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Post by indigojones on Jun 27, 2020 13:17:20 GMT -5
Simple question really. When hot and cold water come together what do you get?
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dean
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Post by dean on Jun 27, 2020 13:19:54 GMT -5
Faucets.
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Post by blazer on Jun 27, 2020 13:27:50 GMT -5
Luke Warmwater
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dean
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Posts: 111
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Post by dean on Jun 27, 2020 13:32:07 GMT -5
A better apartment than mine.
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Post by indigojones on Jun 27, 2020 15:11:24 GMT -5
dean and blazer, both kinda relevant answers. Ok! so the international colors on Faucets are RED for HOT and BLUE for COLD yes? In the Rainbow the angle of RED is seen at 42 degrees (42 is relevant to the chest's weight) BLUE is seen at 40 degrees, therefore Forrest would have discovered this, for in the poem he mentions both 'warm' and 'cold' true? So of the four states what state would you relate to colors? I chose 'Colorado' and Colorado means RED. If a place in Colorado (RED)is met with an angle of 40 which is BLUE then you would get 'WARM WATERS' Using the South East corner of the Colorado map to strike 40 degrees from it picks out 'Colorado Springs' precisely. This is the elusive first clue that no one could make sense of: "Begin it where warm waters halt" Stanza 6 line 2 says; "Your effort will be worth the COLD" this is what this line relates to using geometry. IMO. That is your start point.
indigo
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dean
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Posts: 111
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Post by dean on Jun 27, 2020 15:21:15 GMT -5
That's compelling actually. Sorry for being flippant. Much ado about Color.
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Post by indigojones on Jun 27, 2020 15:55:25 GMT -5
That's ok dean you get used to it haha. I like the 'Shakespeare' touch by the way, I noted that too, he was mentioned in TTOTC. The man noted for his work on the rainbow was Isaac Newton and in conducting his experiments he used a Prism which is trangular in shape. You need to form a prism/triangle shape starting from 'Colorado Springs'
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Post by goldilocks on Jun 27, 2020 18:34:57 GMT -5
That's ok dean you get used to it haha. I like the 'Shakespeare' touch by the way, I noted that too, he was mentioned in TTOTC. The man noted for his work on the rainbow was Isaac Newton and in conducting his experiments he used a Prism which is trangular in shape. You need to form a prism/triangle shape starting from 'Colorado Springs' I don't know if you know anything about the Golden Owl treasure hunt from France. It utilizes color wavelength numbers as part of the riddle which are to be placed in the correct order to solve.
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annie
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Posts: 174
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Post by annie on Jun 27, 2020 18:44:43 GMT -5
GO BACK TO THE POEM. What IF WWWH. Was. WARM = cosy, comfortable - rose, WATERS = Lake, stream, creek, river. HALT= Wait, Rest, Still, Park STILLWATER/PARK BORDER The answers are IN the words in the poem. And Take it in the canyon down was INCANDESCENT? Like Star.
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Post by indigojones on Jun 27, 2020 21:51:02 GMT -5
That's ok dean you get used to it haha. I like the 'Shakespeare' touch by the way, I noted that too, he was mentioned in TTOTC. The man noted for his work on the rainbow was Isaac Newton and in conducting his experiments he used a Prism which is trangular in shape. You need to form a prism/triangle shape starting from 'Colorado Springs' I don't know if you know anything about the Golden Owl treasure hunt from France. It utilizes color wavelength numbers as part of the riddle which are to be placed in the correct order to solve. Hi Goldilocks, nice to hear from you. Yes I do, I bought it when it first came out. Never got too much into it because of the language barrier, the true meaning of words sometimes get lost in translation. Do you speak French?
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Post by indigojones on Jun 27, 2020 22:33:13 GMT -5
GO BACK TO THE POEM. What IF WWWH. Was. WARM = cosy, comfortable - rose, WATERS = Lake, stream, creek, river. HALT= Wait, Rest, Still, Park STILLWATER/PARK BORDER The answers are IN the words in the poem. And Take it in the canyon down was INCANDESCENT? Like Star. Hi annie, the IN you speak of are ' Isaac Newton's' initials. We needed to draw a Prism shape, because Newton used one. You cannot progress the puzzle until you have formed a prism on the Colorado map. Forrest included this as a clue in a '2014 Scrapbook' The Phantom, don't remember the number at present, however towards the end we have the words: "Looking through a prism of vodka, raspberry and lime" So starting at 'Colorado Springs' which is "where warm waters halt" we next have "And take it in the canyon down" this believe it or not is 'Canon City' and if you look at its name you will see an accent over the first 'n' which is called a 'tilde'. This tilde changes the pronunciation to 'Canyon'. It is down and slightly south west. This is one side of the prism, you draw them together by a line. It is imperative this is done accurately so the tiny circle under the place names are what you use to draw to. "Not far, but too far to walk" is a clue but not to a location, it is merely to show that on the map you are using it does not look far if you use a ruler between them, but too far if you had to walk it in miles. "Put in below the home of Brown" is 'Pueblo' because 'Pueblo' homes are brown, ( a Brown home) If you draw these three places together by a pen line you should see your prism is formed. You don't have to believe me, but why not try it? indigo
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Post by heidini on Jun 27, 2020 22:33:45 GMT -5
dean and blazer, both kinda relevant answers. Ok! so the international colors on Faucets are RED for HOT and BLUE for COLD yes? In the Rainbow the angle of RED is seen at 42 degrees (42 is relevant to the chest's weight) BLUE is seen at 40 degrees, therefore Forrest would have discovered this, for in the poem he mentions both 'warm' and 'cold' true? So of the four states what state would you relate to colors? I chose 'Colorado' and Colorado means RED. If a place in Colorado (RED)is met with an angle of 40 which is BLUE then you would get 'WARM WATERS' Using the South East corner of the Colorado map to strike 40 degrees from it picks out 'Colorado Springs' precisely. This is the elusive first clue that no one could make sense of: "Begin it where warm waters halt" Stanza 6 line 2 says; "Your effort will be worth the COLD" this is what this line relates to using geometry. IMO. That is your start point. indigo Sounds like specialized knowledge. But at this point, that doesn’t matter, right?
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Post by indigojones on Jun 28, 2020 0:08:38 GMT -5
dean and blazer, both kinda relevant answers. Ok! so the international colors on Faucets are RED for HOT and BLUE for COLD yes? In the Rainbow the angle of RED is seen at 42 degrees (42 is relevant to the chest's weight) BLUE is seen at 40 degrees, therefore Forrest would have discovered this, for in the poem he mentions both 'warm' and 'cold' true? So of the four states what state would you relate to colors? I chose 'Colorado' and Colorado means RED. If a place in Colorado (RED)is met with an angle of 40 which is BLUE then you would get 'WARM WATERS' Using the South East corner of the Colorado map to strike 40 degrees from it picks out 'Colorado Springs' precisely. This is the elusive first clue that no one could make sense of: "Begin it where warm waters halt" Stanza 6 line 2 says; "Your effort will be worth the COLD" this is what this line relates to using geometry. IMO. That is your start point. indigo Sounds like specialized knowledge. But at this point, that doesn’t matter, right?
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Post by indigojones on Jun 28, 2020 0:59:46 GMT -5
Hi heideni, oh ye of little faith. It is nowhere near specialized knowledge you just look at rainbows on Google it is all there to be found, you only need those two colors and their angles and associate it with temperature which Forrest gave you clues to in the poem. It is completely logical to me, I believe Forrest mentioned logic didn't he. Why don't you at least follow along with me to the end and then decide, deal?
So we have a prism and prisms project color. "From there" relates to 'Pueblo' the place that completes the prism shape. Notice that 'blue' is mixed up in the middle of 'Pueblo'so you project the Blue angle of 40 degrees from here which runs slightly Northwest. You do this accurately by drawing a horizontal line from the map's vertical borderline through the tiny circle dot under 'Pueblo'now project 40 from here it takes you to "From there it's no place for the meek" there is some trickery needed to find this place for it does not reveal itself until you increase the map size, then it suddenly comes into view, the place name is 'Adelaide' however being a ghost town it has no little ring to draw accurately to, but if you search its name whilst on the map 'Google' will put a RED pin on it for you. You now have an accurate point to draw to, namely the point of the pin. 40 degrees from 'Pueblo' hits it.This is the general location of the treasure.You will see that 'Adelaide' lies along 'Phantom Canyon Road' number 67. These two numbers reveal themselves in syllable counts of lines 2 and 3 of Stanza 1. All the lines of Stanza 3 apply to this place and its road. If you want me to explain why I can. The blaze is here so go to Google Earth and look for something that stands out, Forrest once used that analogy. Let me know what you see.
indigo
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Post by goldilocks on Jun 28, 2020 5:53:01 GMT -5
I don't know if you know anything about the Golden Owl treasure hunt from France. It utilizes color wavelength numbers as part of the riddle which are to be placed in the correct order to solve. Hi Goldilocks, nice to hear from you. Yes I do, I bought it when it first came out. Never got too much into it because of the language barrier, the true meaning of words sometimes get lost in translation. Do you speak French? Yes I do.
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