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KNOW-THIS

Joined: 14 Jul 2003
Posts: 3694
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"Dragon" clouds
Wed Aug 10, 2005 1:37 pm
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"Dragons" in the Tibet Sky
-Original
-Enlargement
quote: A photo of two peculiar dragon-shaped objects taken from a plane flying over Tibet’s Himalayas piqued many users’ interest when displayed on a Chinese website. The photographer is an amateur.
On June 22, 2004, the photographer went to Tibet’s Amdo region to attend the Qinghai-to-Xizang Railroad laying ceremony, and then took a plane from Lhasa to fly back inland. When flying over the Himalaya’s, he accidentally caught these two "dragons" in a picture that he took. He called these two objects "the Tibet dragons."
Looking at the photo, these two objects appear to have the characteristics of crawling creatures: The bodies seem to be covered by scales, the backs have spine-like protuberances, and also they have gradually thinning rear ends. Although the photo caught only a portion of the entire scene, it was sufficient create the appearance of two gigantic dragons flying in the clouds.
This photo, shown on some websites such as post.baidu.com and other forums, aroused the website visitors’ curiosity. One person commented, “No wonder that China is the homeland of the dragon! Nature is truly mysterious and powerful, it can always produce spectacular sights beyond people's expectations.”
“Is it really true? Is it possible there is an ancient civilization that we don’t know about is preserved in places that are sparsely populated?”
“It really looks like the dragons in fables, and I really hope it is.”
Certainly, most website visitors hoped that someone could confirm the authenticity of the dragons in the photo.
Photo of dragons taken from an airplane above the Himalayas. (www.dajiyuan.com)
In Chinese fairy tales, the dragon is a kind of rare heavenly creature. Fables say that it can conceal or reveal itself. It ascends to heaven in the spring breeze and dives and hides in deep water in the autumn wind. It can promote clouds and bring about rain. It also became the symbol of imperial authority later on; all emperors of previous dynasties self-designated as dragons, utensils were also decorated with dragons.
Culturally, the dragon is the Chinese ancestors' totem. Nearly all races in China had fables and stories with dragons as the main subject, such as dragon boat races, the dragon lantern dance to celebrate holidays, sacrificial offerings to the dragons to implore timely wind and rain for good crops.
Whether this kind of creature really exists is still an unsolved riddle. In the previous dynasties in China, there had been many documents recording eyewitness accounts of magical dragons. The most amazing events are the various "falling dragons," dragons that suddenly fell to the ground under peculiar circumstances, and were witnessed by many. A relatively recent tale occurred in the puppet Manchuria regime in August, 1944. A black dragon fell to the ground at the Chen Family’s Weizi Village, about 9.4 miles northwest of Zhaoyuan County, on the south shore of the Mudan River (the old name of a section of Songhua River) in Heilongjiang province. The black dragon was on the verge of death. The eyewitness said that this creature had a horn on its head, scales covering its body, and had a strong fishy smell that attracted numerous flies.
The records from previous dynasties also mentioned the connection between the emergence of these kinds of mysterious creatures, “dragons,” and the transition of dynasties on earth. The appearance of Tibet’s magical dragon invites our curiosity and imagination.
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Et in Arcadia ego

Joined: 07 Jun 2005
Posts: 2166
Location: The Void |
Wed Aug 10, 2005 2:58 pm
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Wow.
When I was griping about my sky looking like an HR Giger painting, that's the coiling, spiney, segmented stuff I was refering to..From the ground it looks like this, but I probably have better shots laying around:
It's really interesting how different cultures interpret the same phenomenon..I can totally see how they would interpret that as a Dragon, as their mythological beasts are much longer and undulating than the fat and stubby european ones and are almost always associated as airborne, but wingless bodies embedded in turbulent skies:
A Japanese dragon starts life as a Koi and eventually(if it's strong enough) evolves into the Dragon, representing wisdom and positive force.
Not sure how well that applies here, but it does point out how culturally vapid we are..
They call em Dragons.
We call em chemtrails.
 _________________ "If the President has commander-in-chief power to commit torture, he has the power to commit genocide, to sanction slavery, to promote apartheid, to license summary execution." |
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KNOW-THIS

Joined: 14 Jul 2003
Posts: 3694
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Thu Aug 11, 2005 2:19 am
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I was at a Chinese food restaurant once and they had a little calendar place mat that related your birth date to a particular symbol. Mine happened to be the dragon which in the Chinese culture is basically the s!@#, at least according to the paper.
The clouds in that picture I though were pretty extravagant though.
What better place for something like that to appear then in the majestic mountains of Tibet? A place I would just love to go to meet up with one of the masters there. |
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increase 1776
Joined: 07 Oct 2000
Posts: 3097
Location: Bizzaro World |
Sat Aug 13, 2005 9:27 pm
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Another dragon cloud?Look at the sat photos of Calif.visibe and check out just north of San Franciisco.http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/satellite/ |
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Mech

Joined: 06 Jun 2001
Posts: 8237
Location: THE 4th REICH USA |
Sat Aug 13, 2005 9:54 pm
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I think those are glaciers...not clouds or chemtrails
If those are glaciers, that's pretty incredible..Shouldn't there be more images like this floating around if so? |
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skywatcher NL

Joined: 12 Aug 2005
Posts: 65
Location: next to Belgium |
*delete me*
Sun Aug 14, 2005 7:27 am
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delete
Last edited by skywatcher NL on Wed Nov 02, 2005 10:31 am; edited 3 times in total |
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skywatcher NL

Joined: 12 Aug 2005
Posts: 65
Location: next to Belgium |
Tue Oct 25, 2005 10:24 am
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