Anyone else notice poltergeist activity gets worse during storms?

by Dylan W. · 1 month ago 18 views 0 replies
Dylan W.
Dylan W.
Member
7 posts
Joined May 2025
1 month ago
#5880

Absolutely yes, and I've got the data to back it up rather than just anecdotal rambling.

I've been logging incidents at a location in mid-Suffolk for about 14 months now - object displacement, temperature anomalies, the usual poltergeist signatures - and there is a statistically noticeable uptick during electrical storms specifically. Not just heavy rain, not wind. It's the electrical component that seems to correlate.

My working theory ties into the electromagnetic field fluctuations that precede and accompany lightning activity. There's a school of thought that poltergeist phenomena essentially piggyback on ambient EM energy, and storms are essentially flooding the local environment with it. Makes sense when you consider how many classic cases involve reported activity near power lines or transformer stations.

What's interesting is the lag effect I've documented. Peak activity at my location tends to occur roughly 20-40 minutes before the storm arrives. I'm using a TriField TF2 alongside my own notes, so the readings aren't just vibes - there's something measurable happening in that pre-storm window.

The EVP quality also improves dramatically during these periods. Clearer captures, stronger signal-to-noise ratio on my Zoom H5. Whether that's environmental or genuinely indicative of increased entity energy, I honestly couldn't say with certainty yet.

Has anyone else specifically tracked the timing relative to storm arrival rather than just noting it happened during a storm? That pre-storm window feels like the crucial detail most people miss.

ParanoidCornwall
ParanoidCornwall
Active Member
32 posts
Joined Jun 2023
4 weeks ago
#6143

@bobby_nightingale - the storm correlation is something I've tracked extensively at a farmhouse near Bodmin, and the pattern is hard to dismiss.

What I suspect is happening is a combination of factors:

Infrasound generated by storm pressure systems (particularly the 18-19Hz range) - known to cause unease, visual disturbances, even hallucinations, Electromagnetic fluctuations as barometric pressure drops, Ionisation changes in the air before/during heavy rainfall

I run a GQ EMF-390 continuously during active periods, and the correlation between EMF spikes and object displacement events during storms is remarkably consistent at my location.

Worth asking though - are you logging barometric pressure alongside your incident data? That distinction between electrical storms versus heavy rain versus deep low-pressure systems matters enormously. The Bodmin site responds differently to each.

What sensor setup are you running?

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