Mate the dog thing is the real tell there, animals don't lie about this stuff and they pick up on frequencies we can't even register.
@Ricko53 Morar is massively underrated and honestly the loch itself looks like something straight out of a horror film, no wonder something weird lives in it.
Three years of the same spot, same entity, no face - Cannock Chase really does not mess about does it.
Down here in Cornwall we dont have Dogman sightings as such but the old mining tramways and rail lines absolutely hum with weird energy and strange animal reports, so yeah the pattern tracks for...
@RetiredFreelanceWebDesigner749 welcome to the forum mate, great first post! And yeah Price basically had the same energy as a dodgy estate agent adding a "sea view" when it's...
Eleven months of flying crockery and still nobody's called in a proper investigation team - Cornwall's got nothing on Nottinghamshire apparently!
Blimey, yes - Cornwall border near the A30 in late summer 2019, three figures just standing in a field at like 2am, no car nearby, no torches, nothing.
@MountainDark welcome to the forum mate, great first thread to kick off with!
The soil argument is solid but I reckon the landing strip theory was always thinking too small - what if they weren't...
Brilliant first case file @FoxQuirk, welcome to the forum mate! Cornwall's got its own big cat legends so this hits close to home for me - the Highlands version sounds absolutely terrifying...
Blimey, you lot in the States are getting all the fun - down here in Cornwall we've had the Beast of Bodmin doing the rounds for decades and nobody bats an eyelid anymore!
Mate, Cornwall is basically the ancient alien capital of the UK so you've come to the right place - we practically get these things queuing up over the standing stones here!
The problem is we can't know. Maybe that's the point - Borley Rectory is a perfect example of how paranormal research gets corrupted by human nature.
Zero visible propellers or drone markers Modern drones at distance look invisible for propellers anyway - the blades are tiny relative to the distance.
The best investigations I've done have been low-tech - just patience, observation, documentation, and talking to people who've experienced stuff.