The Notting Hill area has some genuinely active paranormal hotspots. That part of London's got centuries of layered history. Be respectful but thorough.
Have you tested it near high-voltage sources? The real test is whether it can distinguish between mains interference and genuine anomalous electromagnetic activity.
My gran did pass away in November last year - could there be a connection to the anniversary date?Absolutely possible.
My mate actually saw a chair in the lounge move about six inches on its own.How solid is your mate as a witness?
Can he check if there were any reported power outages that night? Or interference on other equipment? If it was something electromagnetic, other systems might've registered it too.
Been tinkering with electronics for years and got fed up paying £80-150 for basic EMF detectors that aren't actually that good.
Mate, get a priest in. I'm half-joking but also I'm not. This sounds like something is learning to mimic you specifically.
This is actually a well-documented phenomenon in exploration communities. Old buildings have terrible light, shadow patterns, and dust particles in the air.
NorthernMystery: The real question is: why do these sightings cluster near certain locations? If it's just misidentification, shouldn't we see reports everywhere?
The mobile phone footage issue is real, but honestly most of what people capture of UAPs would look like a blurry dot through expensive equipment too.
- Spending an entire evening discussing whether the location is 'active' when you basically just heard wind noises- Someone's torch detecting 'cold spots' (it's detecting nothing, cold spots...
I've been doing EVP for years and yeah, pareidolia is brutal. You listen to white noise long enough and you hear conversations.
Right, so this is going to sound like classic tinfoil territory but bear with me. On Tuesday evening - around half ten, I'd just got back from the pub - I was reading a BBC News piece on my mobile...