>>1566207
Amen. Beautifully said. Thanks for the music Baker.
Bless this Bread with harmonious notes of Permanent Peace.
>>1566207
Amen. Beautifully said. Thanks for the music Baker.
Bless this Bread with harmonious notes of Permanent Peace.
April Ryan deserves the Helen Thomas treatment.
From Notables #1968
>>1566300 3 Kings Island Connection To Shells
>>1565560 (pb)
>>1565568 (pb)
>http://www.gastropods.com/8/Shell_31338.shtml
Nice connection, anon.
Teeny islands but at least there's no pesky natives.
https://infogalactic.com/info/Three_Kings_Islands
The Three Kings Islands, called Manawatawhi by Māori, are a group of 13 uninhabited islands about 55 kilometres (34 mi) northwest of Cape Reinga, the northernmost point of the North Island of New Zealand, where the South Pacific Ocean and Tasman Sea converge. They measure about 4.86 km² in area.
The islands are situated on a submarine plateau, the Three Kings Bank, and are separated from the New Zealand mainland by an 8 km wide, 200 to 300 m deep submarine trough. Therefore, despite relative proximity to the mainland, the islands are listed with the New Zealand Outlying Islands.
The islands are an immediate part of New Zealand, but not part of any region or district, but instead Area Outside Territorial Authority, like all the other outlying islands except the Solander Islands.
They were named Drie Koningen Eyland on 6 January 1643 by Dutch explorer Abel Janszoon Tasman who three weeks earlier had become the first European known to have seen New Zealand.
Tasman anchored at the islands when searching for water. As it was the Twelfth Night feast of the Epiphany, the day the biblical three kings known as the wise men visited Christ the child, he named the islands accordingly.
Tasman also named the northern tip of the North Island Cape Maria van Diemen, after the wife of Anthony van Diemen, Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).
These are the only two geographic features in New Zealand to retain the names given to them by Abel Tasman.
Tasman found the islands to be inhabited by Māori, but since 1840 they have been uninhabited. The Māori population probably never exceeded 100.
The Three Kings group falls into two subgroups with four main inhospitable islands and a number of smaller rocks on a submarine plateau called King Bank which rises out of extremely deep water.
The surrounding sea has very clear visibility and contains teeming fish life, attracting hundreds of divers. Another attraction is the wreck of the Elingamite which foundered there on 9 November 1902.
Now that's using your almonds.
>>1566781 kek
>Church of Satan, PO Box 666
>Phone call are NOT accepted or returned.
LOVE duh map! This area is becoming GROUND ZERO for occultic fuckery.
Funny you should mention Phoenicia - home of Robert Thurman's (Uma's poppy) Tibet House (affiliated w/ Dalai Lama).
Bruderhof - remember an anon speaking of this weeks ago when another map of the area floating around.
Also, a famous Waldorf/Steiner school just east of Marina - Hawthorne Valley
And Omega Institute in Rheinbeck - chichi new-age retreat for the nouveau elite.
Then there's the Vanderbilt & Roosevelt estates south of The Church of Satan, close to Indian Point.
This is not even getting into all the Hasidic & esoteric Eastern sects there as well. Strange area, to say the least.
We might need a bigger map...
>>1565728
Please ask your friend if they know anything about that particular branch of G. Dawn. Appears they were heavily into da Cabala.
Tried to go "straight" but supposedly disbanded (or went underground) shortly after.
This character looks interesting too.
>https://www.noted.co.nz/currently/history/strange-magic-a-history-of-nzs-own-school-of-witchcraft/
In 1912, he made a recommendation and within a week Reginald had wired £300 to England to bring to New Zealand the real deal
– Dr Robert Felkin, a 32nd-degree (highest) Freemason, ceremonial magician, head of the magical order Stella Matutina and one-time personal physician to a Ugandan king.