Category Archives: Icon Trail News

Lincoln Cathedral grant GPR scan for Templar Treasure

As reported on the front and second page of the Lincolnshire Echo, July 14th, Lincoln Cathedral have agreed to allowing a GPR (ground penetrating radar) scan at a precise site at a burial grounds opposite SE corner of the Cathedral to search for the lost treasure of the Templars.The location has been deduced from research now referred to as ‘the Lincoln Da Vinci Code’ which was initiated in 2005 when a glazer accidently found a bizarre scene at the depiction of the Last Supper at the Great East Window. instead of either cup or loaf on Christ’s plattere, there is a dog! Local author and ex-tv researcher Callum Jensen has since announced a number of interlocking anomalies in and nearby, which, when amalgamated with the Rennes-le-Chateau Parchments and the bas-relief of the Magdalene at the RLC church, lead to the precise location – which has a marker tomb – that will be scanned, his work now contained in two available books. Amazing synchronicities abound in the LDVC particularly the fact that the name of the man who started all this Grail search is Henry LINCOLN, the fact that Hollywood was drawn to the Cathedral to shoot scenes for ‘The Da Vinci Code’, and the fact that the name on the marker tomb is the same as the QC who defended Baigent and Leigh in the London Courts against Dan Brown. Continue reading

Joa Bolendas RIP

Sad news filtered through over the weekend that Joa Bolendas (see Icon Trail posts elsewhere on this site) had died on Friday. Our thoughts and prayers are with her family and I feel that she is already working her magic as a figure of light in the Otherworld.

Book Release: Walkabout

Mark Patrick Hederman is a Benedictine monk from Glenstal Abbey in Ireland. For many years now he has been engaging in activities that bear more than a passing resemblance to Psychic Questing. Although the wrapper around them is firmly Christian, this should not distract you from an extremely interesting exercise in living your life as a permanent quest. A full review will follow but for the moment here’s the publisher’s notes: Continue reading