Category Archives: Byng

Gold Bug

Comparisons between the discovery of the Bee’s Line of the Kentucky Flat (another type of “natural platform”, as mentioned in Poe’s excerpt here) with primary events in Poe’s “Gold Bug” short story.

The natural platform to which we had clambered was thickly overgrown with brambles, through which we soon discovered that it would have been impossible to force our way but for the scythe; and Jupiter, by direction of his master, proceeded to clear for us a path to the foot of an enormously tall tulip-tree, which stood, with some eight or ten oaks, upon the level, and far surpassed them all, and all other trees which I had then ever seen, in the beauty of its foliage and form, in the wide spread of its branches, and in the general majesty of its appearance. When we reached this tree, Legrand turned to Jupiter, and asked him if he thought he could climb it.

There are no tulip trees in my Kentucky, but instead beech and maple trees, it appears. There is a central tree of maple variety, however, probably as tall as any on this flat or platform, and it is in front this tree I found my own version of a gold bug, about 2 feet from the circumference of the trunk.

During this colloquy no portion of Jupiter’s person could be seen; but the beetle, which he had suffered to descend, was now visible at the end of the string, and glistened, like a globe of burnished gold, in the last rays of the setting sun, some of which still faintly illumined the eminence upon which we stood. The scarabaeus hung quite clear of any branches, and, if allowed to fall, would have fallen at our feet. Legrand immediately took the scythe, and cleared with it a circular space, three or four yards in diameter, just beneath the insect, and, having accomplished this, ordered Jupiter to let go the string and come down from the tree.

I cleared a space of about 3 or 4 yards in front of aforementioned maple tree, to find the bits and pieces of an old, shattered bottle. In the clearing process I stumbled upon the gold bug. Legrand in Poe’s story clears the ground *for* the dropping gold bug, which landed in its approx. center.

Driving a peg, with great nicety, into the ground, at the precise spot where the beetle fell, my friend now produced from his pocket a tape-measure. Fastening one end of this at that point of the trunk of the tree which was nearest the peg, he unrolled it till it reached the peg, and thence farther unrolled it, in the direction already established by the two points of the tree and the peg, for the distance of fifty feet –Jupiter clearing away the brambles with the scythe. At the spot thus attained a second peg was driven, and about this, as a centre, a rude circle, about four feet in diameter, described. Taking now a spade himself, and giving one to Jupiter and one to me, Legrand begged us to set about one to digging as quickly as possible.

For me, the Bee’s Line, straight as if laid out with a tape measure, extended from the center of this cleared space about 30 yards up to the crest of the hill separating Kentucky from the rest of Herman Park. The line in my case was found first, then the space cleared when I followed the line to the maple tree to reveal the broken pieces of the bottle, then the gold bug uncovered. It was basically backwards from Legrand’s process…

We now worked in earnest, and never did I pass ten minutes of more intense excitement. During this interval we had fairly unearthed an oblong chest of wood, which, from its perfect preservation, and wonderful hardness, had plainly been subjected to some mineralizing process –perhaps that of the Bi-chloride of Mercury. This box was three feet and a half long, three feet broad, and two and a half feet deep. It was firmly secured by bands of wrought iron, riveted, and forming a kind of trellis-work over the whole. On each side of the chest, near the top, were three rings of iron –six in all –by means of which a firm hold could be obtained by six persons. Our utmost united endeavors served only to disturb the coffer very slightly in its bed. We at once saw the impossibility of removing so great a weight. Luckily, the sole fastenings of the lid consisted of two sliding bolts. These we drew back –trembling and panting with anxiety. In an instant, a treasure of incalculable value lay gleaming before us. As the rays of the lanterns fell within the pit, there flashed upwards, from a confused heap of gold and of jewels, a glow and a glare that absolutely dazzled our eyes.

… except I didn’t discover any skeletons or treasure at the crest of the hill to start the whole thing. There *was* a rock pile that seemed artifical. Should I dig there? (probably not).

There appears to be no parallel to Legrand’s cryptic parchment either, created by Cpt. Kidd. NOTE: Perhaps the *bottle* itself is the parchement in this case, and not the treasure itself? Pieced back together, does it create some type of similar message? What of the bottom piece of the bottle, found away from the rest and acting like a miniature terranium now? NOTE: Connected to the expression “message in a bottle”, like in The Police song of the same title? One might also have to break such a bottle to retrieve the message. So the message could be the equivalent to Poe’s cryptic parchment here, except there’s no parchment of course. Is there?

NOTE: I skipped the part in Poe’s story about missing the treasure on an original dig by Legrand and co. because the golden bug was dropped from the wrong eye by the dyslexic Jupiter.

NOTE: There is a slight possibility that the crest of the hill with the rock piling can act as a sighting spot, much in the manner of the Devil’s Seat in Poe’s story.

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Hiking Day 4 Pics 03

Close up of the split log discussed in the last blog entry, with Kentucky’s Bee Line passing almost directly through this separation.

3 grouped trees (species?) near the uphill end of the Bee Line. The mysterious rock piling is to their left, just on the other side of the line running next to them.

The rock piling itself. Difficult to take a great picture of, but I’ll try again soon. It looks like it could be the dirt covered roots of an overturned tree, but although there’s an old tree trunk nearby and pointed in the right direction, there’s still a separation between it and this mound. Plus we have all those rocks on top of the dirt mound, if that’s what it is. Could it be rock all the way through instead? It still could be that a dig is in order here. Am I scared? Certainly!

What appears to be the base to the bottle that was shattered at an unknown date in Kentucky. It has turned into quite the miniature terrarium in the meantime, and I hated to move it because of this and disturb the still quite green and alive moss and plants growing within. Its position is a couple of yards off and perhaps also below the Bee Line a bit, behind the gap between two trees that may mark its true beginning.

Moving away from Kentucky, then, I continued to hike clockwise around the west side of Wealthy Mtn., soon coming across this rock outcropping with its own small cave or enclosure…

… but *nothing* like what was only about 20 to 30 yards beyond this: one of the very few, legitimate caves I’ve found in the Blue Mountain area on my many, many hikes. The sucker is about 20 feet deep, and prism shaped — that is, its front entrance and back wall both make pretty even and symmetrical triangles, with straight side walls and a level floor connecting them. The cave is also fairly wet inside, and I didn’t feel comfortable entering even on a bright, sunny day like this. Perhaps it was the foreboding poison ivy growing all around the top and sides of the enclosing rocks that put me off, when no other examples of that species were found anywhere in the immediate area that I saw. Upon returning home, I was also *quite shocked* to also find an “orb” in one of my two pictures of the cave itself, and shaped, for all the world, like a *coin*, similar in dimensions to a Roosevelt dime but whose “face” appears more like Eisenhower on his commemorate 70s dollar piece. Hucka D. and I talk about these and other possible significances of the “Prism Cave” or “Coin Cave” in a post just below.

A picture of the blowing poison ivy adorning the top of the cave. Quite dense and a seeming warning of danger.

Keeping on in a clockwise direction around Wealthy Mtn., a distance of several football fields brings us to another ridge of rocks, which appears to be just above the upper end of Green Oz Creek and on the edge of a long and basically impenetrable rhododendron bramble separating me from it.

Sadly having exhausted my days off this particular week, I left Sue in charge of all the loot at Lion’s Roar, and promised to return and reunite him with exploring companions Stan, Spit, and Sid. I dare not back out on this vow for fear of consequences.

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Hiking Day 4 Pics 02

More Kentucky pics, and now we are at the heart of the matter: the finding of a *”bee line”* running all the way across this ridge totaling a distance of about 35 yards or so. Below is a log split almost on this bee line, which gave me one of the first, large clues that the obviously mystical and occult line was present in the first place.

This photo represents a basically failed attempt to show this Bee Line running through the woods up to the ridge marking a western limit of Kentucky. So in a doctored up version beside it I highlight where the line is.

Just after discovering the line, I started to find bits and pieces of a broken bottle right in the path of it, and beside a prominent maple tree of the ridge. I cleared out an area of several yards around in the process…

… finding, for example, a small glass bit underneath a rock…

… and then this *gold bug* clinging to the side of another rock in sweeping away more leaves, which I instantly knew to be important. I think I had already made the link with Edgar Allen Poe’s famous detective short story “The Gold Bug” when taking this picture, since I vaguely remembered some kind of “bee’s line ” or plumb line also being mentioned in that tale.

The gold bug turned over to show off more of its defining color.

The bits of found glass shards kept piling up at the base of the maple tree as I continued to uncover them in the immediate area.

Another shot of the smaller tree in the middle of the grass clumps, the same as pictured at the beginning of this particular blog post. The shards were mainly found between it and the maple tree, which would be behind me-the-shooter here.

Yet another piece of glass uncovered, right on the Bee Line. I decided not to remove this particular shard. Despite the volume of glass found, I still think it all came from a single shattered bottle.

Another section of the Bee Line. Does that tree to the left form some kind of avatar home, complete with a front door? The thought had to cross my mind. Similar “doors in trees” exist in the immediate area as well, and perhaps one or two more quite close to the Bee Line, even. Hafta check that upon a return here.

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Hiking Day 4 Pics 01

Photo of Byng (Creek) as it passes the flat, cleared area now known as Four Minutes (just left, offshot). The large rock in the center of the photo, as yet unnamed, lies between the creek and this flat spot. Four Minutes is now also the place where, technically, the Mystery Path connecting Kansas/lower Byng and upper Byng starts. More elements of fate, then, that the space was cleared by me of dead rhododendron plants several days ago, as it allows one to move freely up the embankment now where this path then leads.

Further upstream, we have an interesting isle of rocks, also unnamed. Is this another site for a potential temple of some kind, perhaps of a rock variety itself?

Upper extreme of Kansas, where it almost looks like someone has dug into a bank behind an uprooted tree. At least Sue thinks so; more on Sue soon.

A section of the Mystery Path, depicting one of many small white rocks seeming to mark the trail along the way. I cannot doubt that these are signature stones of Lisa the Vegetarian, who appears to now communicate to me (and potentially others) through *quartz*.

We then move to Kentucky, a larger flat spot on the ridge just west of Byng. Below is pictured a small yet central tree found in the middle of an area with several patches of grass. Kentucky has become very important to a correct, synchronistic interpretation of Byng and also Wealthy Mtn. as a whole, it seems. Obviously we have more workings of Lisa V. to take into account here.

Two Kentucky trees that seem to have a path running between them.

More isolated clump of grass on this ridge quite near the above trees.

Looking up into a buckeye tree, I believe. The leaves are peaking now around this elevation.

Rotting log creating a colorful Kentucky landmark via its intense redness.

More grass, but of a different, taller species that the types pictured above.

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Hiking Day 3

Another remarkable day of hiking in Herman Park. Visited Herman’s Grave again on Yards Mtn. and got some really good pics of the epitaph plaque on the back of it finally. Can do some analysis. Also I’m thinking that Herman’s Rock with its lighting bolt quartz vein is intimately and directly tied into this gravestone, and that the two are somehow one. Strange thought I know. I didn’t realize until yesterday that you can see the grave clearly from the top of this rock. Got more objects into Lion’s Roar on Byng Creek — about 50 objects total are there now, or probably about the same as at Billfork. I’m now calling Lion’s Roar the big, overhanging rock on the creek itself — this is where the truly magical stretch of the creek begins, running up at least to the impasse where you must go up the bank to the Mystery Path to proceed further. Four Minutes is now the cleared out section about 20 yards upstream from the Lion’s Roar rock, where a TILE Temple might be built in the future. Further up, closer to Impasse, we have Six Minute Hill. I might clear some of that area out tomorrow, in fact. Why not. All 50 objects come from the top of the Yards Mtn. ridge, the stuff I was originally going to set up in Wedge but decided to move to Lion’s Roar several days ago. Wedge is on Yards Mtn., while Lion’s Roar and Byng (Creek) are on the side of neighboring Wealthy Mtn. The focus really remains on Wealthy Mtn. still, then, continuing the Tinsity-Wallace story from earlier this month and also last month.

Another area I’ve been exploring is the 4 Valley region between Green Oz Creek and Byng Creek. But none of the 4 streams of these valleys approaches Green Oz and Byng in size. There’s also Bass Ackwards Lake (B.A. Lake) to deal with ,which Green Oz Creek empties into and B.A. Creek comes out of. Or perhaps that’s Ackwards Creek?

Oh wait. Bass Ackwards Lake would be another lake in Herman Park instead. The one I’m talking about would be called — well, let’s just call it Green Oz Lake for now.

Another major stream pouring off the north side of Yards Mtn. was also explored yesterday, as yet unnamed as well. Its size compares to Byng.

Frank and Herman Parks just by themselves are going to keep me busy exploring and mapping and populating with art for the rest of my life easily. Today is the first day….

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Byng > Yards Mtn.

Several pictures of various objects found on the side of Yards Mtn. imported into Lion’s Roar, Byng… mostly bottles but also including some old pots and other stuff (some of which I can’t readily identify).

Especially pretty bottle here…

What appears to be a pentagon shaped rock in Byng at Lion’s Roar, or at least that’s what it looks like by the part you can see.

Lion’s Roar.

Moving now to the side of Yards Mtn., and an especially interesting rock found in a small valley on its northern side, perhaps about 200 feet below the summit or so. This valley contained a good number of such quartz veined rocks, although only a few approached or surpassed this one in size.

Curvy wurvy road leading from summit of Yards Mtn. Elevation here: about 4250 feet.

View east from around the same spot I took the above picture. Near peak leaf season here, it seems.

Standing on top of Herman Rock toward Herman’s Grave, namesake of the park. I was surprised the 2 were so close upon a return to snap this picture. I believe now even moreso that they are obviously related not only in name but in spirit as well.

The lightning bolt quartz vein of Herman Rock holds a key, as does the plaque on the grave. Are they 2 pieces of 1 overall puzzle? That’s what I could be looking at, despite the outward impossibility of the situation.

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Byng & Environ

Possibly diseased plant leaf of unknown species, but possibly an umbrella plant (not a mayapple plant, however). Interesting serpentine patterns, whatever. Found near Lion’s Roar and Byng.

Like Kentucky, the below spot represents a flat, platform like area on a ridge above Flanigan’s Fork west of Byng. It lies just beyond the upper reaches of rhododendron on this ridge, and thus you have to climb to this spot to get over to the next ridge beyond, or to avoid the rhododendron bramble in other words. I haven’t named this particular flat place on the ridge yet (unlike Kentucky). Maybe Louisiana? It lies 2 ridges west of Kentucky at any rate.

Quite interesting rocks on the ridge to the west, in turn, of the one pictured above, the one separating the second and third valley of the 4 Valley Region here. Or more accurately, kind of between the top of the 3rd valley working our way west still, and this ridge.

A number of yards below this rock is an overhang essentially creating a very low ceiling, open cave of sorts. I’m now calling this spot Other Cave, and I found a broken bottle within, indicating a human presence sometime in its past. Very interesting, given the remoteness of the location, practically surrounded by rhododendron and pretty off the beaten path for certain. Did this forested area use to be a pastured meadow in some past time, by chance? Could be — I’ll keep checking. Or is the bottle of more recent origin? At any rate, it certainly brings to mind the shattered bottle of Kentucky, also in a remote spot and fairly nearby as well.

Returning to Lion’s Roar/Kansas, we have this interesting looking rock positioned where I cross Byng Creek to keep proceeding upstream in Kansas above Lion’s Roar. Looks like the knife shaped rock has a single eye. That dark spot near the “eye” is some kind of tiny black mollusk, perhaps a periwinkle.

Cascades just in front of the above pictured rock. No name for them yet, once again… but soon I suppose. Periwinkle Falls?

Picture of a nearby, large spider, perhaps a writing spider (lower center).

Quite interesting moss covered formation, also next to Periwinkle Falls as we’ll currently call them. This is now just below the cleared space known as Four Minutes, also notable as the start of Byng’s Mystery Trail.

Rock in Byng Creek just upstream from Periwinkle Falls, and right next to Four Minutes.

Four Minutes itself. More on this space soon.

A sun splashed Lion’s Roar with Byng running beside it and Periwinkle Falls just behind the background rhododendron.

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Roaring Lion

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roaring_Lion

Calypso musician Roaring Lion wrote a tribute song in 1939 entitled “Bing Crosby”, in which he wrote: “Bing has a way of singing with his very heart and soul / Which captivates the world / His millions of listeners never fail to rejoice / At his golden voice…”[53]

—–

“I can’t get a cold, Hucka D.”

Hucka D.:

Lion’s Roar — Byng. Feel it.

bb:

Tell me the story.

Hucka D.:

Byng has a golden voice. (pause)

bb:

Yes?

Hucka D.:

Pure. Known throughout Frank and Herman Parks. Golden.

bb:

What is the significance of that?

Hucka D.:

Lisa initiated the 3333 protectate. Byng syng.

bb:

s-y-n-g?

Hucka D.:

Yes. Lion’s Roar.

bb:

I think another community, shall we say, in the area might be called 4 Minutes. Like Second Life, Jeogeot, had a 6 Minute Hill. (pause). Baker Bloch is heading there now. (pause) But he’s gotta fall outta the sky first.

Hucka D.:

Dorothy. Landing.

bb (after checking):

Why am I not surprised. Nothing there.

Hucka D.:

Back to Byng then. But good you checked anyway.

bb:

Mystery path parallel to Byng. Otherwise, I could not easily reach upper Byng from lower Byng. Considerably more difficult it would be. Considerably.

Hucka D.:

Lisa made it. With Pete.

bb:

Another thing I have is that

Further, the lyrics of many of his “war calypsoes” (essentially insult songs) presage those of similar hip-hop battle rap songs by over 50 years. An extract from his lyrics to “War” (recorded during the 1930s by Roaring Lion with Executor, Caresser, and Attila and directed against their fellow calypsonian Wilmoth Houdini) is a particularly good example of such lyrics:

The earth is a trembling and a tumbling
And the heavens are falling and all
Because the lion is roaring.
My tongue is like the blast of a gunman…
Destruction, desolation and damnation —
All these I’ll inflict on insubordination,
For the Lion in his power is like the rock of Gibraltar.

… oops. Lion roaring is war here, Hucka D.

Hucka D.:

I put that in.

bb:

Did you get bored?

Hucka D.:

Yes. I want to fly like Superman.

bb:

Great. So Lisa made this Lion’s Roar place on Byng.

Hucka D.:

That is correct.

bb:

Part of the 3333 Initiative.

Hucka D.:

To protect. You. Now all you need is a singing bowl of your own.

bb:

I think it can be the creek.

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Hiked…

… Byng today, and the source of the creek. My pictures didn’t really turn out, however, and this is the only one I felt blog worthy…

Still not that great of a picture, but at least it’s somewhat in focus. It’s an interestingly patterned rock found not far from Byng’s source. Afterwards I was pretty close to the top of Wealthy Mtn. so I just huffed on up there, and travelled the edge of Green Oz Valley on the way back to the car. Here’s another picture, from the top…

I don’t think the leaves are going to put on much of a color show this year. Hucka D.?

Hucka D.:

Show them the last picture.

bb:

Okay… (checking) Actually I decided to delete that picture of Wedge with the stuff I found on the ridge above it, Hucka D.

Hucka D.:

Where are you headed tomorrow?

bb:

Well I thought I’d just go back to Blyng — Byng — and do some more hiking; take a different angle through the woods.

Hucka D.:

Great. What do you think of Byng?

bb:

I believe it’s a fantastic creek. I’m not sure an art happening will take place there.

Hucka D.:

Oh I think it has to. You’re set up. You have that rock that will protect you in the rain. You have open-ish meadows below. You have the path along the creek up to the impasse, when you can just jump up into the woods and take that mystery path up to the top of Blue Feather Falls…

bb:

That’s the actual name of the falls, Hucka D.? Who named them?

Hucka D.:

Blue Feather of course.

bb:

Blue Feather Douglas? (no answer) So… is the stream itself named Blyng or Byng or something else?

Hucka D.:

Depends on which era you’re talking about. Lisa knows.

bb:

I suppose she would, since she owns the whole mountain.

Hucka D.:

The new blog is good. Away from Second Life.

bb:

Why was it called Byng?

Hucka D.:

Just a name. Like Fred. Or your favorite: Bob.

bb:

The creek has a past, though. I found irritating spray on that mystery path you mentioned. Strange… why would someone carry protecting spray in the middle of the woods when noone was around.

Hucka D.:

Maybe someone was around, then. Maybe there’s your story.

bb:

So a girl use to come to this creek. To get away from… a boy; boys. Brothers?

Hucka D.:

It’s your story.

bb:

I don’t suppose the girl would be Lisa?

Hucka D.:

Might be. She had to come from somewhere.

bb:

But it’s Lisa Simpson; Lisa the Vegetarian.

Hucka D.:

Still she had to get to Wealthy Mountain sometime, somewhere. A girl, living alone on a creek… might feel the need for some kind of protection.

bb:

So this could be Lisa’s home creek of sorts. Hold on, Hucka D.

—–

bb:

Was Lisa scared of this Pete? And the battle map: Was this a battle map to take Wealthy Mountain. From Pete? Or just a plan to take Wealthy Mountain. Who was on Wealthy Mountain before Lisa?

Hucka D.:

Wealthy Mountain, Wealthy Mountain, Wealthy Mountain…

bb:

Well?

—–

Hucka D.:

Spheres. Singing spheres.

—–

bb:

Maybe Pete is a dog — of a more vicious type.

Hucka D.:

Pete Fountain. The dog.

—–

bb:

Tin S. Man seems to predict what I’m going to say in the next email sometimes, Hucka D. This has happened at least twice.

Hucka D.:

Foreshadowing. You are creating synchronicity.

bb:

I deleted the last email.

Hucka D.:

That’s fine. You need to think about Blyng here.

bb:

Is it Blyng or Byng? I think I like Byng better. Or Blynk.

Hucka D.:

Not Blynk. Not that again.

bb:

Byng, like Bing Crosby. Something in the past, several levels or layers before. Byng, Elvis, Beatles, Pink Floyd, Metallica, Pink… a number of layers before.

Hucka D.:

Peel the onion. Look at the empty pool. Understand that a house was once there. Think about all this. Hike! Happy hiking day number 2!

bb:

Thanks!

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Was he?

So we decided to make a pact and go to The Gatekeeper for bee drinks every Thursday. Then Hucka D. remembered that was bowling night with his pals. “Tuesday, then”, I offered. “Okay,” he said, then remembered the “You Too Can Bea a Beetle” on the insect channel came on at 9 on Tuesday, so he had to beg off again. “When *are* you available?” He looked through his appointment book as I secretly wondered if he was the star of the Beetle show. I ask him. He laughed. I said I didn’t believe a show like that existed. He sneered. “You don’t believe a lot of things about me, what I say.” I said yes, and that’s for good reason. He got up off the couch we were sitting on, springs wore out — too much TV watching. We watched ourselves.

—–

“How powerful is this mountain?” “Powerful,” he replied. “You don’t know.” We were watching ourselves again. I had on an orange jumpsuit. Lisa showed up in back. “Ask her,” he said. “Hi Lisa.” I waved. She waved back. On the table in front of us were battle plans. I noticed the unnamed creek. I asked Lisa about it. “That’s [unpronouncable name]”. “What’s that again?” “[Unpronouncable name]”. “Hmm,” I said. “That’s going to have to be shorted.” She said she didn’t recommend Bob. Hucka D. laughed and agreed, saying I like to name everything Bob that I don’t understand well. So I decided to defy them and name the creek Bob. Then I laughed and said I was joking and that I would think of another name, perhaps not quickly but another name still it would be. Hucka D. said “Joe”. Lisa offered “Pete”. “Bing”, I said. “Short for something. Bing.”

—–

Hold on…
“Byng.”

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