Ppppink
Adorn Me
The stones can speak if you have the ears to listen.
For two days and nights, I lived and slept by this rock on the side of Ben Ledi, it talked to me, while the rest lay silent. The stone wanted to be adorned, in ceremony, in recognition of all it was and will be. Was this the rock talking, was it the interconnectedness of all things, me being hopeful, or mad, this I know I will never know.
This was when I became aware of the tale of giants at Ben Ledi.
Jan, 2024, Ben Ledi, Trossachs, Scotland
I am certainly not the only one interested in the life of stones, rocks, and boulders. Dr J. Havelock Fidler, a retired scientist, had heard people talking about the possibility of energy passing between megaliths, that rocks may communicate with each other, like the findings of Peter Wohllenben in their book, The Hidden Life of Trees.
This introduced the idea that trees communicate with each other. Dr Suzanne Simard, Professor of Forest Ecology at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver expanded on Wohllenben’s work, showing scientifically that the trees shared resources through an interwoven system of roots and fungi. When one tree needed support, it communicated that need to the rest of the trees, and resources were released from storage to help the tree in need.
For the case of rocks, Dr Fidler tested several stones in an area known as Loch Shielding, in Scotland, reporting that each stone was transmitting aerial energies to other stones in the region. The reputable dowser Dennis Wheatly employed by Wiltshire County Council, expanded this research further, of which Wheatly cataloged the electromagnetic energy bandings of megaliths.
The sound of rock vibrations has been recorded by a team at the University of Utah, where the vibrations seem to be in time with the earth and the wind. They measured them by recording the rock arches' ambient seismic vibrations, these have been sped up twenty-five times to be made audible.
The red rock tones can be heard at: