Ley Lines Used to Build a Modern Hospital

Most people believe that ley lines were built by our ancestors during the Stone Age, personified by the standing stones and circles we see scattered around the landscape, mute testimony to a lost knowledge, but it is obvious now that a little of this knowledge still exists.
  In Crieff, Scotland, a hospital was built and opened in 1995. In plan view it is shaped like a large figure 4, with 44 beds with its 3 wards aligned to 4 churches surrounded by their burial grounds, a 4 stone circle, a path to 1 of the churches, its manse, a War Memorial and the site of the previous Cottage Hospital. Probably one of the most modern ley line systems in the UK.

  The number 4 is the number of the square. There are four cardinal points and four winds, four phases of the moon, four seasons and four elements, earth, air, fire and water, and in “Angelic numbers” the number 4 means that your ancestors are there to support you and keep you safe and a sign that your guardian angels are hard at work on your behalf and are waiting to give you a warm hug. 

Samson Stone, Kilmahog

This is the Samson Stone of Kilmahog, possibly built to rock in the past, produces a ley line to one of the wards of Crieff hospital.

  Below is the Youtube film of the extraordinary layout of this hospital, built by modern architects who I believe have a knowledge of ancient geometry.
 What is the purpose of focusing ley lines through hospital wards to ancient burial grounds and churches: for healing? or do the architects know something about the spirit world that most of us don’t?
    If so it is a knowledge which should be shared to the general public.

Another modern building is the Hydropathic Hotel, (below) also in Crieff, which was built by Dr. Meikle in 1868 as a health resort, taking its water from a chalybeate (iron rich) river flowing beneath it. An hydrologist came to see me years ago and showed me a map of this underground river, which runs down Scotland from Pitlcochry to Crieff, Dunblane and Peebles, all of which had health spas, or Hydropathic Hotels built on them.
   In the past the Crieff hotel specialised in the care of alcoholics wishing to stay in this up-market Temperance hotel, giving cheap rates to Protestant ministers, especially the Presbyterians and Evangelical Union church, with a fine of 1 old penny being levied for anyone who missed grace before meals.

Crieff Hydropathic Hotel

The map shown below shows the hotel with many ley lines leading to it. it is a huge target, of course, and there must be many of these sacred sites aligned by chance, but if you take a line along the main roof ridges they do connect with important, sacred sites. Every alignment has at least two sacred sites on it, and  there are 33 – 24 churches and chapels, including Comrie’s White church, and Ochtertyre Mausoleum (where a famous massacre took place between the Murrays and Drummonds;1 abbey; 4 burial cairns; 3 castles; 5 standing stones; and 2 stone circles.

Crieff Hydropathic on energy leys
Fowlis Wester staning stone and circle

 To the north east the main roof ridge is aligned to the stone circle connected to this standing stone on the moor above Fowlis Wester