Forteana

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For discussion of everything run and uncanny from cryptozoology (mysterious or out-of-place animals), UFOs, high strangeness, etc. Following in the footsteps of Charles Fort and all those inspired by him. As this community is on Feddit.uk it takes a British approach to things but it needn't be restricted to the UK - if it's weird and unusual it probably has a home here.

Elsewhere in the Fediverse:

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King Charles has an ongoing fascination with UFOs and the possibility of alien life, a new documentary has sensationally claimed.

The documentary 'The King of UFOs' also explores reports of the monarch's inherited secret library of books and files on the phenomena plus other subjects such as crop circles and the paranormal.

It also suggests the late Prince Philip and Queen Elizabeth II communicated with UFO believers several times.

And now King Charles is exploring his own interest in the fascinating topic, according to the documentary.

One of the most bizarre claims made in the new production is that the then Prince Charles was seen piloting an experimental "UFO-style craft" in Canada in 1975.

Ufologist and filmmaker Mark Christopher Lee said: "Retired Police CID detective, and now owner of The Great British UFO Learning Centre, John Hanson had regular correspondence with Prince Phillip and The Queen and states that they had their own library of UFO and paranormal books."

He told Express.co.uk: "Letters between Hanson and the Queen and Prince Phillip, shown in the film, say they will 'add the book that John sent to them to their own collection/library'."

Nick Pope, who investigated UFOs for the UK Ministry of Defence (MOD) until 2009, said: "The Royal Family has been interested in UFOs for decades, but this was also a matter of extreme sensitivity as in some ways, the situation was almost counter to the government's position on this, or it was difficult to gel with it.

...

"Prince Philip was very much at the forefront of royal interest in this, although arguably, he was introduced to this by Earl Mountbatten, his uncle.

"(Prince Philip) had a large collection of UFO books. He subscribed to Flying Saucer Review and a number of other publications, but it was all done carefully, so not to take a subscription and say 'please send to Buckingham Palace.'

...

"As well as looking at an alleged UFO landing and alien visitation on Lord Louis Mountbatten’s estate in England (allegedly witnessed by one of his own employees), the film investigates the late Queen and Prince Phillip’s interest in UFOs and crop circles.

"The film has exclusive access to unreleased archives and interviews with witnesses and also explores the extraordinary claims that the then Prince Charles piloted an experimental UFO craft in Canada in 1975.

Archive

Previously: Wild claims King Charles 'flew UFO to save lives' in secret military mission

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Vasile Gorgos was 63 years old when he left his home in eastern Romania to go on a short business trip.

As a cattle farmer and trader, Vasile often made such excursions and, this time, had bought his train ticket in advance.

The difference here was that on this fateful day in 1991, he didn’t return home.

Knowing that he was due to come back the same day, his family immediately called the police who launched a search effort.

But after days turned into weeks, then months, then years, with neither sight or sign of Vasile, his loved ones were forced to assume the worst.

With no leads or traces to follow, they suspected foul play, but endless questions were left unanswered.

But then, on 29 August, 2021, three decades after Vasile’s disappearance, his family was faced with the ultimate plot twist.

A car stopped in front of their home – the same one they’d had for the past 30 years – and out stepped an old man, looking confused.

That man was none other than 93-year-old Vasile, wearing the same clothes he left in all those years ago. His pocket even contained the same train ticket he was due to travel with.

The car allegedly raced off before anyone had a chance to question the driver, but when asked where he’d been, a baffled Vasile replied that he’d been “at home”, Medium reports.

He subsequently underwent a thorough medical examination but doctors concluded that he was in remarkably good health.

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Police are investigating a strange case involving two suspects who allegedly shapeshifted and became cats in order to escape from the Meyerton Police Station holding cells on Tuesday morning.

The suspects, brothers Omari and Ali Mustafa, were among 11 suspects who were arrested for possession of hijacked good.

Omari has since been rearrested, while his brother remains on the run.

In the summary of events given to Gauteng provincial commissioner Tommy Mthombeni, police say the two men allegedly disappeared while being processed in the holding cells.

The statement reads:

The cell commander, Warrant Officer Phakathi, and Constable Mahloko were also in cells locked themselves in while the suspects were charged (sic). When it was a turn to charge this other [two] suspects, known as Mustafa Ali and Omari Mustafa, their names were called but they couldn't be found. Among those suspects, there is a suspect known as Erick Tumbulu - who informed the police that he saw when these two suspects made a strange like owl bird noise, turned into cats and they escaped while the gate was still locked, he was prepared to even give a statement.

...

A senior police officer, on condition of anonymity, said it was very suspicious that the suspects waited to arrive at the police holdings cells before they could turn into cats.

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A "mysterious monolith" has appeared in a desert north of Las Vegas.

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department says the shiny, reflective structure – similar to one found in Utah years ago – was spotted by its search and rescue unit near Gass Peak over the weekend.

"We see a lot of weird things when people go hiking like not being prepared for the weather, not bringing enough water... but check this out!" police wrote on X alongside an image of the monolith.

The discovery comes months after a hiker in Wales captured a video of a mysterious "UFO"-like monolith on top of a hillside along the country’s border with England.

...

Similar monoliths also have been found in Belgium, Romania and the Isle of Wight – an island in the English Channel.

In November 2020, one of the monoliths, estimated at between 10 feet and 12 feet high, was found by Utah state wildlife employees who were counting sheep from a helicopter.

...

Then a week later, another monolith was discovered in Atascadero, California, which is north of Los Angeles.

It’s unclear who is behind the placement of the monoliths. A New Mexico artist collective claimed responsibility years ago.

Archive link

Previously: monolith in Powys

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The source of a mystery humming sound which has plagued people living in Omagh may now have been identified – but is not being made public.

People in the County Tyrone town first started to report a persistent humming that was keeping them them awake in the second half of last year.

A Fermanagh and Omagh District Council investigation has now ended.

John Boyle, the council’s director of community and wellbeing, said it had been “complex” but had been able to “hone in on a specific spot”.

Mr Boyle said the noise “wasn’t audible every night", and was linked to atmospheric conditions, making the investigation very difficult.

“We were able to hone in on a specific spot, and undertook a targeted screening exercise with a number of industrial businesses using equipment on a 24-hour basis," he said.

“However, a particular premises became the focus, and environmental health officers engaged with the management.

“While nothing was absolutely concluded, the noise did cease in a sense, but we will keep the complaint open and under review over the next number of months."

He told the council’s regeneration and community committee the council had received a total of 11 hum complaints.

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A junior doctor has ended up with a new pet after a goldfish mysteriously appeared in his garden.

Dr Ben Beska, 33, from Newcastle, said he saw a group of magpies squawking in his garden on Saturday and went out to investigate when he spotted the fish lying in the grass.

The NHS cardiology doctor retrieved the fish and placed it in a freezer drawer filled with water, and intends to keep it as a pet.

"It's pretty mad really, finding a fish on the lawn. I have no idea how it got in the garden," Dr Beska said.

...

Dr Beska suspected a bird had picked up the fish from a nearby pond and dropped it while carrying it away.

However, he said, there were no ponds close by and he thought it must therefore have travelled a "reasonable distance".

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For the past four and a half years, I’ve immersed myself in spaces occupied by conspiracy theorists.

What began as an attempt to understand the QAnon conspiracy movement quickly expanded into an exploration of a wide range of alternative belief systems.

These include, but are not limited to, discredited intellectuals who promote race science; butthole sunners who believe that by harnessing the sun’s rays, they live longer; and semen retention enthusiasts, which is a practice that discourages ejaculation as a way to boost testosterone levels.

Most researchers have understood conspiracy theories and alternative beliefs as being a product of poor education or misinformation spread on social media. But recent research has found that support for them exists regardless of educational level or income. Some of the most privileged people in U.S. society hold deeply conspiratorial beliefs, as do sports fans, yogis and video game enthusiasts.

While some many say that believing in UFOs or Bigfoot may not be that big of a problem, these ideas can lead to real-world harms. Butthole sunning, for example, has been linked with cancer.

...

Certain stigmatized narratives can also become tools wielded by politicians and media influencers who will say or do anything to make money and gain power.

For example, in their book “Conspirituality: How New Age Conspiracy Theories Became a Health Threat,” Derek Berry, Matthew Remski and Julien Walker document the ways in which contemporary New Age spiritualism has been hijacked by social media influencers, who have then gone on to promote vaccine misinformation and foment government mistrust.

Social media platforms provide financial incentives for individuals creating the most engaging content. Of course, what’s engaging is not necessarily what’s accurate or truthful. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, many of these influencers became popular by suggesting that they had “sacred” or “secret” knowledge on how to defeat the virus.

It’s one way people can go from embracing seemingly harmless ideas, like Bigfoot, to becoming open to more radical beliefs like the Great Replacement Theory, which is the conspiracy theory that illegal immigrants are colluding with Democrats to change the racial demographics of America and, in doing so, shape future elections.

The intersection of politics and alternative beliefs is not a recent phenomenon.

Some of these beliefs, like the imaginary continent of Atlantis, were used by the Nazi party to create a link to a mythical pure race. Indeed, a key component of the Nazi’s rise to power was the promotion of ideas that today would be described as New Age mysticism – a spiritual movement that emphasizes magical experiences and the notion that spiritual forces connect everything in the universe.

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Aliens have not been discovered in South America after all. The doll-like figures, photos of which went viral online last year, are just that – dolls, according to scientists.

The controversial artifacts were seized by Peruvian customs agents in October and intended for "a Mexican citizen," the Associated Press reported.

Mexican journalist and self-described "UFOlogist" Jaime Maussan brought similar unidentified fraudulent objects in front of the Mexican congress last September, claiming that they had been recovered near Peru's ancient Nazca Lines and dated over 700 years old.

...

Experts with Peru's prosecutor's office analyzed the seized dolls, and forensic archaeologist Flavio Estrada presented the results of their findings at a press conference for the Peruvian Ministry of Culture on Friday.

"They are not extraterrestrials, they are not intraterrestrials, they are not a new species, they are not hybrids, they are none of those things that this group of pseudo-scientists who for six years have been presenting with these elements," Estrada said.

The humanoid three-fingered dolls consisted of earth-bound animal and human bones assembled with modern synthetic glue, Estrada elaborated. It isn't the first time Maussan has had an otherworldly corpse debunked — he made similar claims in 2017.

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Now, a new study, published in the journal Resuscitation, adds more evidence that people may experience life’s memories flash before their eyes during the near-death experience following cardiac arrest.

The research, led by those from the New York University Grossman School of Medicine, assessed reports from survivors of cardiac arrest who described lucid death experiences that occurred while they were seemingly unconscious.

Fewer than 10 per cent of the 567 patients studied, who received CPR in the hospital, recovered sufficiently to be discharged, scientists said.

Four in 10 patients who survived, however, recalled some degree of consciousness during CPR that could not be captured by standard measures.

...

The new study finds these experiences of death could be different from hallucinations, delusions, illusions, dreams or CPR-induced consciousness.

Researchers suspect the brain’s processes in such people during this state may be opening access to “new dimensions of reality”, including a lucid recall of all stored memories from early childhood to death.

These new dimensions, according to the study, include experiences of people’s deeper consciousness such as all their memories, thoughts, intentions and actions towards others “from a moral and ethical perspective”.

....

However, scientists agree that research until now has “neither proved nor disproved” the meaning of patients’ experiences and claims of awareness in relation to death.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/5049655

NASA hasn’t found any evidence that UAPs / UFOs are extra terrestrial in nature, most UAP reports can be explained as other phenomenon logically.

Administrator Nelson says if ever NASA does find evidence of this “you bet your boots” it will be disclosed public

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/5039587

Earthquake lights can take several different forms, according to a chapter on the phenomenon coauthored by Derr and published in the 2019 edition of the Encyclopedia of Solid Earth Geophysics.

Sometimes, the lights may appear similar to ordinary lightning, or they may be like a luminous band in the atmosphere akin to polar aurora. Other times they resemble glowing spheres floating midair. They may also look like small flames flickering or creeping along or near the ground or larger flames emerging from the ground.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/5016160

Two words = Fraud >> Jaime Maussan

From the article:

Maussan is a Mexican journalist and UFOlogist who has nearly 1 million subscribers to his "MaussanTV" YouTube, which he calls "the number 1 channel in the world in investigating the UFO phenomenon, science, technology, and the investigation of space and climate change."

I regret to inform you that this is not the first time Maussan has rolled out “humanoid” mummies from Nazca, and it’s not even the first time he’s done so in front of a country’s legislature. In 2017, Maussan and Gaia, a streaming service that offers “consciousness-expanding videos,” published a video called “Special Report: Unearthing Nazca.” In that video, Maussan and Gaia show an alien-looking mummy that appears to be larger than the ones he showed Tuesday in Mexico. That kicked off a recurring frenzy in the UFOlogy world. In 2018, Maussan gave a very similar presentation to the one he gave Tuesday to the Peruvian Congress during a four-hour hearing called “Mummies of Nazca.” In a History Channel series called “The Mummies of Nazca,” Maussan showed what appear to be the same mummies he showed Tuesday, and a 2019 documentary called Alien Mummies of Peru also followed many of these same mummies.

This is all to say that Maussan and his mummies are a pretty known entity in the world of UFOlogy. In 2018, Live Science published a debunking in which several scientists suggested that the mummies appeared to be made up of manipulated human bones, a finding that was also published by the YouTube channel Scientists Against Myths. In 2017, the Atlantic did a deep dive about why "Peruvian archaeologists are tired of debunking claims of extraterrestrial influence on human history" and how "pre-Columbian bodies are once again being used as evidence for extraterrestrial life."

Jason Colavito has been following Maussan for years and posts about the recent claims:

Longtime UFO huckster Jaime Maussan showed the Mexican Congress two alleged “fossilized” alien bodies whose “DNA” was one-third “unidentified” in a presentation attended by Mexican and U.S. officials. Maussan claimed the bodies had been recovered near Cusco, Peru and had been carbon-dated to at least 700 years ago. They looked very much like crude clay sculptures of Steven Spielberg’s E.T., and an x-ray showed small bones embedded within them. (Previous, similar fakes were made from the bones of human fetuses and/or animals, some looted from graves.) The bodies were first publicized in 2017. At the time, the World Congress on Mummy Studies declared them a fraud.

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After starting in October last year, the team chaired by astrophysicist David Spergel of the Simons Foundation, has spent nine months laying the groundwork for NASA and other organizations to conduct their own research.

"The primary objective of this incredible team of experts is not to go back and look at grainy footage of UAPs but rather to give us a roadmap to guide us for future analysis," explained Daniel Evans, the NASA official in charge of the study, during an update meeting in May.

The media briefing at NASA's headquarters in Washington is scheduled for 14:00 UTC on 14 September 2023 (10:00 EDT on 14 September and 00:00 on 15 September in AEST). You can watch it live below.

https://www.youtube.com/live/idJKLP5hcuQ

That's 15:00 GMT tomorrow for us Brits.

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Not really forteana, but forteana adjacent.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/4887441

Note: I'm not seeing anything in these videos that suggests they are anything more than electrical wires falling or transformers exploding. Yet, the media sources are incompetent and credulous in saying they are mysterious. For more on EQLs, see https://spookygeology.com/earthquake-lights/

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It was February 2023.

The month began with a Chinese surveillance balloon that both startled and puzzled politicians and civilians alike.

It was symbolic - the Chinese had broken into America's own backyard.

Cue, the political and media pressure - it was swiftly shot down when clear from built-up areas.

Then in quick succession, three smaller unknown objects were taken down, thought to be a potential threat to air traffic.

All were shot down at the command of the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).

The events were a huge wake up call - not only were the Chinese operating in America’s back yard, but so were unknowns.

Their origin? Unknown. Their operators? Unknown.

When it comes to 21st-century warfare, America, as the world's dominant superpower, can deal with most potential global threats. From under the ocean to within Earth's atmosphere, there is nowhere it cannot project its immense power.

That is with the exception of Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) - objects which appear to act with impunity without any consequence over military ranges. Like a soccer goal left wide open with the goalkeeper nowhere to be seen, these occurrences are like loud open invitations to unknowns and enemies to score a goal against the most sophisticated and heavily-funded defense apparatus on the planet.

...

The situation faced on U.S. military test ranges is alarming and plays a big role in explaining why Congress created the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO).

But perhaps the larger issue to tackle in terms of UAP is the inconsistent and uncoordinated response to incursions.

...

There now needs to be a consistent approach, and the correct way ahead is reforming how U.S. skies are protected.

The current situation is unsustainable, much like a pre-9/11 world where intelligence agencies were not coordinating effectively.

The same, but on a larger scale, is occurring when it comes to UAP.

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cross-posted from: https://radiation.party/post/104584

[ comments | sourced from HackerNews ]

Paul Landis was one of two Secret Service agents tasked with guarding first lady Jacqueline Kennedy on November 22, 1963—the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. In a new book, The Final Witness, to be published in October, Landis claims to have seen something that afternoon that he had never publicly admitted before. His secret, coming to light only now, will certainly reorient how historians and laymen perceive that grave and harrowing event. His account also raises questions about whether there might have been a second gunman in Dallas that day.

...

Landis was approximately 15 feet away when Kennedy was mortally wounded, a close witness to unspeakable horror.

That horror was compounded when the president’s limo reached Parkland Memorial Hospital, where Landis and Clint Hill tried to coax Jackie to release the president, whom, by that point, she had cradled in her lap. Climbing into the back seat area, which had been spattered with blood and brains and bullet fragments, both agents, according to their subsequent accounts, gently encouraged the first lady to let go.

As she did—standing up to follow Hill and another agent, Roy Kellerman, who lifted her husband’s body onto a gurney and raced into the hospital—Landis saw and did something that he has kept secret for six decades, he says now. He claims he spotted a bullet resting on the top of the back of the seat. He says he picked it up, put it in his pocket, and brought it into the hospital. Then, upon entering Trauma Room No. 1 (at that stage, he was the only nonmedical person in the room besides Mrs. Kennedy, and both stayed for only a short period), he insists, he placed the bullet on a white cotton blanket on the president’s stretcher.

This secret, as it turns out, may upend key conclusions of the Warren Commission, the body created by President Lyndon Johnson to investigate the assassination.

The sad fact is that Landis—though required to provide his version of events to the Secret Service (and, in a second report, to what would become the Warren Commission)—never sat for an interview before the FBI and never testified before the commission itself. He left the Secret Service months after the assassination and before the panel had finished its work and issued its report.

...

At Parkland Memorial Hospital, on the day of the assassination, an additional intact bullet was discovered on a stretcher. Through testing, commission investigators determined that the copper-jacketed, 6.5-millimeter bullet matched the rifling of the Mannlicher-Carcano that had been abandoned on the sixth floor of the depository. Testing on the bullet fragments resulted in a similar finding.

One key point to raise here concerns a fundamental underpinning of the Warren Commission report: the supposition that the retrieved intact bullet had been discovered on Governor Connally’s stretcher, not on Kennedy’s. It was from this assumption, in part, that the commission reached its pivotal conclusion: The available evidence indicated that “the bullet found on the Governor’s stretcher”—the single bullet—“could have caused all his wounds.” Over time, critics have referred to it as the “pristine” or “magic” bullet.

In his book, Paul Landis now says that when Jackie Kennedy stood up to enter Parkland, he looked over and saw that a bullet was improbably sitting on top of the rear seat of the limo, right around the spot where the limo’s detachable roof, which had been removed that day, would have otherwise been affixed to the trunk. Also, amid the blood and gore, Landis remembers, were two bullet fragments on the back seat, next to where Jackie had been sitting.

Landis contends that he reached over, picked up the lone bullet nestled in the crevice, and decided to place it in his pocket, mindful that if it were left there, precariously, it might be overlooked, pilfered by an unauthorized passerby, or misplaced once the president’s body was removed. Accompanying the first lady into Parkland, he says, he brought the bullet with him and, without conferring with Mrs. Kennedy, his fellow agents, or hospital staffers, placed it on JFK’s stretcher, thinking it needed to be with the body for the autopsy. As such, he contradicts a key linchpin underlying the findings of the Warren Commission. The bullet—as Landis tells it—was not from Connally’s stretcher.

From Landis’s description, three lines of inquiry emerge.

First, how did a largely intact bullet wind up on the ledge of the back seat, where JFK had been riding when he was shot?

Second, if Landis’s account is accurate, could Lee Harvey Oswald—who shot the president from a vantage point behind the motorcade—have acted alone, as the Warren Commission theorized?

And finally, why did Landis decide to keep this information to himself for six decades?

...

What does all this mean when considering whether Lee Harvey Oswald, as proposed by the Warren Commission, was the lone assassin? It certainly raises the stakes that another shooter might have been involved.

First, if the “pristine” bullet did not travel through both Kennedy and Connally, somehow ending up on Connally’s stretcher, then it stands to reason that Connally might have actually been hit by a separate bullet, coming from above and to the rear. The FBI recreation suggests that Oswald would not have had enough time to get off two separate shots so quickly as to hit Connally after wounding the president in the back. A second shooter must be considered.

And what about the bullet wound in the front of Kennedy’s neck? In one of the earliest critiques of the Warren Commission report, Josiah Thompson, author of Six Seconds in Dallas, proposed, not unreasonably, that the front-neck wound might have come from a bullet or bone fragment that was driven down and exited through the president’s throat from the final blast to his skull.

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With the age of the home has come its intriguing qualities, one of those being a series of bricked up doorways believed to lead to tunnels in the cellar of the house, as well as the c[e]ll bars in the cellar.

Another is the fact the house may be haunted. She added: "My house is haunted but not in the Airbnb because that's an extension.

"It's in our cellar, we catch them mimicking our names and the dogs growl at the cellar and won't go down.

"It doesn't happen that often. The last time it happened I was in the kitchen, I heard my husband shout Dee and I turned and he wasn't there he was in the garden.

"Things go missing and come back when we asked for it. It's a really fun house to live in."

NB: copy editted because they couldn't be arsed.

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Far from being an invasion of black panthers in Blighty, a former zookeeper believes the culprit is a creature that most of us are already pretty familiar with, kind of.

Hayley de Ronde told the Star she thinks people have actually been seeing the super rare melanistic fox.

She told the outlet that there are over 400 black foxes roaming the streets and countryside.

"If somebody believes they have seen a big cat more often than not it's going to be a more regular animal," de Ronde claimed.

"If they are adamant they have seen a big cat then there's a high chance that it might be a fox instead – that they did see something unusual but it isn't quite what they thought."

According to Black Foxes UK, the animal is pretty rare for the UK.

However, over the past few years, there's been a rise in melanistic traits in the UK fox population, with more and more of the black foxes being spotted.

But de Ronde also said that other animals have been confused for big cats too, not just these rare foxes.

"Once you point it out to people what it is [foxes] they suddenly see what you're seeing," she said.

"They're not only foxes – they can be dogs, cats, I believe a few cows get confused."

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I was not looking directly out a window, but I saw a brilliant flash of light outside and heard an associated boom. I noted that the light and the sound were simultaneous, which means that the strike was very close. Strangely, the thunder sound did not include ongoing rumble but resembled a gunshot. Later I looked around the area to find where this close-by lightning had struck, but I found nothing.

Then, discussing the event with my wife, I learned that she had been looking directly out the large glass windows of our pool room. She saw a ball of bright yellow light come down from above the trees to about six feet above the ground and then approach the house. She feared that it would hit the house, but it vanished with the explosive sound.

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/2140419

As mentioned previously , the cursed painting returns because someone realised there was money to be made from the power of evil:

Now it is being offered on eBay with bids nearing £1,000. Half of the net sale will be donated to charity.

The framed portrait was for sale at the HARC (Hastings Advice and Representation Centre) charity shop in London Road, St Leonards, with a price tag of £20.

It was bought by a woman who promptly returned it, complaining that the little girl’s eyes seemed to be following her around the room. She told staff at the shop “I never want to see the damned thing again.”

Staff at the shop displayed the picture in the window with a label saying ‘possibly’ cursed. It was bought by another woman, Zoe Elliott-Brown, from St Leonards, but she too returned it saying she could not live with it. Staff put the painting back in the window with a label saying ‘She’s back! Sold twice and returned twice. Are you brave enough?’

Zoe decided to re-buy the painting and has now put it up on auction with bids standing at £940 at the time of writing this. It was being advertised on the same page as other ‘haunted’ painting, a Stone Age rock and an Egyptian Ushabti statue.

HARC charity in Hastings will receive 50% of net profits from its sale.

Here is the eBay listing. Don't forget, a cut of the sale goes to charity, so good will win out eventually. Until the curse strikes the new owners.

And if anyone is curious, here are the Stone Age rock (you can tell the age from material, probably) and the ushabti. I can neither confirm or deny that they are sources of bowel-liquidising evil. The same cannot be said for this cursed painting:

Victorian artwork extremely morbid in nature. 3 children having a funeral for their dead cat. I do not know if this is a painting? Litho? Or what. I also do not know if under matting its signed? I purchased this as a cursed Object from a old gypsy man that was a friend of my grandfather's back when I first started cleansing homes in 1963. I have enjoyed it and decided to pass it along for someone else to love. I have blessed it but it has a very heavy aura. This piece is shrouded in mystery. Sometimes their faces look sad, other times very sinister. There has been times when I was scrying, the mirror hung next to it, and I swear the children moved. Nothing bad has ever come from it. If you want I'm more than happy to bless it again before shipping. In the off chance I'm also willing to remove the blessing but AT YOUR OWN RISK. I am not responsible for mishandling of this cursed Object. Please be aware of what you are buying. Art wise its extremely beautiful.

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The presence of 'big cats' in the West Country was discussed at a special meeting of witnesses and experts. The gathering was organised by Rick Minter, who runs Big Cats Conversations, to celebrate his his 100th podcast.

Big cat incidents from across the region featured on the podcast include 'a panther' disturbed by the witness as it was cornering a fox, a metre-long black cat 12 metres up a tree devouring young grey squirrels in their nest, cats resembling black leopards seen with smaller ones presumed to be cubs, sightings and reported calls of tan coloured pumas, and cats resembling the Eurasian lynx, Britain’s former larger native cat.

...

“A bone from that carcass had tooth marks pitted into it, assumed to be from the consuming animal. The Royal Agricultural University is examining that sample in its study of ‘tooth pits’. The students use a forensic process to gauge the shape and pattern of tooth marks from leopard and puma sized cats. This follows up published work in Wales in 2007 which confirmed that a tooth pit sample on a sheep bone was from a large cat the size of a leopard or puma.

...

And DNA from a black hair caught on a barbwire fence following a sheep attack has offered 'definitive proof' big cats are roaming the West Country countryside. The strands were sent off for testing after being recovered from a farm in Gloucestershire where there had been some "unusual predatory" activity. Suspicion was raised when video footage of a large black animal was also captured only a few miles away from where the sample was taken.

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A team of deep sea explorers visiting an extinct volcano found something resembling a golden egg 250 miles off the coast of southern Alaska.

The discovery was made Wednesday, Aug. 30, as a NOAA Ocean Exploration team recorded video in “the deep abyssal depths of the Gulf of Alaska.”

There, at a depth of about 2 miles, sat a shiny golden orb — with a perplexing hole in it.

“Something tried to get in ... or to get out,” one researcher observed in a live feed.

In the debate that followed, the team made funny references to everything from the X-Files to classic monster movies. It was ultimately decided a sample of the orb was needed to examine its DNA.

However, caution was advised.

“I just hope when we poke it, something doesn’t decide to come out,” one scientist said. “It’s like the beginning of a horror movie.”

...

“When our collective knowledge can’t identify it, it’s something weird,” one team member concluded. “What kind of an animal would make an egg casing like that?”

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