On a map of England with the indication of the St. Michael ley line, I follow this route by bike. This ley line is an almost straight line that runs from west to east in southern England. The starting point is in Land’s End and the end point is in Lowestoft at the east coast. A ley line is a concept that stands for the cult in distant prehistory in which people made their sacrifices to invisible forces, called Gods, who apparently emerged on this line. Fire and singing are the ultimate forms to express this religious primal feeling. To honor these Gods, all kinds of shrines were established. These sites are located at intersections on these imaginary invisible lines. Sometimes it was a water source or a viewpoint or remarkable rock or tree that gave the location a higher status. These Megalithic monuments that give shape and content to the sacred of the ley line are now known as "stone circles". Later, many of these pagan sacrificial sites were used to build churches or cathedrals in the tradition of the Christian faith. One still makes ritual sacrifices (in churches, etc.) through the use of light, in the form of fire, and hymns. My journey investigates the secret energetic forces that apparently flow along this path. In order to experience the landscape and its exceptional appearance as much as possible, I choose to travel the route by bicycle. In many places where a cathedral or church are situated on the ley line, I stop and take a pinhole shot. This is the purest form of photography in which the light falls directly onto the sensitive pellicule film without an interruption of lenses or filters. The image is a constructive sum of light units and therefore also a soft ode to the ley-line. I am present in the image and let in this way, light and earth energy flow through me.