Understandable. However, family legend says it’s been unfurled three times already to protect the clan; once when they were battling the Macdonalds, and twice to stem cattle plagues on Skye.
Well, we’re in luck! I just signed up for a free trial of newspapers dot com today for an unrelated matter. Here’s a clip from the front page and a transcript. Mystery solved, I guess!
The Drum
Bill Mann, field trip guide for the Mojave River Valley Museum, happened upon an unusual steel object atop a ridge in the Crucero y Hills about 25 to 30 miles north of of Ludlow.
Speculation ranged from a movie prop to a modern art sculpture to something solely to confound at the curious.
Dennis Daraghy, Bureau of a Land Management ranger in Needles, had the chance to meet its at maker about a year ago.
The skillfully welded object is the body of a drum. The drummer hauls up skins for drum heads and wires the drum to a generator-powered amplifier. It is on private land, but Daraghy met the pair who rigged the elaborate setup after they traveled slightly off-road onto nearby public land.
The drum is perched atop a high, rocky ridge.
Daraghy says the drummer didn’t why he had chosen that at particular spot. The device doesn’t appear to be aligned with anything, sitting roughly 15 degrees off of a north-south angle.
The climb up to is is somewhat precarious, and Daraghy was told the drum was hauled up there by in hand, though it weighs some 350 pounds.
It is about 7 feet, 5 inches long and bolted into granite. It sits far enough back from the road that it is easy to miss unless spotted against the skyline.
Bill Mann likens its shape to two big megaphones, back-to-back and bolted together.
Gene Stoops, assistant field trip coordinator for the museum, is a welder himself, and says building the drum must have been a “labor- intensive” effort.
I gotta say, though, it reads a whole lot like, "This guy I knew talked to a buddy of his, and … "
I mean, “its maker” isn’t ezzactly a verifiable source.
Still, an interesting article to read, even if it does raise far more questions than it answers. . .
How did a BLM ranger find (“have a chance to meet”) the person who installed this?
No word on WHY “its maker” did this. There’s stuff about how drummers are supposed to use it. But has any drummer actually drummed on the mystery drum thingie?
The drummer hauls up skins for drum heads and wires the drum to a generator-powered amplifier.
So they’re hauling generators, too? What, by mule?
It’s a farming implement. The wheels at the bottom are harrowing discs, and the pieces between the wheels create rows and the drums on top dispense seeds.
I don’t suppose there’s any way to be sure that it wasn’t invented previously, and then forgotten about.
But that doesn’t look to me like it would work for that purpose. – hmm. If we assume a perspective problem, so that the discs should be edge down to the ground, the single disc could go at the front and open a furrow, and the rear discs cover it over – but the barrel’s in the wrong place, it would need to be in the center of the thing to drop seed into the furrow, not way out front. And those two little tabs at back don’t look like very good handles, and I don’t see any other way to move it.
Plus which, isn’t the scene as a whole a war scene, not a planting scene?
A new one has emerged, or rather submerged. The 9000 year old Lake Michigan Stonehenge, found deep under water in the Great Lake. Was it built by water breathing humanoids in North American? Or that absurd explanation of a dry lake bed during an Ice Age? Whoever built it may have left carvings of mastodons on the pillars, or maybe an image of Amelia Earhart’s plane. It’s going to provide a wealth of speculation, Discovery channel TV programs, deep underlake missions, and no doubt evidence of aliens.
From Wikipedia, “The Great Lakes are estimated to have been formed at the end of the Last Glacial Period (the Wisconsin glaciation ended 10,000 to 12,000 years ago), when the Laurentide Ice Sheet receded. The retreat of the ice sheet left behind a large amount of meltwater (Lake Algonquin, Lake Chicago, Glacial Lake Iroquois, and Champlain Sea) that filled up the basins that the glaciers had carved, thus creating the Great Lakes as they are today.”
Presumably there were people in the area prior to the formation of the Great Lakes.
So let’s see, you think some scientific theory founded on actual evidence of geological changes is more likely than the Great Lakes region being settled by water breathing humanoids? You’re not going to get newsletter subscriptions that way!