[In this July 30, 2012 photo provided by The Wilbur Register, crop circles are 
shown in a wheat field owned by Greg and Cindy Geib near Wilbur, Wash. The 
circles were first noticed on July 24, 2012. Crop circles have been a worldwide 
phenomenon for decades, and this is not the first one in Lincoln County. (AP 
Photo/The Wilbur Register, Courtney Ruiz)]

SEATTLE (AP) â€" Mysterious crop circles have appeared in an eastern Washington 
wheat field â€" not far from the nation's largest hydropower producer â€" but 
area farmers preparing for the summer's harvest find the distraction more 
amusing than alarming.

"You can't do anything other than laugh about it," said Cindy Geib, who owns 
the field along with her husband, Greg. "You just kind of roll with the theory 
it's aliens and you're special because aliens chose your spot."

Friends called the Geibs on July 24 when the pattern of flattened wheat was 
spotted off Highway 174, about five miles north of the town of Wilbur. The 
field is about 10 miles south of the Grand Coulee dam, which the Bureau of 
Reclamation says is the largest hydropower producer in the United States.

The circles resemble a four-leaf clover and remind Cindy Geib of Mickey Mouse 
ears. The design knocked down about an acre of their wheat. Some of it could be 
salvaged by combines when the harvest starts in a week or two, she said, but 
some will be lost.

"Of course, we don't have alien insurance," she said.

Crop circles have been a worldwide phenomenon for decades, and this is not the 
first one in Lincoln County. Similar circular patterns were left in crops in 
the Wilbur area in 2010 and in 2008 or 2009, Geib said.

Lynne Brougher, public affairs officer for the Grand Coulee dam, hadn't heard 
about the latest crop circles but said the previous one was no cause for alarm.

"It seemed to be highly unusual," Brougher said. "As I recall from a couple of 
years ago, there was no good explanation of how they got there."

Still, she added, "it wasn't a concern."

The latest crop circle was first reported Tuesday by Spokane station KHQ-TV 
(http://is.gd/57FTpy ). There were no signs that anyone walked into the field.

"We're trying to figure out how they got out there without breaking any of the 
wheat. It's hard to walk through the crunchy wheat and not knock it down," Geib 
said. "At the same time, it's hard to think it's aliens. It's a bizarre thing 
to wrap your brain around."

Geib's daughter-in-law, Kelly Geib of Wilbur, says the crop circle has given 
the family something to ponder and chuckle about.

"The kids all like to say the aliens have come, and we're happy to indulge 
them," she said.

http://news.yahoo.com/crop-circles-appear-e-washington-wheat-field-200318016.html

Reply via email to