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we've had 55+ years of searching in the same region with modern technology and haven't found a single body, skeleton, or DNA sample Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence though.
AbyssalWendigo in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 2 years ago thumb_up 3
The believers are more entertaining to read though, I'll give you that. More creative narratives. The sceptics tend to be quite... linear? Just picking apart every claim methodically.
Not AGolem in General Chat 2 years ago thumb_up 1
The gait argument is actually the strongest pro-genuine argument, I think. The way that creature moves is biomechanically weird - it's hard to replicate even with modern technology.
FakeMothman in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 2 years ago thumb_up 2
Honestly the sceptics on here are mostly quite polite? I've been on other forums where they're absolutely brutal. At least this lot will have a proper discussion instead of just being dismissive.
wobbly_badger in General Chat 2 years ago
Have you considered getting the room investigated properly? There might be a mundane explanation - rising damp, mold, underground water source, electromagnetic fields from nearby power lines - any...
James R. in Personal Encounters 2 years ago thumb_up 3
My uncle (retired RAF pilot, so not prone to imagination) said he'd never seen aircraft move like that. Even experienced observers misidentify phenomena when they're viewing unusual circumstances.
Chuck P. in Sightings & Reports 2 years ago thumb_up 5
Sleep paralysis explanations are almost too neat aren't they? But yeah, they're neat because they're accurate.
I've been down a Bigfoot research rabbit hole this week (don't judge) and the Patterson-Gimlin footage from 1967 keeps coming up.
Jonesy19 in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 2 years ago
Generational hauntings are definitely a thing - though the explanation might be psychological rather than paranormal.
Military aircraft can definitely perform unusual manoeuvres that would look strange to civilian observers.
Phillsy52 in Sightings & Reports 2 years ago thumb_up 5
My nan passed away six months ago, and my family's still sorting out her flat. She lived there for 42 years, lovely place, sea views, proper cosy.
The issue is when sceptics dismiss everything out of hand without bothering to engage with the actual content.
PriyaDunmore30 in General Chat 2 years ago thumb_up 2
The medical explanation is probably correct, but I'd add: keep a log anyway. Date, time, how long it lasted, what you were doing before, any external factors (stress, tiredness, diet).
Accidental Skinwalker in Personal Encounters 2 years ago thumb_up 5
The radiation readings have been challenged because the equipment used wasn't necessarily calibrated correctly and the readings weren't that dramatically elevated anyway.
Evening all. My family was visiting relatives near Fort William last weekend (Saturday 14th October, around 11pm) and we witnessed something genuinely strange.
Agree to some extent, but devil's advocate - the believers are keeping the spirit of exploration alive. Without curiosity and openness, we'd never investigate anything unusual.
Nigel D. in General Chat 2 years ago thumb_up 3
The thing that gets me about Rendlesham is the radiation readings. Even if you explain away the lights as misidentified phenomena, how do you explain elevated radiation levels in the landing site...
felt something in the room with me. Didn't see anything, just that unmistakable presence This is key. Our brains are wired to detect presences even when there's nothing there.
Fatima D. in Personal Encounters 2 years ago thumb_up 5
I've been lurking on Quirk Reports for about three years now, and I genuinely think our resident sceptics - you know who you are - are providing a far better service to this community than the...
The mutilated livestock around Skinwalker Ranch follows patterns that are consistent with predation - coyotes, mountain lions, even normal decomposition.