Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Scary times for pumpkin growers in New England

Associated Press (PORTLAND, Maine) — New England pumpkin growers spent the early summer soaking in rain that heavily damaged their crops.

Now they're facing the frightening prospect that the rest won't be ready before Halloween.

The relentless rain in June and July caused some seedlings to turn to mush in the soil. Harvests were delayed by up to two weeks, meaning pumpkins may not turn orange or grow large enough in time to be shipped.

In Maine, for example, the harvest is expected to be off by about 50 percent.

Federal agriculture economist Gary Lucier says weather also caused sporadic problems in the Midwest. But he said the overall crop will be average in top pumpkin-producing states like Illinois, Pennsylvania, California, Ohio and Michigan.

Pumpkin carving tips with Howdini

Native looks into local ghost stories

Commercial News (DANVILLE) — From the ghosts of coal miners at Grape Creek to paranormal activity around Ellsworth Park, Eddie Cunningham has heard it all and wants to hear even more.

A Danville native, Cunningham is one of the co-founders of the Central Illinois Paranormal Association and is conducting a project to publish a book about the history and hauntings of Vermilion County.

“It’s the mystery of it and an interest in history for me,” Cunningham said. “You can’t have a haunting without some sort of history involved with the location. They go hand in hand.”

At a time when ghost hunting programs have captured TV watchers’ imaginations, Cunningham is looking for the ghost stories — and lore — that surround the buildings, homes and properties throughout Vermilion County.

So far he’s had a pretty good response, with one-time residents of the area calling him from Indiana and California with stories about the county. A former employee from the now demolished St. Elizabeth Hospital contacted Cunningham with descriptions of what he encountered at the hospital.

He’s also heard rumors about other places, including Spring Hill Cemetery, Danville Area Community College and the Hegeler mansion.

Cunningham began the research last winter for the book and said he expects it will take another year to complete.

Writing is only part of Cunningham’s interest in the paranormal. As a member of the CIPA as well as a local representative for the American Ghost Society, Cunningham has been involved in the paranormal for 16 years and taken part in investigations of places in several cities, ranging from Springfield to Peoria.

He said the field of paranormal research is not an exact science.

“In this field, 99 percent of the time you’re not going to get results back,” he said. “In my experience, you experience more than what you can capture evidence-wise.”

Cunningham said CIPA investigators like him merely look into the reports of hauntings with hopes of finding evidence of the paranormal. This generally entails seeking and ruling out all explainable possibilities, such as faulty plumbing or wiring, rodents or even deceit.

To contact the Central Illinois Paranormal Association, send an e-mail to legion421@comcast.net or visit the organization’s Web site at http://www.ci-paranormal.org

Paranormal experts feel alienated by Obama

SF Reporter-- Change may be harder to believe in than extraterrestrial life—at least when it comes to releasing classified records, according to UFOlogists in attendance at Angel Fire’s first Paranormal Symposium.

“The only ‘change’ is the change of opinion among UFOlogists who think that we’re going to get something from Obama,” Dee Gragg, who teaches adult education courses on UFOs at New Mexico State University, says.

Gragg presented a lecture on crop circles at the symposium, held Sept. 11-13 in the small village 25 miles outside Taos. The event drew more than 150 attendees to listen to 10 lectures covering everything from monster hunting to “UFOs and Alternative Energy.” While the speakers disagree on theories and explanations, they largely agree that Obama hasn’t made paranormal research and UFO disclosure as high a priority as they had hoped.

“If you lined up the 17 most important things Obama has to do, [UFOs] wouldn’t make the list,” Gragg says. “Look what he’s got on his plate; he’s not about to take on something like this.”

Right now, that plate is heaped over with health insurance reform. But just as the US lags behind the rest of the Western world on universal coverage, paranormal truth-seekers say the US also trails Europe when it comes to the release of UFO records.

In late August, the British National Archives followed the lead of several other nations, including France and Russia, by releasing 4,000 pages of documents related to UFO reports dating back 15 years. Nick Redfern, a British-born author of more than a dozen books on the paranormal, has reviewed many of the British documents and notes that approximately 90 percent are reports of sightings from citizens and requests for information filed by researchers.

[Read More via Paranormal Daily News]

Nasa: Strange light in evening sky was not a UFO

Morning Call-- Walt Rupnik sat in the backyard of his Breinigsville home on Saturday evening with his wife Diane, enjoying one of the final days of the summer season.

In a flash, things got pretty weird in the early evening sky.

''I was sitting out there grilling chicken and all of a sudden I saw a bright slice of light and then we watched as a triangular shape came out of it,'' the 55-year-old Rupnik said. ''It was the strangest thing we ever saw. The light beamed down out of the sky for 30 to 45 seconds then it went back into the slice and then it was gone. It didn't fly off, it just disappeared.''

Rupnik was among numerous startled Lehigh Valley residents who telephoned or e-mailed news outlets, reporting a similar sighting of a strange light coming from the southern sky.

So what was it? What was this strange beam of light lasting nearly a minute on a picture-perfect weather evening?

NASA officials have the answer.

The lights were caused by the launching of a rocket in Wallops Island, Va., as part of a cloud experiment, officials said.

The space agency said it launched the Black Brant XII around 7:45 p.m. Saturday to gather data on the highest clouds in the Earth's atmosphere.

A number of people along the East Coast -- from as far away as Boston, 380 miles from Wallops Island -- reported seeing the cone-shaped light.

NASA hopes the experiment will provide information on the formation and properties of noctilucent clouds, which occur at high altitudes.

As for Rupnik, he said the lights in the sky were something he can't forget.

''It was like something that you see out of the movies,'' He said.

[via Paranormal Daily News]

SSE Talks - Psi and UFOs: Lessons for Physics

Pennsylvania UFO witnesses learns 'no camera' lesson twice

Examiner.com-- Two Pennsylvania witnesses watched a "circular red light" hovering just above the treeline about one-quarter mile away, according to testimony from the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) database.

Unable to photograph the object, the witnesses decided to watch a movie. But when they looked at the object an hour later, they noticed the trees near the object lit up the color red.
The situation scared the witnesses and they went back inside. This was their second sighting.
The following is the unedited witness statement from MUFON. Please keep in mind that most UFO reports can be explained as something natural or manmade.

PA, September 21, 2009 - Night time abnormal space craft behind girlfriends back yard. MUFON Case # 19533.
I received a text from my on and off again girlfriend. It must of been about 7 or 8p.m. when she texted me. She sent me a few texts that I didn't respond too, but the last one was far too enticing not to respond too.

She wrote "There's a space ship near my back yard."

I thought this was a joke to get me to come over to see her but we did encounter a U.F.O. maybe 5 months before hand that was like a jet but it was vibrant yellow, moved so slow, and made no sound. That one looked identical to the old toy model of the Roswell U.FO. I decided I'd bring my laptop & webcam just in case.

[Read More]

Strange Creature Found in Panama is a Sloth

UFO Digest-- The animal was already dead and decomposing, and the story was concocted by teenagers. The case was debunked last week by members of Brazil's Equipo UFO.

The story became widespread last Thursday, with a subject initially identified with Panama's location of Cerro Azul, involving the alleged death of a creature stoned to death by four adolescents near a lake.

The unidentified creature was described as an alien, as if this classification offered an explanation. According to Panamanian papers, the youngsters were frightened by its appearance and fearful of being attacked, stoned it to death and then left it in a lake.

The worst aspect of the story is that a so-called wildlife expert said that the case was under investigation and that the creature had very odd characteristics.

Events of this type, which fall like parachutes (sic) into the hands of ufologists, have given rise to a new specific area of study in ufology, which will be very useful, employed and treasured: exozoology, that is to say, the study of supposedly alien animals. In this Cerro Azul incident, all that was needed was a comparison of images between the alleged ET and the fauna in the region in question. Observe the creature's mammaries, muzzle, and the arrangement and disposition of the legs.

Yes , dear readers. It is a Preguiza (sloth), more commonly known as bicho preguiza, with a habitat that ranges from Central America to Brazil in six different species. It is a mammal and a member of the families Bradypodidae (three-fingered) and Megalonychidae (two-fingered). The absence of fur and the clearly distended abdomen show that the creature was in an advanced stage of putrefaction, which completely blows away not only the story -- concocted by the teenagers and swallowed whole by the media -- but any extraterrestrial hypothesis.

At most, a second hypothesis would involve the possibility of a fetal Preguiza, but judging from the images circulated, it appears to be too large for a fetus, unless the images were retouched and enlarged to obtain the desired effect.

The expert in question probably rendered an initial opinion in a state of surprise (sic). Unfortunately, these situations have nothing ufological about them and can be swiftly and efficaciously explained, yet they wind up in our Inboxes, obstructing our path, as if we were the oracles -- or trashbins -- of any passing type of "unexplained" material.

Psychic Detectives Allow Murderer to Escape Death Penalty

Live Science.com - Last month I pointed out how a self-proclaimed psychic detective failed to help find a young girl, Jaycee Dugard, who had been abducted and held captive for nearly 20 years. In addition to Dugard, Chandra Levy, Laci Peterson, Elizabeth Smart — and, well, every other missing person — psychic information failed to recover Brooke Wilberger, a university student missing since May 24, 2004. Police said they received more than 500 tips from psychics about Wilberger's location, though she has only now been found.

According to ABC News, "Five years after Brigham Young University student Brooke Wilberger vanished from an Oregon apartment complex, her remains have been found. Authorities told The Associated Press today that her suspected killer, Joel Courtney, told police where he'd left Wilberger's body following her 2004 disappearance. His admission was part of a plea deal to avoid the death penalty. It was not immediately clear where the remains were found. The Benton County District Attorney's office said Monday that Courtney, 42, pleaded guilty to aggravated murder and received a life sentence without the possibility of parole. The deal allowed Wilberger's family to finally learn what really happened to their daughter after all these years."

It is a tragic end to the story, but with more than 500 psychic detectives offering information on the case (and five years of searching and investigation by police, her family, and others) why hadn't Wilberger's body been found years ago? Why wasn't a single psychic able to tell police where her body would be found? Why couldn't one of the psychics read the killer's mind, or contact Brooke's departed spirit, and locate the poor woman's body so that her family could find closure? Why didn't the psychics come forward to remove this murderer's bargaining chip and let him pay for his crime?

If psychics really had the powers they claim, they could save lives and prevent horrific crimes and miscarriages of justice. It would be an incredible boon to police and the families of missing persons, but their track record of failure speaks for itself.

Coast to Coast AM - 16 Sep 2009 - Science Fiction Secrets part 1/12

2009 Mothman Festival

Paranormal News Insider --The 8th Annual Mothman Festival was a pleasant (no pun intended) escape from the typical paranormal conventions, conferences and "P-Cons" that are all the rage. Maybe because it was primarily outdoors or maybe that it had a carnival atmosphere, who knows. All I know is that it was a great time for all who gathered on this tiny town along the Ohio river known as Point Pleasant, West Virginia, on September 19th and 20th.

The festival itself is a celebration of the creature along with the sightings. In the heart of the vendor area was the famed Mothman Statue, created by local artist Bob Roach, who also created Chief Cornstalk and Colonel Andrew Lewis Statues that were outside the flood wall (funny fact, each statue is about five feet tall despite Mothman being rumored to be at least 6 feet tall, apparently Mr. Roach is also about five feet tall and refused to use ladders to help create his sculptures). There were also many "characters" walking around, a few various Men in Black as well as the Mothman himself paid a visit (see pic above left).

As I said it was a carnival atmosphere. There were Mothman pancakes (and an eating contest with them as well), lemonade, elephant ears and a variety of other food available. Saturday brought the Miss Mothman Festival Pageant (photo at left). There were also many other street vendors selling everything from t-shirts to handmade crafts (lots of stuffed Mothman dolls) along with some ghost groups (Prodigy Paranormal and Ghosts of Ohio, both of which had guest speakers) present to share their info.

Yes, guest speakers were on hand to talk about various paranormal and supernatural subjects on Saturday and Sunday. I was only in attendance on Saturday and was able to see James A. Willis (discussed the "Spooky Side of Abraham Lincoln") and Rosemary Ellen Guiley (Vampires) speak at the State theater (pictured at right in center of photo) on Main Street between sightseeing. There were other guests in attendance, be sure to check out the Official Mothman Festival website for more details.

Curiously missing from the event was any homange to the late John Keel, author of The Mothman Prophecies book that ultimately launched the movie that, well, helped fuel the festival. Keel passed away on July 3 of 2009. Funny thing, a few of the locals I talked to said the movie had nothing to do with the festival. The fact is the first year of the festival (2002) was the same year when the movie was released. The movie was actually shot in Kittanning, Pennsylvania (almost 4 hours away) and really put this city back on the map. The site of the Mothman Museum (pictured at left) has some great coverage surrounding the movie and does have a tribute to John Keel on their home page.

There is also a lot of history outside of the Mothman sightings and the Silver Bridge collapse. A long time ago a guy named George Washington visited the area and is rumored to have said (while looking at the point where the Ohio and Kanawha river meet) "What a pleasant point", which lead to the town being called Point Pleasant (well, that's the story the tour guide told). At the corner where the rivers meet there is a huge park, Tu-Endie-Wei (Wynadotte Indian phrase meaning, "the point between two waters") Point Pleasant Battle Monument, with a lot of historical artifacts onsite. The park celebrates the October 10, 1774 battle between Viriginia militiamen, lead by Colonel Andrew Lewis, versus native Indians lead by the Shawnee Chieftan Cornstalk. Cornstalk is sometimes blamed for many of the bad things that happened in the last 200 years in and around Point Pleasant which is known as the Cornstalk Curse.

[Read More at Paranormal News Insider]