Hi Group,
Below this text you will notice a strange apparition (a supernatural depiction), half horse and half elephant. The “pedico” man referenced an ass. We are basically told to look at the horse’s ass or we are in fact horse’s asses. We go back to the stone map depicting the horse and we look at his rump, as we are looking for an anomaly, something different than what we see. How do we solve the problem?
You have to know the country the horse is pasturing in like the back of your hand. You have to be familiar with every known symbol on the stone horse map. You have to be in the field performing your due diligence or you are never going to figure out how to solve the stone maps.
The horse has become half a horse, but we are still looking at the horse’s rear trying to find the answer. Criteria to follow, the mission.
How many of you can locate and point out Elephant Butte? Do you know where it is located on the 1900 Florence Topo Map? How many times have you passed through the area in the last 5 years? Have you been able to take photographs of this SARA at least once during each season; winter, spring, summer and fall from four different directions; north, south, east and west?
Do you know or can you draw Elephant Butte in its entirety? Does it have legs, ears, tusks, eyes, mouth, trunk and a body? If you can answer “yes” to most of the above then you will be able to identify the horse’s ass as an elephant’s head with one eye, trunk, no legs, no ear and no tusk.
We will discuss the elephant later. I have not checked the line I drew in to define the horse/elephant halves for exact accuracy (55°). It may need to be moved a few degrees. It must intersect with the number four line (north-south) on the horse’s mane. Line # 1 lies directly beneath gold, sun symbol just behind his left ear. Line two is to the left, line three is again to the left and last, but not least, line # 4.
The separation line runs southeast between the “3” and the crescent moon, down into the horse’s right rear leg and produces Somehiker’s “pi” sign; 3.14. Remember that number we will be using it soon enough as it will be combined in conjunction with the horse’s four (4) southeast mane lines. I hope you all are with me, as this took some time to put it together. Artwork may not be the best, but you will get the picture.
More Later,
Ellie B