Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Nov 23, 2018 9:17:36 GMT -5
The dead dog is an interesting aberration. I believe it is the metaphor of who is Brown, but the big hint is in the colour: black&white just like the Oreo, another aberration. Did you know Oreos are sandwiches? Bring an Oreo sandwich can be another black and white hint. The trick is to identify the significance of black and white. In what you say about the Oreos. I've got the munchies now😂 This is how I take the sandwich. After Forrest took the gold in the first trip and came out. Forrest sit in his car and ate a sandwich and just rested,and paid close attention of his surrounding from where he was parked If there many that gets within 500ft. It's better for the fox to dress like the hound.
|
|
The Wolf
Finding Forrest Fenn
content...
Posts: 797
|
Post by The Wolf on Nov 23, 2018 9:27:53 GMT -5
Oreo marketed as "Chocolate Sandwich Cookie". If one listens carefully to Mr. Fenn (one of his criteria) he describes how to use the book's subtle hints to solve the clues poem. It is about putting these aberrations together and thinking about their relationship to the clues.
My theory is he was conservative when he wrote the book, not knowing how difficult it would be to solve the poem, and he later expanded the subtle clues and their importance in other aberrations made in interviews and scrapbooks.
"Milk's favourite cookie" is synonymous with Oreo. Surely we can team that up with another story in the book. hint (think of those cats)
|
|
|
Post by lookinup on Nov 23, 2018 11:04:28 GMT -5
|
|
The Wolf
Finding Forrest Fenn
content...
Posts: 797
|
Post by The Wolf on Nov 23, 2018 19:22:03 GMT -5
Ah the Cross of Lorraine. A subtle hint in itself, just enough to get the point across. Magnum PI had the Cross of Lorraine on his ring. I like that because PI (pie) is another subtle hint of which many focus. It is important to cross (pun intended) these hints with others like who first estimated pi and that was Archimedes with 22/7. 22 being another important number. Archimedes is an interesting fellow and signified the number 10,000. Fenn likes that number too which is linked to M (roman numerals). One can have so much fun chasing rabbits. Wouldn't it be nice to have all of these rabid holes all connect to each other? Eureka!
|
|
The Wolf
Finding Forrest Fenn
content...
Posts: 797
|
Post by The Wolf on Nov 24, 2018 1:57:46 GMT -5
Black to black and white. Unfortunately his cow Bessie was a Guernsey not the black and white Holstein. But an interesting black and white object synonymous with word that is key is a piano, with 88 black and white keys. FF is 88 years old this year.Better yet, those zebra boots are black and white. Oh and one more the magpie, I like that one. Any more?
|
|
|
Post by heidini on Nov 24, 2018 7:33:44 GMT -5
The first time I saw a magpie was at Glacier National Park. I think they must only hang out west of the Mississippi. Very pretty birds. The black reminds me of ink from when I was a kid. I doodled and colored in an area. Although it was black, it looked a bit iridescent with blues and greens swirled in the black.
|
|
The Wolf
Finding Forrest Fenn
content...
Posts: 797
|
Post by The Wolf on Nov 24, 2018 11:47:30 GMT -5
The first time I saw a magpie was at Glacier National Park. I think they must only hang out west of the Mississippi. Very pretty birds. The black reminds me of ink from when I was a kid. I doodled and colored in an area. Although it was black, it looked a bit iridescent with blues and greens swirled in the black. Photo: Bob Kothenbeutel A magnificent looking bird, with connections to this hunt. The clouds of black and white definitely striking! ;-)
|
|
|
Post by goldwatch on Nov 24, 2018 14:40:43 GMT -5
I'm trying to remember what I had on magpies. Something. It's in my notes somewhere, lol. But I noticed the black and white reference at the time.
|
|
|
Post by robjohnson on Nov 30, 2018 10:22:51 GMT -5
Per A Gypsy's Kiss video and the people who shared with them - painting seemed to be exhibited in 1893 at the Chicago World's Fair.
1893 might be familiar to most as the year on some postmarks.
Also, ttotc description of the painting is an aberration to what it shows.
|
|
|
Post by lookinup on Nov 30, 2018 11:41:25 GMT -5
An artistic impression/interpretation of the "Dead Dog" perhaps?
|
|