Mate, you need to get hypnotic regression done. That ninety minutes could be crucial. There's a practitioner in Somerset who specialises in UFO cases - let me dig out her details.
Great review actually. You've described exactly why I find this stuff compelling - it's not the phenomena that interests me, it's the fact that people are genuinely frightened by something, and...
Ilkley's a proper hotspot for reports. There's been sightings there for decades. Whether it's an actual surviving wild population or escaped pets is genuinely unclear - probably a mix of both.
The psychological factors are massive and most amateur investigators don't account for them properly.
Evening all. My family was visiting relatives near Fort William last weekend (Saturday 14th October, around 11pm) and we witnessed something genuinely strange.
This is a brilliant idea, mate. I've got a folder on my hard drive with about 200 screenshots of threads because the search function is rubbish and I can't find anything twice.
I'm more fascinated than scared by most of this stuff tbh. The thing that does unsettle me slightly is the idea of missing time events - abductions where people lose hours and can't account for...
I've requested the full unredacted files from MoD twice and got nowhere. The "official" released documents are barely useful because of all the black marker.
Pennine Way has loads of reports of strange experiences - some documented, lots just local knowledge. The ridge paths especially seem to have a reputation.
The lack of physical evidence is actually the smoking gun for me. If a craft genuinely landed in that forest, there would be soil samples, burn marks, something.
Skeptical Comments Are Now Allowed: We've historically been biased toward believers, which wasn't fair.Appreciate the self-awareness on this. This forum was becoming quite insular.
The quality of the experience felt real in a way most paranormal stuff doesn't This is actually a reliable way to evaluate paranormal experiences.
Welcome! Rendlesham's a great starting point because it's well-documented and genuinely interesting.
Summer observation is genuinely harder than winter precisely because of the twilight issue. I'd recommend starting observations around 21:30-22:00 (early June onwards, when it's actually dark) and...
Don't sleep on Coniston Water or Thirlmere either. Less famous but equally strange reports going back centuries.