1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,000 Yes! 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:08,400 You're a Gary Buddy. Welcome to 2019 Sacred Journey to Africa with Sam Osama, 3 00:00:08,400 --> 00:00:13,520 I get to Michael Telinger. Thank you for being here. Thank you for joining us on this journey. 4 00:00:13,520 --> 00:00:19,840 And thank you for being and welcome for arriving at one of the most amazing sites in one of the 5 00:00:19,840 --> 00:00:26,000 highlights on this journey. As we say sacred sites of Southern Africa, the giant footprint. 6 00:00:26,160 --> 00:00:32,240 In my opinion, probably the greatest example of a giant footprint in rock. I haven't seen anything 7 00:00:32,240 --> 00:00:41,760 better yet. This is truly a spectacular example of how little we know about our human history, 8 00:00:41,760 --> 00:00:49,200 how little we know about geology, and so many other areas of science that are part of the nature of our reality. 9 00:00:50,080 --> 00:00:56,720 Very quick history about this footprint that was first discovered in 1931 by a farmer or a guy around 10 00:00:56,720 --> 00:01:02,560 this area called Stoffel Kuttsia, who was hunting in this area. Keep in mind in those days there 11 00:01:02,560 --> 00:01:09,600 were no plantations, no forestry here. This was wild animals everywhere. This is why they were hunting here. 12 00:01:09,600 --> 00:01:15,280 And there were probably lions and other wild animals and dangerous animals in this part of the world. 13 00:01:16,160 --> 00:01:23,680 And they stumbled upon this and then this, the Dracula site became obviously quite an attraction 14 00:01:23,680 --> 00:01:30,560 and a curiosity among the locals. But this has been well known about by the knowledge keepers and the 15 00:01:30,560 --> 00:01:35,680 shamans and the knowledge keepers of ancient African knowledge. People like Baba Kredo Mutwa 16 00:01:35,680 --> 00:01:42,160 knows us very well. Here at first to this as a place where the ogres once used to live. The 17 00:01:42,160 --> 00:01:47,520 ogres and the man-eating giants that used to live in this part of the world. And again this is part of 18 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:53,280 that hand-a-darn ancient African knowledge that people like Baba Kredo Mutwa shares with us 19 00:01:53,280 --> 00:01:58,720 that is completely and utterly discarded by mainstream historians and mainstream archaeologists 20 00:01:58,720 --> 00:02:04,480 and mainstream media. Here we are. We can't wish as the way here it is. What's fascinating about it, 21 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:09,360 it's obviously very clearly a footprint. You can't misinterpret this is anything else over 22 00:02:09,440 --> 00:02:14,880 the footprint. The first thing that people look for is how many toes does it have. People that 23 00:02:14,880 --> 00:02:20,400 have been studying giants have remarked that many of the giants seem to have had six toes and 24 00:02:20,400 --> 00:02:27,040 not five toes and many people come, six toes here and not five. It's open to interpretation. 25 00:02:27,040 --> 00:02:35,600 We have the big toe, two, three, four, five and then another tiny little one over there, 26 00:02:36,160 --> 00:02:44,160 possibly six. So this might be a six-toed bee giant. Very interesting. What I find interesting 27 00:02:44,160 --> 00:02:51,360 as well is the way that this footprint, the way that when you put your foot into wet mud, 28 00:02:52,080 --> 00:02:58,480 it pushes up the mud under your toes and above your toes. And that's exactly what we find here. 29 00:02:58,480 --> 00:03:04,960 This is not a carving. This is real. Now anyone that studies mainstream geology or archaeology 30 00:03:04,960 --> 00:03:09,200 will immediately think, well, how is it possible? You can't leave a footprint in Agnes Rock. 31 00:03:09,760 --> 00:03:14,240 Grand Island is an Agnes Rock. It's pushed up over millions of years out of the ground. It's hot 32 00:03:14,240 --> 00:03:18,480 and boiling and blah blah blah. And you can't leave a footprint in it. Well, those would be the 33 00:03:18,480 --> 00:03:23,920 people that haven't done their research. They don't have enough information to figure out why 34 00:03:23,920 --> 00:03:31,360 you could leave a footprint in this kind of rock. Because what seems to us as rock may not actually be 35 00:03:32,320 --> 00:03:36,640 rock. When you take granites, you crush it up, you extract the gold, extract the metals, 36 00:03:36,640 --> 00:03:42,640 extract the material. And you leave a line around and it's wet cement concrete like state. 37 00:03:43,360 --> 00:03:50,240 It becomes hard again. It becomes a granite and the solid mass again. I had read, I've had a 38 00:03:50,240 --> 00:03:56,880 beautiful information shared with me by a Canadian gold miner in the Canadian Rockies that claims 39 00:03:56,960 --> 00:04:02,800 exactly the scanner thing. That says, when they leave the gold mining activity behind in 40 00:04:02,800 --> 00:04:08,880 autumn and they leave for winter and leave behind these piles of wet cement concrete like 41 00:04:08,880 --> 00:04:16,000 slurry. And when they come back after winter, they find footprints of bears and birds and other animals 42 00:04:16,000 --> 00:04:22,000 in what they left behind. And now those footprints have become hard. They're in the granite that 43 00:04:22,080 --> 00:04:27,360 looks like rock. If anybody finds those, they'd be wondering, how is it possible for bears and 44 00:04:27,360 --> 00:04:33,200 deer and birds to leave footprints in the granite? Because it wasn't a solid rock granite to start 45 00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:40,000 off with. It was originally a processed material like concrete out of which they extract of the gold. 46 00:04:40,000 --> 00:04:45,920 And that is the common denominator here. We have ancient gold mines. We have stories of Anunaki and 47 00:04:45,920 --> 00:04:51,280 giants the way we have in the Bible in the Sumerian texts. And we have the common denominator 48 00:04:51,360 --> 00:04:56,080 called gold, gold mining. I've shared with you already the incredible amount of stories on the 49 00:04:56,080 --> 00:05:02,000 gold. How much gold has been mined in southern Africa in the last 120 years. And now we start 50 00:05:02,000 --> 00:05:08,160 looking at how much gold has been mined here in the last 100 and 200 and 300,000 years. This giant 51 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:14,880 footprint is a very, very sober reminder that there is a history here and unwritten history that we 52 00:05:14,880 --> 00:05:20,800 know nothing about. And this footprint needs to be cherished and investigated. And we need to 53 00:05:21,840 --> 00:05:28,560 investigate this rock to see how much gold is in this rock or if the gold has been extracted. 54 00:05:28,560 --> 00:05:33,920 From my understanding, this granite is reasonably rich in gold and this is why they wanted to come 55 00:05:33,920 --> 00:05:40,960 in mine this for gold and possibly other minerals. So the next step here is to take samples of this 56 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:46,480 and have it analyzed to see how much gold is in here and other minerals in there. And if it is 57 00:05:46,560 --> 00:05:52,480 a process material, if it is not, if it is granite, if it is a material that's already been crushed 58 00:05:52,480 --> 00:05:58,080 and re-hardened. One final thing on this. And one of our lectures, while I was talking about the 59 00:05:58,080 --> 00:06:04,880 giant footprint, a guy put up his hand and said, he works in the glue in the epoxy business. 60 00:06:04,880 --> 00:06:12,480 So he does, he's epoxy chemist. And granite powder is an active ingredient in epoxy glue that helps 61 00:06:12,560 --> 00:06:17,280 the glue to the cup hard. And there we have another important ingredient. So, 62 00:06:18,880 --> 00:06:24,160 welcome to the giant footprint. Share this with the rest of the world. This is one of the great 63 00:06:24,160 --> 00:06:29,440 ancient sites that should be seen by those who are interested in this part of human history. Thank you 64 00:06:29,440 --> 00:06:34,480 very much.