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Alright, I got bored and made paranormal community bingo cards based on predictable seasonal posts. Thought you lot might appreciate it.
Clapham's got history - lots of old buildings, lots of lives lived there. Victorian era was when spiritualism was massive in London.
LancashireStoat in Personal Encounters 3 years ago thumb_up 5
Sheehan's work is solid because he actually talks to the witnesses. But yeah, the book doesn't take any strong stance because the evidence genuinely isn't conclusive.
Lily G. in Books, Documentaries & Podcasts 3 years ago thumb_up 4
I'll watch it but I'm not expecting anything revelatory. My money's on 'these are probably advanced aircraft from adversary nations' as the conclusion.
Fair warning though - December on the moors is grim. I went to Blakey Ridge last year and nearly froze solid.
Tyler Incubus in Skywatching & UAP Monitoring 3 years ago thumb_up 3
One thing though - if the footage is from your phone, check if there's any metadata embedded (EXIF data). You can strip personal info but keep the timestamp and location data.
Sofia X. in UFO Video & Photo Analysis 3 years ago thumb_up 4
This is helpful but I'd caution that solstices being linked to increased activity is correlation, not causation.
Casey K. in Skywatching & UAP Monitoring 3 years ago thumb_up 1
The idea that major astronomical events trigger paranormal activity is worth taking seriously - there's historical precedent for it.
Picked up the newer edition of 'The Rendlesham Forest Incident' by Daniel Sheehan (the updated version, £16.99 from Waterstones).
Shadow figures are genuinely one of the most commonly reported phenomena. Good news: they're almost never hostile. Bad news: we don't really know what they are.
I visited in October and honestly, the site is underwhelming if you're expecting obvious paranormal activity.
HampshireCrow in Haunted Locations 3 years ago thumb_up 5
You're describing a version of apophenia - pattern recognition in random data. Which isn't an insult, it's human nature. Our brains are wired to find patterns. That said, some patterns are real.
Solo is fine but bring a charged mobile, tell someone where you are, and honestly, stick to daylight hours or early evening.
Misty Dark in Haunted Locations 3 years ago thumb_up 2
I'd go but honestly I'm a bit nervous about revealing my location/real identity in person. I know that's paranoid but given some of the surveillance stuff discussed here, I'd rather stay...
RetiredTaxiDriver18 in General Chat 3 years ago thumb_up 2
Borley is accessible but you need to be respectful of property boundaries. The current owners aren't thrilled about paranormal tourism.
George J. in Haunted Locations 3 years ago thumb_up 4
your digital photo analysis presentation Yes please. That's actual useful content that I could apply to investigations I'm planning. Not just anecdotes but actual technical skills.
ScrappyPilgrim in General Chat 3 years ago thumb_up 4
Manchester's alright but the London events always feel more populated because London has more members in the Southeast.
SortOfDoppelganger in General Chat 3 years ago thumb_up 5
Good shout on Kielder. I've been there three times and seen unexplained aerial phenomena twice. The isolation is key - less background noise, more chance of actually observing something.
I'd go but July is family holiday time for me unfortunately. Any chance of a September or October event instead? Loads of people probably skip summer because of school holidays and travel plans.
HauntedPresence in General Chat 3 years ago thumb_up 1
The Hebden Bridge area is in a decent UAP hotspot actually - Yorkshire has had some interesting incidents. The acceleration you describe is worth documenting precisely.
Gareth V. in UFO Video & Photo Analysis 3 years ago thumb_up 4