In 1992, I helped organize the first and last International Crop Circle Making Competition.
In the late 1970s, circular areas of flattened crops mysterious appeared in fields in southern England, especially in Wiltshire, and throughout the 1980s they were found in increasing numbers. By 1991 the annual count was about 800. A few appeared in other countries, but the great majority were, and still are, in England.
By the late 1980s some of the formations had evolved a long way from the basic circle, with concentric rings, satellite circles and rectangular, triangular and wavy shapes. By 1990 the most complex formations were pictograms and ‘insectograms’. The forms evolved further in 1991, and the season ended with an astonishing fractal pattern, the Mandelbrot Set, in a field near Cambridge.
In 1991, two artists in their 60s, Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, claimed that they had been had been making crop circles for years. They gave a demonstration of their rather modest skills to journalists. Those of a sceptical cast of mind tend to be credulous when it comes to the claims of hoaxers, and jumped to the conclusion that hoaxing by Doug and Dave explained the whole phenomenon. But even if their claims were to be believed, they were making a maximum of 30 formations a year, leaving the great majority unaccounted for. Doug and Dave were mystified themselves.
Thinking through the hoax hypothesis to its logical conclusion led into the treacherous territory of conspiracy theories. Who were all the hoaxers, apart from Doug and Dave? Were they in the military or intelligence services? Were they members of occult groups, or secret societies? Performance or landscape artists? Japanese? There were also several naturalistic hypotheses: the crop formations were caused by complex whirlwinds, or even by migrating hedgehogs. Other proposals included a psychokinetic downloading from the collective unconscious, or the activity of ‘higher intelligences’ or extra-terrestrials. Some people even claimed to have tape-recorded spaceships in fields where formations were appearing at night, but ornithologists identified the high, unearthly sounds as the song of the grasshopper warbler, a small bird with a ventriloquist-like ability to conceal its location.
Crop formations generally appear at night and are fully formed by sunrise. Despite many attempts to observe formations being made, the vast majority appeared mysteriously. In 1991 the debate was dominated by the question of what people could and could not do. Defenders of mystery theories claimed that various features of the more complex formations, including the way the crops were flattened, could not have been produced by any human agency.
Resembling some vast extra-terrestrial printed circuit board, competition entries viewed from a helicopter. Some idea of the immense scale involved may be had by spotting the man on the ground, midway up the left of frame.
The ‘standard design’ for competition entries, which were judged in accordance with astonishingly rigorous criteria by a team of five. Rules and detailed instructions ran to four pages. Competitors were given up to five hours to complete the pictogram, having received it only 24 hours in advance. Permitted to enter the field at 10pm, they had to finish the job by 3am in darkness with only the light of the moon to assist. Additional points were awarded for not being seen. Invigilators were equipped with night-vision binoculars. The huge competition-cum-experiment was sponsored by the German science magazine PM and the Koestler Foundation in association with The Guardian
It was in this context that a group of people, including myself, John Michell and Richard Adams decided to organise a crop circle making competition to find out exactly what people could and could not do. The competition was co-sponsored by The Guardian newspaper and The Cerealogist, the leading crop circle journal in Britain, edited by Michell. A German magazine, PM, funded the contest, enabling us to offer a first prize of £3,000. I was the chairman of the organizing committee.
The competition was announced in May 1992 and teams interested in taking part had to submit an application in advance. A panel of crop circle experts advised us on the design (see diagram) of a standard formation that all the teams were required to make. This contained supposedly difficult-to-hoax features like rings, and the instructions also specified the directions in which the crops were to be flattened. This design and general guidance notes for competitors were sent to all of the participants three weeks before the actual contest, so they had time to plan their strategy. They were also sent a copy of the marking scheme by which the judges would allocate points to the various formations. The location of the contest was kept secret, and the participating teams were informed of it only 48 hours in advance.
The contest itself took place on the night of Saturday July 11, 1992, in a wheat field on the estate of Sir Francis Dashwood in West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, thanks to Michell’s friendship with Sir Francis. His son Edward (now Sir Edward, the twelfth baronet) kindly supervised the arrangements, which included the erection of a tent beside the field for our organizational headquarters. On Saturday afternoon, we marked out equal-sized plots that were allocated at random to the 12 competing teams. The competitors had to arrive at the tent by 9pm, when they were given the final rules and instructions. They were free to work in their plots in the hours of darkness, between 10pm and 3am, when they had to leave the field. During this period, members of the organising group were patrolling the area to make sure there was no sabotage of other people’s plots by contestants or by anyone else, and after all the teams had left the field, the area was guarded by Sir Francis Dashwood’s gamekeepers.
We arranged for a helicopter to fly over the field soon after dawn to take aerial photographs of the site. The five judges, led by Jürgen Kroenig, were in the field soon afterwards. When we were assembling the team of judges, we invited the Wessex Skeptics, who claimed that all crop circles were hoaxes, to nominate a judge, but they refused. They thought that our set design was too difficult to execute in the dark and claimed we were deliberately setting up an unfair contest. We also invited Doug and Dave to take part, pointing out that with all their practice, they should have found it easy to win the £3,000 prize. They also declined. However, one sceptic entered the contest himself: Matt Ridley, along with his sister. Like the Wessex Skeptics, he complained that the design was too complex and that we were loading the dice to favour mysterious explanations. At the time, Ridley worked as a part-time journalist for the Daily Telegraph and also wrote books on evolutionary theory.
The contestants were very varied. One team consisted of Cambridge undergraduates; another was a group of schoolboys from Hampshire who had been practising all week on the playing fields. A young American graduate student from Oxford, Jim Schnabel, worked alone. One team came in camouflaged outfits with lamps strapped to their foreheads. The rules had specified in advance that lights could be used, but would result in a loss of points. All the other teams worked in darkness, including two women accompanied by a Pyrenean Mountain Dog that had been trained to pull planks through standing crops. Unfortunately, he was not much help because he went to sleep soon after the contest began.
The night was cloudy, with intermittent rain and only occasional moonlight. The next morning, after the aerial photographs had been taken, the judges were the only people allowed to enter the field. By midday they had completed their judging process, taking into account both their observations on the ground and the aerial photographs. The winning team consisted of three young engineers from the Westland Helicopter Company. However, before being presented with a cheque for £3,000 by the Earl of Haddington, they had to make the formation again in broad daylight so that everyone could see how it was done. Programmes about the competition on BBC radio had revealed the location that morning, and the circle-making demonstration was open to the public for a modest entry fee of £1. Several hundred people came to watch, along with TV crews, journalists and photographers.
The demonstration by the winning team was fascinating. The young engineers employed very simple apparatus. For flattening the crop, they used a roller consisting of a piece of PVC piping with a rope through it, pushing it with their feet. In order to get into the crop without leaving footprints, they used two lightweight aluminium stepladders with a plank between them, acting as a bridge. For marking out a ring, they did not put a post in the centre, but rather used a telescopic device made out of plastic pipes of different diameter projecting from the top of an aluminium step ladder. A string was attached to the end of it in such a way that by holding the string and walking in a circle around this central position a perfect ring of flattened plants could be marked out without leaving any trace on the ground in the middle.
The experiment was conclusive. Humans could indeed make all the features of state-of-the-art crop formations at that time. Eleven of the twelve teams made more or less impressive formations that followed the set design. The contest was reported in most of the British newspapers and on radio and TV. Some people jumped to the conclusion that all crop circles must be hoaxes. The sceptics were pleased with the outcome, although they had been dismissively sceptical about the competition itself and had refused to cooperate in its organization. Ridley’s team was the only one that did not attempt to follow the set design, producing a question mark instead.
After the competition I took part in many interviews, in which I pointed out that although the results showed that it was possible to hoax crop circles, it did not prove that all were hoaxes. The fact that it is possible to forge a £50 note does not prove that all £50 notes are forgeries.
The same night that the contest took place, three other crop formations appeared in fields in southern England. One of them was five miles from West Wycombe.
Since the competition, formations have continued to appear, and have done so every year. Although the numbers have decreased, the designs have become more sophisticated, many of them embodying remarkable geometric constructions. Every year the Wiltshire Crop Circle Study Group produces a calendar showing the best crop circles from the previous year. I give them to friends for Christmas.
Almost everyone now agrees that most crop circles are human made. But some enthusiasts still believe that a minority are created by non-human agencies.
This year, an impressive variety of crops circles have appeared again, mostly in their traditional locations in Wiltshire, and some of them can be seen HERE.
Don't drink the Kool-Aid, Rupert. It is now standard reporting that all the circles were human-made, without any evidence to support this and plenty of reason to doubt. I put together a booklet with reasons for doubt: https://suespeaks.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/booklet001-compressed.pdf.
Here's my movie, "What on Earth?," that miraculously got a good review in The New York Times, which is on Vimeo for only $1.99 to stream it. It's got Doug and Dave and my arguments for a mysterious origin!
There are reports, and some footage, online about how the stems of "genuine" crop circles are bent by some form of energy that heats them at the nodes only, differentiating them from human-bent stems that are roughly snapped between nodes. Also that subsequent growth in that season is different from the natural. Do you have any opinion or information on that aspect? Most observations seem to be superficial and don't look at all the evidence. Like so many others, I want to believe! But also don't want to run down any rabbit-holes, I want the truth!