Could this be the end of tupperware and tea mornings.
#1
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Thread Starter
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 10,375
Could this be the end of tupperware and tea mornings.
Well for the lucky residents of queenland anyway.
While looking for surf clubs we found
Clubs UFO
UFO Hotline. Sightings and Abductions Club
Gympie if anyones interested, I think Crestas up this way
PM me if you want the number
While looking for surf clubs we found
Clubs UFO
UFO Hotline. Sightings and Abductions Club
Gympie if anyones interested, I think Crestas up this way
PM me if you want the number
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Could this be the end of tupperware and tea mornings.
And the Aborigines may have started it
Aboriginal myths incorporate the idea of "sky beings", with the Wandjina being among the most interesting to consider. The Wandjina have been preserved in a fascinating oral tradition and in a large collection of rock paintings scattered throughout the Kimberley region of northern Australia. The paintings have received all manner of interpretations from stylised representations of a pervasive myth system to naive "ancient astronaut" theories.
Aboriginal myths incorporate the idea of "sky beings", with the Wandjina being among the most interesting to consider. The Wandjina have been preserved in a fascinating oral tradition and in a large collection of rock paintings scattered throughout the Kimberley region of northern Australia. The paintings have received all manner of interpretations from stylised representations of a pervasive myth system to naive "ancient astronaut" theories.
#3
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Thread Starter
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 10,375
Re: Could this be the end of tupperware and tea mornings.
Originally Posted by ABCDiamond
And the Aborigines may have started it
Aboriginal myths incorporate the idea of "sky beings", with the Wandjina being among the most interesting to consider. The Wandjina have been preserved in a fascinating oral tradition and in a large collection of rock paintings scattered throughout the Kimberley region of northern Australia. The paintings have received all manner of interpretations from stylised representations of a pervasive myth system to naive "ancient astronaut" theories.
Aboriginal myths incorporate the idea of "sky beings", with the Wandjina being among the most interesting to consider. The Wandjina have been preserved in a fascinating oral tradition and in a large collection of rock paintings scattered throughout the Kimberley region of northern Australia. The paintings have received all manner of interpretations from stylised representations of a pervasive myth system to naive "ancient astronaut" theories.
Possibly however my local video shop has 67 episodes of star trek in stock, leading me to suspect despite the climate anoracks may well be in use in gympie and Noosa.
Crestas not been on the forum lately perhaps he can fill us in, unless hes been abducted by a UFO of course. The trips to the bottle shop may well be just a cover up.