Really glad you posted this rather than just keeping it to yourself - a lot of people don't, and then the detail fades. Was there any sound at all, even a low hum or tone?
@fergus_blackwood that flat oppressive atmosphere is the detail that gets me too. There's something about environmental perception shifts that keeps cropping up in these accounts - not just visual...
Really glad to see @mia_singh sharing that EVP experience - first-hand field data from Glamis is genuinely rare and worth digging into properly.
There's an old Victorian asylum about 12 miles from where I live, been derelict since the early 90s.
Been thinking about this for a while actually. The astronomical alignment angle gets thrown around a lot but most people stop at "solstice markers" and leave it there, which I think...
Bit out of my usual patch this one - I'm based up in Northumberland where we get our own big cat reports fairly regularly, mostly around the moors.
@RetiredRetiredGeographyTeach34 raises a good point about the physical effects - the compass anomaly is something I keep coming back to.
Been looking into this one on and off for a couple of years and the consistency does stand out. When you actually map the sightings geographically rather than just reading them as isolated...
This is actually interesting from a pattern perspective though - if there IS something happening in his flat, anomalies in the pattern are worth noting.
I'm posting this on behalf of my uncle who doesn't use computers much. This happened last Friday night (7th December, approximately 22:45 GMT) near Inverness in the Scottish Highlands.He was...
Another Yorkshire member here (Sheffield area). Always good to have more local people. The moors are genuinely worth investigating - far more activity reported there than most places.
There's a decent middle ground here: yes, ancient peoples were sophisticated astronomers who understood their skies intimately. Yes, this is fully explainable through patient observation.