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Been on various paranormal communities for years and I'm noticing something: the quality of discussion has genuinely declined.
Look, I love this forum. Genuinely. But I'm getting frustrated scrolling through months of old threads only to find out halfway down the comments that someone already explained the phenomenon six...
I'm thinking of heading out to Suffolk next month to have a proper look around.Fair play for the enthusiasm, but fair warning - the current owners are not happy about paranormal investigators...
NocturnalPendle in Haunted Locations 4 years ago thumb_up 2
The issue with the London Underground theory is that's basically impossible. The tunnels are regularly maintained, surveyed, and monitored by hundreds of people.
ActualDaemon in Cryptozoology General 4 years ago thumb_up 3
Definitely sounds like you encountered something unusual, though I'd say: bears, moose, or even a large elk can cause exactly this kind of reaction.
Infernal Ecto26 in Bigfoot & Sasquatch 4 years ago thumb_up 3
Save your money initially. Hire equipment first - there's places in London and Manchester that rent thermal cameras and EMF kit for about £30/day. Try before you buy.
Lucky Falcon in Ghost Hunting Techniques 4 years ago thumb_up 5
The "ancient aliens" explanation always feels like people saying "non-white people couldn't possibly be smart enough to do this" with extra steps.
The solstice light angle thing is super cool. If you go back next year (or at Winter solstice) with precise GPS coordinates and better documentation, you might actually contribute something useful...
BrandonOrb in New Members Lounge 4 years ago thumb_up 3
But have you actually tried moving a stone that weighs 25 tonnes with ropes and wooden sledges? Because I haven't and I'm not convinced the standard explanation really holds up under scrutiny.
You're not being dismissive enough, honestly. The "aliens must have done it" argument is basically Victorian anthropology in fancy dress.
Underground cryptids actually makes sense though. If something evolved to avoid human contact, it would logically move away from populated areas, and staying in open moorland is risky because...
Gezza18 in Cryptozoology General 4 years ago thumb_up 1
Been meaning to post this for ages. Still feels mental to talk about it, even now. So this happened in April 2019 near Glen Affric in the Highlands.
Respect for sharing this honestly. Too many people either dismiss everything as BS or jump straight to 'ALIENS!' You clearly had a real experience, whether the cause is mundane or anomalous.
Dale F. in Personal Encounters 4 years ago thumb_up 5
Mate, I drove past it about three years ago. Honestly, it's just fields now. Pretty underwhelming if I'm being honest.
Haunted Australia in Haunted Locations 4 years ago thumb_up 3
The Beast was almost certainly an escaped exotic pet from the 1960s or 70s. Big cats do occasionally escape from private collections - it happened periodically back then.
Right, so I've read literally everything about Borley Rectory. The ghost nun, the demonic voices, the whole lot.
Trevor N. in Haunted Locations 4 years ago
This community seems less 'tinfoil hat' and more actually interested in real investigation That's the vibe we try to maintain!
MountainMisty918 in New Members Lounge 4 years ago thumb_up 2
Right, so I grew up near Bodmin and my dad used to talk about the Beast constantly in the '80s and '90s.
Look, I get why people think aliens built Stonehenge. Moving massive stones without modern equipment seems impossible, right?
I've had experiences like this at Fernworthy before. Not saying it's definitely paranormal, but the energy there does feel different from other sites. There's something about that circle.
Casey U. in Personal Encounters 4 years ago thumb_up 4