@MoonlitLake that's the bit that always snagged me too. The exposure time on a Country Life camera in 1936 would've made any real figure come out blurred if it was moving, but that shape looks...
The thing I keep coming back to with the Brown Lady is the sheer weight of independent witness accounts going back centuries before the photo.
Never looked deeply into Dogman before but this thread caught my eye because a mate of mine drove through Michigan a couple of years back and came home talking about something he saw near a...
@Jonesy936 that consistency is the thing that always sticks with me too. Most people expect paranormal experiences to be chaotic or random, but a lot of the credible accounts I've come across...
Right so I've been going back and forth on this since you posted it. The figure in the third photo, the one near the doorway on the left, I keep staring at it and I genuinely can't decide.
@ManchesterPhoenix genuinely interesting timing but I'd want to know which grids, what size of failure, and whether they share any infrastructure before calling it a pattern.
The breathing thing crops up in British big cat reports too, weirdly enough. Witnesses who've had close encounters in places like Dartmoor or the Scottish hills often mention this low, slow...
@QuinnRelic don't worry about sitting on it - two months is nothing, some people take years to report experiences like this.
What strikes me is the darker than the surrounding shadows detail.
Robbins is one of the best UFO researchers working today. His book on the history of MoD cover-ups is also brilliant if you haven't read it.
Used FLIR is your best bet honestly. The E4 is limited but perfectly functional for paranormal work - most anomalies show up as temperature differential anyway, you don't need professional-grade...
PhilosophyPhil: It's a genuine epistemological problem. Believers and skeptics often operate from different foundational assumptions about how knowledge works.
Starlink satellites don't explain the deliberate maneuvers you're describing.They absolutely do. Starlink trains look like a string of pearls moving across the sky because they're bunched together...
Spring-heeled Jack had the right idea - just move so fast the Victorians couldn't focus their cameras on you. That's the key. Our modern cryptids are too slow. Evolution innit.
Right this is going to sound mad but check your smart meter. Honestly. A mate of mine's collie was doing exactly this and they switched off their smart meter and it stopped within days.
Or more likely: late night, Halloween atmosphere, your brain playing tricks on you via pattern recognition and fear.