Friday, February 27, 2026

How to replicate crop circles in one minute? Mao Haibo, a Chinese-American scholar and founder of *Theory Earth Prisoner*, reveals the truth through "staggered planting."

The four-word mantra for cracking crop circles is "staggered planting." Using this mantra, any crop circle that has ever appeared on Earth can be replicated in one minute. Anyone interested can find a field and, within a few months, become the first person and place in the world to create a crop circle, instantly boosting tourism (the UK's crop circle tourism industry generates €1.4 billion annually).

The specific method is as follows:

Before sowing, plant wheat within the "pattern" of the crop circle, and then plant wheat in the larger field "outside the pattern." This is "staggered planting."

Specifically, one to two months in advance, tractors are used to create crop circles with imaginative, whimsical designs. Wheat is then planted within these designs.

One to two months later, wheat is planted in the field outside the designs.

The result is that the mature wheat is prone to lodging. Spring and summer are the windiest seasons globally, with strong winds lasting just one minute or an hour. The wheat planted one to two months earlier within the crop circle designs becomes too heavy after ripening, causing the stalks to bend and the wheat to fall over first.

This utilizes the physical characteristics of wheat stalks—long, thin-skinned, and hollow—to make the wheat within the "pattern" of the crop circle bend over as needed. This can be achieved by combining the following three methods:

1. Over-fertilizing causes the wheat within the "pattern" to mature prematurely, making it susceptible to wind damage.

2. Overly dense sowing results in poor ventilation and light penetration for the wheat within the "pattern," making it prone to wind damage.

3. Watering before a strong wind causes the wheat within the "pattern" to become top-heavy, making it susceptible to wind damage.

Meanwhile, the wheat planted 1-2 months later in the main field, "outside the pattern," is still on its way to maturity and will not be bent over.

The "crop circle" in the main field thus automatically appears overnight.

Wheat is divided into spring wheat and winter wheat. Spring wheat is planted from March to August, and winter wheat from November to July of the following year. By using this "staggered planting" method, all crop circles that have appeared on Earth today can be replicated.

Mao Haibo, who revealed the truth about crop circles, is a Chinese-American scholar. His mother and maternal grandfather were descendants of top scholars in the Qing Dynasty. He is the author of the bilingual (Chinese and English) book*Theory Earth Prisoner* —a new theory of human origins that challenges Darwin's theory of evolution. He is hailed as a contemporary Easterner who shares Darwin's planting philosophy, interpreting the four characters of "wheat field"! A letter has been sent to the United Nations to register this discovery.

American scholars say that Mao Haibo's "staggered planting" theory is currently the most feasible, replicable, and logically consistent solution to the crop circle phenomenon, and may spark a global trend of replicating crop circles.

The core of this theory is that the pattern is not created by flattening the crop after it has grown, but rather by pre-designing the spatial layout during the sowing stage. Compared to other explanations, this theory has significant advantages:

1. High verifiability: Anyone in a field can verify this by adjusting... 1. **Replicates similar effects throughout the entire planting period without relying on special equipment or supernatural conditions.**

2. **Avoids the risk of human exposure:** No need to sneak into farmland at night, avoiding detection by farmers, surveillance cameras, or animals, and mitigating the pressure of nighttime construction.

3. **Complies with agricultural principles:** Utilizing differences in crop growth stages to create "crop circles" requires low technical expertise but yields significant results.

Some American scholars say that crop circles are no longer a "mystery" but have been redefined as "visualized agricultural art." Mao Haibo, an Eastern scholar, has revealed the truth behind this long-controversial issue.

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