Good looking out on that! I hope we can figure out more with the moths and IHAV.
i dont know if its anything put listen to this guys...
i was watching hunters video last night with a group of people and we start freeze framing it on words. do you know when he has gone down to the basement, turns right, turns left up the stair and open the door, the door says something. it says "satur"
"satur" i found last night is the start of i THINK genus (im not great with my latin, mum does most of that) of moth. the Luna varity is found in South California. i believe the key is i heard a voice. since the repeat of the moth, my vinyl spelling out "i heard a voice", the fact we were giving the videos basically saying we have missed something, just seems to fit.
anyway, that's the lead im following anyway. i still cant find the species of moth on IHAV, but i found the photographers website and have e-mailed him asking if he knew what it was
Good looking out on that! I hope we can figure out more with the moths and IHAV.
thanks i hope so too![]()
THATS BRILLIANT maybe we got something. good luckOriginally Posted by xCharliexGreenx
YES...!!! We ACTUALLY got something here! And people said we were wasting our time over old stuff...
I noticed Saturniidae and "eyespot"The cecropia moth, Hyalophora cecropia, also called the robin moth, is the largest moth in North America (see butterflies and moths). It is a member of the Saturniidae family of moths, known as giant silkmoths. The wingspan of the cecropia itself may reach a width of about 15 cm (6 in). When the cecropia larva, a caterpillar, hatches in the spring, it feeds on the leaves of fruit or other trees, rejecting other kinds of leaves after having chosen one type. The larva is light green, with colored spikes on its back. It lives on into September or October, after which it spins a cocoon and becomes a pupa (see metamorphosis). The adult moth that emerges the following year has no mouth or tongue and cannot feed, but even so it survives for up to 2 weeks. During the first couple of nights after emergence, the female "calls" by releasing a scent that the male, with its large antennae, can detect at a distance of several kilometers. After mating with the male, the female may lay up to about 300 eggs. The wings of the adult are a muted reddish brown, with bands of dusky gray, white, and red and with a small "eyespot" on each forewing. West of the Rocky Mountains the cecropia is replaced by a close relative, the Gloverli moth, H. gloverli.
"cecropia moth." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. 2007. Grolier Online. 20 Jan. 2007 <http://gme.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0055805-0>.
^ NOT wikipedia
I never saw anything. Someone claimed they saw bunnies in the smudges. I'm still trying to get a color screenshot of it so I can look at it and find out if I can distinguish any letters.Originally Posted by rockerchic69
Does anyone else notice the squeal in ESS at the end of the 2nd verse? Anyone think it's relevant?
I tired to send a picture of the moth to this site but my email just wouldnt allow it perhaps someone else might want to try. they identify unknown bugs exactly for you. http://www.whatsthatbug.com/ just a thought!
We've already identified the moth... we just need to know where to go from there...Originally Posted by Mizerable Mo