10 Comments CherryPie on Jul 8th 2013
The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.
Albert Einstein

14 Comments CherryPie on Jul 7th 2013
It was a great day all round. In the morning I had a hair appointment, it was time for a trim. The hairdressers were on fine form celebrating the 21st anniversary of the opening of the salon. There were cupcakes, balloons and freebies, I did however decline on the offer of a cupcake. The town was buzzing because the town carnival was taking place. I was struggling to get parked when suddenly I noticed that a car was just about to leave from one of my two favourite parking places. Perfect timing
This was followed by a trip to Birmingham in time for lunch, which was enjoyed sitting in the sunshine looking out over St Martins Church. Unfortunatly shopping was necessary, things were needed for the summer hols. The afternoon was productive and we got home just in time to enjoy dinner on the patio catching the evening sun.
18 Comments CherryPie on Jul 6th 2013
During last years Diamond Jubilee celebrations some of our neighbours had organised a joint garden party. Unfortunately rain stopped play! Instead we stopped inside in the warm and watched the Jubilee Flotilla on the television.
This is one of the photographs that I took from the BBC coverage of the Jubilee Flotilla.
More Red, White, Blue can be found in the gallery.

9 Comments CherryPie on Jul 5th 2013
…The Forgotten Origins of the Sanctuary of Anubis
Synopsis (from book cover):
Shrouded in mystery for centuries, the sphinx of Giza has frustrated many who have attempted to discover its original purpose. Accounts exist of the Sphinx as an oracle, as a king’s burial chamber, and as a temple for initiation into the Hermetic Mysteries. Egyptologists have argued for decades about whether there are secret chambers underneath the Sphinx, why the head-to-body ratio is out of proportion, and whose face adorns it.
In The Sphinx Mystery, Robert Temple addresses the many mysteries of the Sphinx. He presents eyewitness accounts, published over a period of 281 years, of people who saw the secret chambers and even went inside them before they were sealed 1926 – accounts that had been forgotten until the author rediscovered them. He also describes his own exploration of a tunnel at the rear of the Sphinx, perhaps used for obtaining sacred divinatory dreams.
Robert Temple reveals that the Sphinx was originally a monumental Anubis, the Egyptian jackal god, and that its face is that of a Middle Kingdom pharaoh, Amenemhet II, which was a later re-carving, In addition, he provides photographic evidence of ancient sluice gate traces to demonstrate that, during the Old Kingdom, the Sphinx as Anubis sat surrounded by a moat filled with water – called Jackal Lake in the ancient Pyramid Texts – where religious ceremonies were held. He also provides evidence that the exact size and position of the Sphinx were geometrically determined in relation to the pyramids of Cheops and Chephren and that it was part of a pharaonic resurrection cult.
Review:
The book presents an interesting and plausible theory that the Sphinx was originally carved as Anubis, the Jackal God and that the monument was original surrounded by water. The author has visited the Giza plateau on numerous occasions and has used his knowledge of the area as it is in recent times along with the accounts of people who excavated and lived in the area from the 1700s – 1800s.
It details how the Giza plan is modeled round ‘the golden mean proportion’. I found the chapter entitled ‘The Golden Angle of Resurrection’ particularly fascinating. It explains how the artworks within the tombs and temples display this proportion.
The book is well researched and fully illustrated with diagrams and sepia photographs taken by the author and older photographs and postcards that the author has collected over the years.
For anyone interested in the pyramids or the sphinx, it will make them look at the area in a new way and challenge the ‘consensus reality’.
My brief review doesn’t do the book justice. More information about the book and the theory, along with all the photographs from the book can be found on the book’s dedicated website:
5 Comments CherryPie on Jul 4th 2013













