Migration theory is solid from an evolutionary perspective. Large primates need massive territories and seasonal food sources would drive movement patterns.
Pendle Hill phantom has been reported since at least the 1920s. I've got old newspaper clippings if you want to compare notes.
Try recording in consistently haunted locations using both analogue and digital equipment simultaneously. Document everything - ambient conditions, electromagnetic readings, temperatures.
Could be Chinese lanterns - they move in formation if released together, orange glow, no sound, visible for about that duration.
Lakenheath is always interesting because you've got actual trained observers - RAF personnel - giving consistent accounts.
This is exactly the sort of thing that gets hyped up online and turns out to be a thermal imaging glitch or someone's nan in a dressing gown.
Absolutely welcome that kind of material here. We've got a whole section for evidence submission and analysis. Fair warning: you'll get skeptics picking apart everything, but that's healthy.
Just an observation, but I've noticed that both on this forum and in my personal experience, paranormal reports seem to cluster around September through November.
So this is going to sound mental but I'm posting it anyway. My mate Jake and I were exploring an abandoned manor house near Hastings last Saturday afternoon (about 2pm, clear daylight, both...
TruthSeeker77: Or - and I'm just spitballing - maybe the skeptics could let people share their experiences without immediately demanding peer-reviewed papers? Not every post is a scientific claim.
Why do we treat a debunked investigation as gospel? We shouldn't. But Borley Rectory is interesting precisely because it's controversial.
CriticalEye_Jane: Starlink. Honestly, probably Starlink. It fits every detail - the formation, the fading, the impossibly smooth movement, the silent operation.
FLIR ONE Pro is solid. I've had mine for two years. The mobile integration is seamless (works best with iPhone, a bit clunky on Android).
Had one of these for two years now and basically agree with everything here. The weight is genuinely my only complaint - I bought a motorised tripod to help with that.
Honestly, the best winter technique is staying longer in locations. Winter nights are longer, so you've got extended dark hours for observations.