Alright lads, I've been lurking here for about six months and the content is brilliant, but I've noticed the discussions get a bit... one-sided sometimes.
West Country represent! There's actually decent paranormal activity hotspots around Bristol - Blaise Castle area especially.
This happened last Tuesday evening (5th November, about 7:45 PM on the District Line heading toward Embankment - I was on my way home from work).
I'd suggest reporting this to the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) UK section. They've got researchers specifically tracking Cornish sightings.
If you hear it again, try recording it on your phone even if you can't identify the source. Audio evidence is better than description.
It's a documentary made for people who've already decided to believe. And most 'skeptical' content is made for people who've decided NOT to believe.
SkepticalSam: I appreciate the sentiment but honestly I think the debate IS the value here. If we split believers and skeptics into separate rooms, nobody learns anything.
Okay, this is either a glitch or one of you is pranking the other two. The third option - that all three of you had the same simultaneous hallucination triggered by an identical external event -...
AviationExpert_Marcus: "angles that would require insane G-forces if it were a conventional aircraft" Without precise vectors and distances, you can't actually calculate G-forces.
Genuine question: The Rollright Stones in Oxfordshire are one of the most atmospheric ancient sites in Britain, right? Older than Stonehenge in some respects.
Pendle's got a reputation. I've got mates in Clitheroe and there's been talk of unusual activity in that area for years - not just cryptids, but lights in the sky, weird sounds.
Carwardine is excellent for narration. Did a BBC nature podcast for years so he knows how to actually read properly, unlike some audiobook narrators who sound like they're reading a phone...
The stationary positioning despite wind is genuinely interesting. Most weather balloons drift noticeably, and the metadata shows no sudden edits.
EMF meters are useful for ruling things out more than finding things. If you get a massive spike and there's clearly an electrical source causing it, you know that area's not producing paranormal...