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Spring-heeled Jack gets all the attention, but there are reports of actual hairy ape-men spotted in rural areas going back to the 1700s.
I've started doing regular skywatching on the Yorkshire moors near Haworth and I want to make sure I'm documenting properly if I spot anything interesting.
White noise is fine but radio static is actually better because it gives your brain more 'material' to work with.
EdmundAshfield85 in Ghost Hunting Techniques 3 years ago thumb_up 3
Excellent question. Morag is genuinely well-documented - serious researchers have been investigating that one since the 1950s.
Janet Q. in Cryptozoology General 3 years ago thumb_up 3
Borley Rectory is the obvious Essex haunted location, but I'm doing a project on regional hauntings and I want to go beyond the famous ones.
Kenji U. in Haunted Locations 3 years ago
Have you considered staying over to see if anything happens while you're there? Not to debunk her, just to have a witness.
Hank T. in Poltergeist Activity 3 years ago thumb_up 1
I believe you. This happened to my uncle near the M6 in 2009. He got very ill afterwards - nothing serious, but strange skin rashes.
Derek N. in Alien Contact & Abduction Accounts 3 years ago thumb_up 4
There's actually a decent amount of anecdotal evidence for large hairy bipedal creatures in the Scottish Highlands and the Pennines.
Maureen Flux in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 3 years ago thumb_up 3
So I've been reading about the folklore around various British lochs and reservoirs, and I'm fascinated by how many of them have their own local creatures.
Honestly, the £300 equipment is overkill unless you're doing serious baseline measurements. What matters more is technique: ask clear questions, leave long pauses, be respectful.
This is brilliant. Genuine question though - were you tired? Because the A1(M) at that time of night is hypnotic as hell and your brain can basically autopilot for hours.
Lily N. in Alien Contact & Abduction Accounts 3 years ago thumb_up 4
If you want cheap and cheerful, get a basic digital voice recorder (£20-30 from Argos) and do a control recording with white noise, then one without.
Accidental Cipher in Ghost Hunting Techniques 3 years ago thumb_up 1
White noise is still solid. What's changed is that we understand the mechanism better now - it's basically providing source material for pareidolia to work on, which is exactly what you want for...
MistyMisty in Ghost Hunting Techniques 3 years ago thumb_up 4
I know this is mad, but hear me out. Most of the Bigfoot phenomenon is North American, right? But the British Isles has decades of folklore about wild men, hairy ape-like creatures, and things...
Which area of the Cairngorms specifically? I've got family near Aviemore and they've mentioned strange things over the years. Not Bigfoot necessarily, but unusual animals.
Mia L. in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 3 years ago thumb_up 4
if there's anything here, it's probably smaller, more elusive, probably no match for established cryptozoology standards. This is actually smart thinking.
Chrissie78 in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 3 years ago thumb_up 3
Could it have been ball lightning? The dashboard interference is interesting though - that's unusual for natural phenomena. Have you checked your car over since?
Avery G. in Alien Contact & Abduction Accounts 3 years ago thumb_up 2
I've been getting back into ghost hunting after a ten-year break, and I'm trying to figure out what equipment actually works vs. what's just expensive nonsense.
She's 67 and quite sound mentally, not given to flights of fancy. Fair play for saying that. Look, I'd suggest your mum keeps a detailed log anyway - dates, times, what moved, what she heard,...
MoonlitDusk861 in Poltergeist Activity 3 years ago thumb_up 4
Please can we also have a rule about actually reading what the other person wrote before replying? Half these debates are people arguing past each other because nobody's actually listening.
Shawna L. in Site Announcements 3 years ago thumb_up 4