Right, cheers for the heads up at least. Most sites just go dark without warning and you're left wondering if the whole thing has been pulled.
Saturday should be fine for me - not that I'd have...
Been there twice, last visit was 2019 before everything got shut down for a while. The body chute is where I felt it most - that long descent just does something to people, whether you believe or...
The soil analysis is the part that doesn't get enough attention. When they tested that ring site, the radiation readings were consistent with something that had genuinely irradiated the ground...
November on Bodmin is genuinely creepy. The dark nights do something to the atmosphere there. I've camped multiple times and there's always this sense of being watched.
Vallee's a bit dense if I'm honest mate, but worth it. The folklore parallels section is brilliant - basically proves that UFO sightings and fairy abductions follow identical patterns.
The Beast of Bodmin is almost certainly just feral dogs and overactive imaginations. Every moorland area has a 'big cat' legend. The Scottish Highlands have had them for decades.
Right, I'm looking to kit out my mobile paranormal investigation setup and I keep seeing thermal imaging cameras recommended everywhere.
Bodmin Beast reports spiked in the late 80s after a Guardian article about a leopard escaping from a collection in Devon.
Great introduction post! The fact that you're both interested but skeptical immediately puts you ahead of about 60% of newcomers.
Disagree slightly. I went last year and yeah, there's nothing physical to see, but the location itself is atmospheric. The energy or whatever you want to call it is noticeable.
Your mate hearing 'dog food' is actually really useful data though - it suggests the recording itself is ambiguous enough that brains can project meaning.
I've noticed this too and it's definitely a problem. The line between "sharing your professional services" and "ongoing commercial promotion" gets blurry but there's definitely accounts crossing...