Thursday, December 31, 2009

Vision: Japan Atomic Solar Flares, June 15

READ MORE ABOUT THIS MESSAGE @

http://japanatomicsolarflares.blogspot.com/



REMOTE-VIEWING MESSAGE:



1331 [ military time ] ; Friday ; June 15th, 2007



Remote-viewing message titled : Japan Atomic Solar Flares [ the title was added after the message, not part of the message ]



. . . Landing gear knocks the bridge gear off the ramp. The steering column



releases the enzyme pressure seals to the galley.



Withering storms reduce in tropical horizon.



The candle is low to the flame for fuel option.



Sending barrier over the reef and collecting the atomic flares from



YOKOHAMA, Japan, walks pretty straight forward in regard to man power.



The driftwood circles the deck planks.



Seldom do the batten hatch stronghold resume its northward wind gales.



So the Pacific horizon luminous in the disk shaped obstacle.



The obstacle is unknown and low altitude control operative dysfunction.



Rise and fire-risers are under watch for open, to release stern pressure



below gut area of vessel.



Watching and waiting for survivors to crest the wave toward light



of moon lit scape.



Dowsing rod showed no help to attract electrical current to charge



battery box.



The wind currents continual beating of the flask of the bough.



Gives reason of panic in sailors who remain holding to boards and faith.



The red flare is the last ditch step.



Saved for night to increase visibility of shipwreck. ( Tsurumi-ku )



End of remote-viewing message . . . Below are the area's listed in the message.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yokohama





Yokohama (横浜市, Yokohama-shi?) is the capital of Kanagawa Prefecture and, with a population of 3.6 million, Japan's largest city after Tokyo[1], located in the Kantō region of the main island of Honshū. Yokohama is a major commercial hub of the Greater Tokyo Area.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsurumi-ku,_Yokohama



Tsurumi-ku (鶴見区, Tsurumi-ku?) is one of the wards of the city of Yokohama in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It includes the former village of Namamugi, site of the Namamugi Incident of 1862.

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