It's very easy to be judgemental towards the behaviour of this farmer, compare him unfavourably with nice Farmer Wotsit down the road who put up an honesty box and gave the money to charity, blah di blah. Time and again crop circle enthusiasts get too self-righteous in this regard, IMO.
Perhaps he just didn't want hundreds of woosters trampling over his field, blocking the lanes with their cars so they could go and 'feel the energies'. City folk often fail to understand the deep connection farming people have with their land. In many respects it would be a better analogy to compare this chap's field with your living room. If some graffiti appeared on your living room carpet, would you be happy to let a bunch of strangers traipse in an out of your house to stare and sit on your carpet? And how affronted would you be if, when you told those strangers they were not wanted, rather than leave they turned round to you and told you to charge them a pound at the door?
I'm not saying I'm on Mr Angry Farmer's side, or that he is right to consider his wheat field inviolable. I like crop circles too. But there is always another perspective and it I think it would serve some croppies to appreciate this.
Well said. And, even if he did all the "right" things and ended up in profit from the income from the crop circle, he would still have had to invest extra time and effort to do something that was forced on him. He may have preferred to simply do without the hassle.