is also called Dreamland. But they are not aware that the area to the west of Mexico City where ley line 104º long (The Dragon Line.) meets 19.47º north, was called Dreamland, long before Europeans arrived in the Americas. In Hawaii 19.47º passes directly over the Mauna Loa Volcano. And just to the north we have yet another stargazing centre. There are many International/university telescopes and observatory's clustered around the summit. For example, if one inscribes within a sphere, a tetrahedron with one point of the tetrahedron at the pole of the sphere, then the other three points of the tetrahedron will lie at 120° intervals along a latitude of 19.4712...°. This latitude corresponds, on a planetary scale, to possible sources of immense energy from the internal regions of a planet. For example: 1) Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii, 2) Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl volcanoes near Mexico City, 3) the absolutely huge Mare Orientale on the Moon’s far side (but near the edge of the Earth-side/far-side interface), 4) Olympus Mons on the planet Mars, (the solar system’s largest volcano), 5) the Great Red Spot on Jupiter, 6) the Great Blue Spot on Neptune, and so forth, are all located at or very near to 19.5° latitude. In addition, The Great Pyramids of the Sun and Moon at Teotihuacan, Mexico are also located near this latitude, suggesting the ancient architects may have had an inkling of this “energy source”. ..................:bluefour:(Phoenix 2012s pic) The significance of this hypothetical, inscribed tetrahedron is due to the somewhat esoteric belief that this geometrical anomaly may be connecting with other dimensions (outside of the four dimensional space-time continuum), and therefore represent the stuff of “tapping into the Zero-Point Energy” as envisioned by such researchers as Moray King [1] and others. Additionally, Chris Tinsley [2] has recently reported on an anti-gravitational effect (which may be tapping into the ZPE) by rotating a disc composed of superconducting material. This suggests that perhaps the more ideal experiment would be to rotate a tetrahedron shaped object -- or better yet a Merkaba (two tetrahedrons interlocked within an inscribed sphere). In either case, if the tetrahedrons were composed of superconducting material, the results could be stunning. One might also wish to incorporate in any new energy system design the slight difference between q and 19.4712...° -- which was on the same scale as the relationships connecting the planetary orbits. One can show, for example, the following approximate equalities: p = 3.14159... @ (6/5) F2 = 3.14164... (within 99.85% accuracy) p = 3.14159... @ 4/ÖF = 3.144606... (within 90.41 accuracy) e = 2.71828... @10 x (ÖF - 1) = 2.720196... (within 92.96% accuracy) Similarly, if Ö5 = f + F = 2p tan q, where q = 19.5897...° @ j = 19.4712...°, and 1/3 = sin j, then Ö5 = f + F @ 2p tan (19.4712...°) = p / Ö2, or f + F @ p / Ö2 Ö5 @ p / Ö2 or Ö10 @ p (both within an accuracy of 99.35%) The slight inexactitudes of these three Transcendental Numbers (and which may be thought of as one of the properties of the transcendental numbers) is extremely note-worthy. Just as the universe would rapidly collapse were it not due to angular momentum (and/or spin), it may be that the nature of transcendental numbers have similar properties with respect to the design and construction of effective energy systems based on Zero-Point Energy, and/or The Fifth Element of Connective Physics. Nevertheless, there is clearly a connection here between hyperdimensional physics and Sacred Geometry, or the Golden Mean! Another website, possibly worth investigating (and which has considerably more hard science) is [link to www.rialian.com] (corrected link) Finally, [link to www.enterprisemission.com] (corrected link) asked the question of how long have the powers-that-be been aware of hyperdimensional physics? [Strangely of all the enterprisemission webpages, this one is now missing. Hmmmm...] In any case, the argument may evolve down to much of the information about everything being already known to some, but not being given to the world at large, except in measured, carefully selected parcels. There may also be the supposition that 94% of the people will never get it, but that portions of the other 6% - those slated to be capable of joining the Education elite -- will. And that, perhaps is enough. [The above website also used to include an excellent picture of the Apollo 13, “Orion” patch -- where you could just scroll about 40% of the way down. Is that why it's now missing?] |
mj-13 User ID: 860177 United States 02/10/2013 05:51 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Judethz
User ID: 20521597 United Kingdom 02/10/2013 05:54 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 05:54 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 05:54 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I always remember wycliffe well from the story about the english couple who pulled over to help someone with their car and then he tied them up and threw them in the back of his truck but the girl escaped and the bf was never seen again and they never found his body. Quoting: Requiem The nearest place to them was wycliffe well wasn't it? I can't remember their names either but the story was a horrible one. She like ran and hid under a bush until the guy got sick of looking and drove off with her bf in the back. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 05:55 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
mj-13 User ID: 860177 United States 02/10/2013 05:57 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 05:59 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Judethz
User ID: 20521597 United Kingdom 02/10/2013 05:59 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34026347 Australia 02/10/2013 06:00 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Judethz
User ID: 20521597 United Kingdom 02/10/2013 06:05 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 06:05 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | By the way, Vegemite is crazy expensive here in St.Louis. Thirteen bloody bucks for a tiny jar! Quoting: mj-13 860177 you know what's better than vegemite? New Zealand marmite. Sanitarium makes it and it is reaaaaaallly good. It has been out of production for a bit now because their factory got destroyed in an earthquake and they are a weird religious cult owned company and they wouldn't set up factory anywhere else for transparently superstitious reasons. Vegimite is good too just a little bit with lots of butter, but NZ marmite is tops. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 06:05 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 06:08 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 06:11 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Judethz
User ID: 20521597 United Kingdom 02/10/2013 06:15 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 06:18 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to 3.bp.blogspot.com] man I can't post anything properly, I don't have a custom smiley stock : (. when I do i will be sure to add some nice bikini booby pics : ) I really liked Cairns. I stayed in Palm Cove for some time. It's an interesting place and about one of the only places in Queensland with a semblance of culture. I have never been to Tassie, Mr 2, but would love to. I am from Victoria and I love it there dearly. Tassie is nice and cold with beautiful forests. |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 06:22 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 1246800 Australia 02/10/2013 06:22 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 06:27 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061989 Australia 02/10/2013 06:30 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I love Gippsland in Victoria. The forests are simply amazing. There are mountain ash, temperate rain forests, and the trees grow to 100m tall. Quoting: Requiem [link to www.redbubble.com] I have traveled around aus a bit and have some least favourite spots, including Tennant creek and Bundaberg. Bundaberg was just fucking weird. The whole place gave me the creeps... it was like all haunted and shit. That doctor that killed all those people was at the Bundaberg hospital ... have you ever been to a place that left you feeling like that? Tennant Creek was like a hell on earth. I was warned not to stop if anyone tried to flag you down out there because you would likely get car jacked if you did. How people live there is beyond me. I got stuck there passing through [my 4th time through there], I ran out of petrol. I went to the local help agency and said like shit... I'm stuck here for 10 days and they gave me $100 petrol to get to Adelaide because they knew if they left me stuck there I would end up robbed, raped and fuck knows what. Tennant Creek is in the middle of the northern territory - not far from Alice springs, for those who don't know. It's in the middle of the desert. Better tennant creek..at least there ya only get raped and robbed.. Where ya DONT want to break down is Wilcannia..FAR FAR worse. |
Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 34060560 Australia 02/10/2013 06:32 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061989 Australia 02/10/2013 06:33 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 34061534 Australia 02/10/2013 06:35 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to 3.bp.blogspot.com] Quoting: Requiem man I can't post anything properly, I don't have a custom smiley stock : (. when I do i will be sure to add some nice bikini booby pics : ) I really liked Cairns. I stayed in Palm Cove for some time. It's an interesting place and about one of the only places in Queensland with a semblance of culture. I have never been to Tassie, Mr 2, but would love to. I am from Victoria and I love it there dearly. Tassie is nice and cold with beautiful forests. It's nice and peaceful where i live...we never lock our doors...even if we go away. The keys,wallet and phone are always left in the cars. Why would we want to live anywhere else. |