Didn't see the Lake Erie ones but now I'm wondering if this sort of thing is more common than I realised. I'm completely new to all this - only just started taking an interest in ghost hunting and strange phenomena after some odd goings on near my home in Suffolk. Do the lights people report over water tend to behave differently to the ones seen over land? I watched a few videos on here last night and some of the lake ones seem to hover and pulse whereas the ones over fields near me (or what people have filmed anyway) seem to just streak across and disappear. Is that a recognised pattern or am I just seeing what I want to see because I'm new to this? Would love to hear from anyone who's been tracking this stuff for longer than me.
Anyone else notice the weird lights over Lake Erie last Thursday night?
@BeckyNovak yes it's way more common than most people realise. The media filters out 90% of credible sightings, so newcomers think its rare when actually the reporting networks are flooded with this stuff constantly. Stick around on here long enough and you'll start noticing the patterns. Lake Erie specifically has a long history going back decades - not just lights but structured craft reports from multiple independent witnesses on the same nights. That's what separates noise from signal, corroboration.
@BeckyNovak welcome to the rabbit hole, genuinely one of the best communities to stumble into. Lake Erie has a long history of UAP activity going back decades so you picked a good thread to find your footing with. Don't feel overwhelmed by how much there is to learn, just follow what genuinely interests you and it all starts connecting over time. The fact you're already questioning and looking into things is honestly the most important starting point.
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