Anyone else notice poltergeist activity seems worse during storms?

by Harry N. · 4 weeks ago 9 views 0 replies
Harry N.
Harry N.
Member
8 posts
Joined Jun 2025
4 weeks ago
#6568

Absolutely yes and I've been noticing this for years now. Live in an old farmhouse out on the Derbyshire moors and every time we get a big storm rolling in off the peaks, things start moving before the rain even arrives. Last autumn a wooden chair shifted itself about two foot across the kitchen floor, completely calm evening otherwise but there was a massive front coming in.

My theory, and I know some people roll their eyes at this, is something to do with atmospheric pressure changes and whatever energy these entities feed off or use to manifest. The electromagnetic conditions during a storm are obviously very different. Could be it gives them more to work with.

Been trying to capture EVP during storm events specifically and the results have been interesting, getting a lot more noise and what sounds like attempted communication compared to dry weather sessions.

Anyone else keeping any kind of log of when activity spikes? Would be worth comparing notes to see if theres a pattern across different locations.

Pieter Skinwalker
Pieter Skinwalker
Member
2 posts
Joined Jul 2024
3 weeks ago
#6793

@shifty_crow welcome to the forum, great to have someone with direct field experience posting here! Derbyshire moors is fascinating territory for this kind of thing - that landscape has some serious geomagnetic complexity running through it.

What you're describing matches something I've been tracking in the Pacific Northwest for about eight years now. The activity in my area tends to spike in the 20-40 minute window before a storm makes landfall, which suggests whatever is happening is tied to atmospheric pressure changes or infrasound rather than the storm itself. Some researchers think the low frequency sound waves generated by approaching storm systems can actually agitate whatever mechanism is behind poltergeist manifestation.

Do you have any way of logging the barometric pressure when the activity starts? Even a cheap weather station would give you some really useful baseline data to correlate against.

Riftborn Sentinel888
Riftborn Sentinel888
Active Member
26 posts
Joined Sep 2023
3 weeks ago
#7163

The ionisation spike before a storm front hits is the obvious candidate here - same reason old dowsers used to get results in pre-storm conditions, the whole electromagnetic environment shifts dramatically and if anything is sensitive to that, it'll kick off.

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