Classic anchoring bias innit. Once someone drops the H-word in the thread everyone starts pattern-matching to Hopkinsville whether the details actually line up or not.
Not really my area but I did poke around an old grain storage place near Sleaford a few years back and saw something shifting in the corner that I couldn't explain.
Kingman's interesting for this sort of thing given its proximity to the old crash site. Not surprised at all.
Not really my area but the rail line thing is interesting because we get similar stuff with ley lines and crop circle clusters over here - old pathways, animal tracks, whatever you want to call...
Had something similar last year out in the Lincolnshire countryside. Three nights, same pattern, like deliberate footsteps rather than a squirrel or fox scrambling about.
Not really my usual turf - I'm more crop circles and MIB than cryptids - but this is actually interesting enough to pull me in.
The railway line theory reminds me of ley lines and the way certain...
TransitWorker_TfL: Nothing dramatic or verifiable, mostly just feelings of unease or seeing shadows. This sums up why I'm skeptical. Feelings and shadows aren't evidence.
Most paranormal content is rubbish, let's be honest. They're all trying to prove something rather than investigate it.
I've actually done some research on this. There's a document in the Suffolk Record Office from 1906 describing mysterious knocking sounds years before Price showed up.
You're not rationalizing. This is genuinely why a lot of people get into nature-based hobbies. Paranormal research just adds the 'mystery' element which makes it more engaging than regular nature...
Visiting Pendle Hill this weekend with some mates who think I'm mental for being interested in the witch trials. But honestly, the energy up there is peculiar.
I've been following the Rendlesham incident for decades (like many of you, I'm sure), and I just received a batch of previously unreleased documents through the National Archives' latest digital...