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Breaking News: DNA Evidence of Mystery Ape!

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Scientists extract DNA from Mystery Ape hair

According to a press release just sent to me from cryptid researcher Adam Davies:

Orang Pendek of Sumatra

The Orang Pendek of Sumatra

A team of Danish scientists who have been analysing hair samples brought back from Indonesia by a British expedition last autumn have found some potentially world-shattering results. The expedition was looking for the fabled orang pendek, an upright walking ape from Sumatra which is only known from eyewitness reports.

Expedition leader ADAM DAVIES has been to Sumatra five times since 1999, to look for the orang pendek. Over the years, there has been a gradual refinement in his search technique. He is certain that it exists, and when he first went to Sumatra he was struck as to how authentic the first-hand accounts seemed to be. On a previous expedition in 2001, prints and hair were found, and subsequently examined by world famous hair analysis expert Professor Hans Brunner and by Dr. David Chivers of Cambridge University. They independently concluded that they were from an unknown primate closely related to the two species of orang-utan.

Last weekend at the annual conference of the Centre for Fortean Zoology (CFZ), the world’s largest mystery animal research group, Danish scientist Lars Thomas announced the results so far. The preliminary DNA analysis of the hairs appears to resemble that of an orang-utan. He says:

“… the significance is quite enormous  no matter what the result is basically, because if it turns out to be orang-utan this proves that there is orang-utan in a part of Sumatra several hundred kilometres from the nearest population of orang-utan. If it turns out to be a primate that looks like an orang-utan but isn’t, it’s an even greater discovery because that proves that there is another great ape living in Indonesia”.

A morphological analysis of the hair samples also corroborated Professor Brunner’s findings.

Adam Davies (not in Sumatra!)

Cryptozoologist Adam Davies

RICHARD FREEMAN, the zoological director of the CFZ has been to Sumatra on three occasions, the hairs in question being found on the last expedition in September 2009. On this particular trip were Adam Davies (leader), Richard Freeman, Chris Clark, Dave Archer plus their guides Sahar, John, Dally and Doni.  It was the brother – John Didmus – of their main guide Sahar, who found the hairs on a small sapling about 3 feet off the ground.  He said that:

“if the hair turns out to be from a new species, it would be the first confirmed upright walking ape which then throws an interesting light upon other reported bipedals like the yeti, etc.  It may also help tell us how bipedalism in humans first developed.  Also, the fact that such a large animal was found on an island roughly the same size as Britain could be significant as it may also mean that there could be other large animals still to be found across the world.”

Film of Lars Thomas carrying out a morphological hair analysis of the samples for CFZ Director Jon Downes, and an interview with Lars Thomas can be found at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idcRbLm0L-4 (or see below)

Adam Davies can be contacted on 07952 381110 Richard Freeman can be contacted on 07900 642781. To arrange an interview with Lars Thomas, or to get pictures, please telephone Corinna Downes on 01237 431413

Authors Note:

Adam also told me that one of his team members had an eyewitness sighting of the orang pendek during their last research expedition.

Congratulations to Adam and his fellow cryptid researchers on obtaining this evidence. I’m sure the impact of this discovery will become increasingly evident in the weeks and months to come.

YouTube Preview Image

Monsters of New Jersey!

Thursday, August 12th, 2010
Monsters of New Jersey

Monsters of New Jersey

Monsters of New Jersey, a new book by Loren Coleman and Bruce G. Hallenbeck and published by Stackpole Books, will be released on September 1, 2010.

Any reader of The Paranomalist blog will, of course, know of famed cryptozoologist Loren Coleman. Mr. Coleman has over four decades of both field and scholarly research in the areas of cryptozoology and folklore, and writes regularly on Cryptomundo.com. He is also the author of numerous books on the subject of cryptids, mystery animals, and sightings of unexplained creatures and phenomena.

Bruce G. Hallenbeck is an author and film director, having co-authored Monsters of the Northwoods, and written and directed such films as  The Edge of Reality, Vampyre, and Blood of the Werewolf, among many others.

Are there monsters in NJ?

The subject of cryptids and mysterious animals has long been a passionate interest of mine, and I’m especially captivated by any reports of sightings and encounters here in my beloved home state of New Jersey.

The Garden State is undeniably one of many contrasts and mysteries. At the time when the first European settlers arrived, New Jersey had long been the home of the Lenni Lenape Native American people. According to Lenape legend, the dense wilderness which covers over a million acres in southern NJ that we now know as the Pinelands was home of the Mahtantu, a destructive, evil being that the Lenape associated with the Devil. This belief far predates the legend of “Mother Leeds” giving birth to her thirteenth child, which transformed into the Jersey Devil, the horned and winged beast of the Pinelands.

The Wematekan’is, the Little People of NJ

Every culture throughout the world has for millennia told of various types of small humanoids, and Native American folklore is no exception. Lenni Lenape folklore tells also of a race of diminutive beings who dwelt in the forests, which they called the Wematekan’is. Typical of the legends of these little people that are found throughout cultures worldwide, the Wematekan’is were said to be shy and wary of humans. When the Wematekan’is would occasionally interact with the Lenape people, they often played mischievous pranks on the unsuspecting Big Folk.

I find it interesting how these legends echo those told to me by my grandmother of the tomtegubbe or tomtar, the little people of her native Sweden — a land 4,000 miles removed from the Lenape’s.

Since writing my article A Gnome by Any Other Name, I’ve received several emails each week from people (a number of them New Jersey residents) who claim to have encountered small human-like creatures. Could there be a connection between these reports and the old Native American and European tales of gnomes and other tiny humanoids? Could such a race have existed at one time, and still remain in the more remote regions of the world — and in the state of New Jersey?

A state too populated for unknown creatures?

I realize that it’s difficult for most people, especially those unfamiliar with New Jersey, to think that there are any “remote” regions left in such a highly populated area of the USA. To these people, I would counter that they’ve likely never hiked and camped the vast, sparsely inhabited NJ Pinelands that cover over 1.1 million acres of the state. Nor have they spent time in the deep woods and mountains of the northwestern Highlands region. The fact is, most of New Jersey’s population density is concentrated in it’s few major cities and the suburbs of New York City and Philadelphia. Trust a native of the state when I say that there are a great many remote and wild areas of New Jersey.

Big Red Eye, New Jersey’s own Bigfoot

Big Red Eye, NJ Bigfoot

Big Red Eye, NJ Bigfoot

What? A Garden State Sasquatch? Ridiculous! This was my initial reaction when my very shaken wife told me of the unearthly screams and yowls that she heard while camping with her seventh-grade students in Stokes State Forest.

She went on to tell me that a NJ State Trooper, in response to her inquiry as to the nature of the horrifying sounds that were emanating from the surrounding forest, replied in a very grave but level tone of voice, “there have been a lot of reports of Bigfoot sightings in the area recently.” If anyone would like to read it, I’ve recounted the full story in my article Bigfoot in New Jersey.

Naturally, this piqued my interest. The fact that my wife, who is very calm, levelheaded and has not the slightest interest in the strange and unexplained mysteries of life, was so visibly shaken held a lot of weight in my estimation, as did the police officer’s reaction. Upon further investigation, I found that reports of huge, hairy, hominoids were fairly commonplace in the northwestern part of the state, in Sussex and Warren Counties. This area of New Jersey is known as the Highlands region, and it is largely rural and mountainous, with large tracts of deep forest.

Having been raised in Bergen County in the northeast and just a few miles from New York City, I’d never heard of these tales at all, and always associated Bigfoot sightings with the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia. Naturally, I was shocked to learn that reports of sightings of these creatures are well known in the Highlands region that borders Pennsylvania and New York State. Bigfoot sightings are also frequently reported in Burlington County to the south, a county that holds much of the Pinelands National Reserve.

In the course of my research, I found that reports of these creatures are often accompanied by a fascinating physical characteristic: they are usually said to have glowing red eyes. Thus, New Jersey’s own Sasquatch became known to the local inhabitants as “Big Red Eye”.

I recently corresponded with a reporter formerly with a Sussex County-based newspaper and she confirmed what I’d learned earlier, that reports of Big Red Eye sightings and encounters are well-known to the people native to northwest Jersey. Like me, she explained, being raised in the northeastern part of NJ, she had never heard of this until she moved to Sussex County to work for the newspaper.

She went on to say that the newspaper had a “large file of these reports” dating back to the early 1970s, but they rarely published them. Also, she told me that the state troopers at the local barracks (she asked me not to reveal which) were fully aware of the beast’s existence — although the police understandably refuse to go on record about their knowledge of Big Red Eye’s existence. This lends support to my wife’s claim that the trooper said in such a serious and matter-of-fact tone that “there have been a lot of Bigfoot reports in the area recently”. Yet, could a creature as large as Big Red Eye live in such a populated state as New Jersey? That’s something I’ve pondered in other articles, but we may never have a clear answer to this question.

The *REAL* reason to buy ‘Monsters of New Jersey’!

I had the great pleasure and honor to have been contacted by Monsters of New Jersey co-author Bruce G. Hallenbeck regarding some of the articles that I wrote here on The Paranomalist blog. Bruce and I corresponded by email and spoke on the telephone about what I know of local New Jersey legends and creatures. I promised to give him some assistance in researching the Hoboken Monkey-Man and the Lake Hopatcong Monster, but I unfortunately proved to be of little help. Other than the odd Internet article, I simply could not find much information about these creatures.

Nonetheless, Bruce asked if he could cite my blog and a couple of its articles, and I was only too flattered to agree. I’m not entirely sure what articles from my blog are to be included and what is not, although my wife’s account of the unearthly screams that she heard in Stokes State Forest may be among them. Whatever blog posts that Mr. Coleman and Mr. Hallenbeck have decided to reference, I’m happy to have been able to contribute. I’m told also that The Paranomalist blog will be cited, which is also a genuine thrill — and I don’t mind the free publicity, let me tell you! Regardless of the publicity however, I was excited to have been asked my opinion and glad to help in any small way that I could.

Also cited is the work of Drew Vics of the New Jersey Bigfoot Reporting Center, with whom I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing on the old Paranomalists podcast show.

In addition to Big Red Eye and the Jersey Devil, Monsters of New Jersey will also cover other Garden State cryptids, such as:

  • Wooo-wooo (I don’t know what that is)
  • Hoboken Monkey-Man
  • Big Cats
  • Cape May Sea Serpent
  • Lake Hopatcong Monster
  • Lizardman of Great Meadows

I’ll admit, I’ve heard of most of these (except the Wooo-wooo), but I don’t know much about them — which is all the more reason to read the book! I’m looking forward to reading Monsters of New Jersey and reviewing it on The Paranomalist in the near future.

Thanks again to Bruce and to Loren for contacting me, and if they do a book signing at the Paramus NJ Barnes & Noble or at Bookends in Ridgewood NJ, I’ll be there! Heck, I’ll drive even further than that!

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0149327/

Train Ride to a Parallel Dimension

Friday, July 30th, 2010
Station Road, Newtonmore, Scotland

Station Road, Newtonmore, Scotland

On May 30th of this year I received a comment on my post titled Missing Time Experience? about the time slip and memory loss incident that I experienced in my early teens. The comment came from a woman named Linda Smith who, as I later learned, was an American and a frequent visitor to the British Isles.

Linda related to me two very fascinating unexplained events that she endured while traveling to the England and Scotland. Last week I wrote of the first experience in Missing Time Inside a Stone Circle.

Linda’s second episode of high strangeness, however, was even more bizarre. This incident took place a decade or so after the Stone Circle incident, in 2004.

A visit to Scotland, a journey to the past

Once again, with Linda’s consent, I’ll recount her story verbatim as she emailed it to me:

“In 2004 I had grown absurdly fond of a PBS series, ‘Monarch of the Glen’, which was set in the highlands of Scotland. When I discovered that most of it was filmed in and around the village of Newtonmore and that Newtonmore was a regular stop on the main rail line to the North and Inverness, I simply had to go myself.

After a totally sleepless red-eye flight to London and another one to Glasgow, I finally got on the afternoon train for Inverness. Happily chatting with a group of friendly Scots, I nearly missed the stop. But I did swing off, the only passenger alighting. John, in spite of advancing age, I’m quite travel-oriented and love to travel solo where I can do and see entirely what I like. I have traveled extensively in England and Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. But I have always encountered a rail station where I could ask directions if necessary.

So, suitcase and carry-on in hand, I disembarked from the train at the Newtonmore station in Scotland. I swung onto the platform to meet absolutely nothing except a giant transformer in the center, surrounded by chain link fence with the polite British notice saying, ‘Do not touch equipment. Danger of Death.’ I sidled carefully around that and found myself looking out on open countryside. With the exception of a two-story Victorian style house that I took to the the stationmaster’s — rather like a lighthouse keeper — there was simply nothing except open moorland. As I stood there in shock, a young man rode up on a bicycle.

Of course, I asked, ‘Sir, can you tell me which way the town is?’ He stared silently at me for so long I had just concluded he was either a deaf mute or what the country people call ‘a simple’ and prepared to walk to the stationmaster’s house. Just then he said vaguely, having looked around in every direction, ‘…it’s not THAT way,’ and pointed south in the exact direction I had come from. Rather than pointing this out, though, I asked, ‘Could you tell me where the Glen Hotel is?’ I had booked a room over the Internet, as it was seemingly the town’s most popular. More confidently, he replied, ‘No…no, there’s no place like that around here’ and promptly and swiftly rode away.

Frustrated, I dragged my luggage down the road to the ‘station’. I was thrilled to see that the front door was open. As I approached the front yard, that door was suddenly and violently slammed shut from behind! I didn’t know what to do — there was no other sign of civilization, but on the other hand I was so isolated I had no idea what I might encounter if I tried to pursue my information quest. I decided safety dictated that I should head up the only road there was, in the direction the man on the bike had gone. There were trees on the horizon, so there must be someone. And I couldn’t see any other choice.

Accordingly, I set off. The train had arrived in typical British punctuality, at 6:32 p.m. Everything was unbelievably quiet, but I thought to myself, ‘Lovely peaceful Scotland with its wonderfully kind people!’ (all the more strange about the slamming door — not at all like the Scots I remember). Just then, at the first road to the right, a lorry came to the main road and turned right. I stopped and put on my best forlorn lost-tourist expression. To my shock, he looked right through me with no sign of recognition, let alone the expected query as to whether he could help me find directions!

I was astounded and started to hail him back, but just then I spied a young-looking woman about a block ahead of me. Thinking she would be more approachable, I hurried toward her. She was pushing what looked like an old-fashioned baby carriage (‘pram’ to the Brits) and, even with my wheeled suitcase, I hoped I could overtake her. I was horrified to see her look back, see me, and start hurrying away. I increased my pace the best I could, but the faster I walked the faster she did, and she got away from me, I suppose. I say ‘I suppose’ because that’s the last thing I remember — after wondering why she acted scared of a little old lady dragging two suitcases! — until I found myself at the dead end of Station Road on the Main Street of Newtonmore.

I remember well thinking that the lights of the petrol station just ahead of me and the shops and buildings on down the road were the most welcome sight I had ever laid eyes on! So I followed the hotel’s website direction and directly found myself in the hotel lobby. I had to knock loudly on the kitchen door before locating someone to check me in. Inquiring about dinner in the hotel restaurant, I was told the dining room was closed for the night but that I could probably pick up something at the local grocery just down the street. I did just that, purchasing a packet of lovely farmhouse veg soup, pate, crackers, fruit, and a badly needed wee dram of local Scotch! I say all those details in the hope of convincing you that I do not customarily suffer from memory lapses…

Anyway, after a couple of days in the tiny village I decided to take an unexpected detour to Inverness for a couple of days; a local bus could take me from Main Street in front of the hotel straight into central Inverness. So I did not have to go back to that rail ‘station’.

Now for the Twilight Zone part. I was in France (Rennes le Chateau area!) last year and had decided I didn’t want to return to the US immediately), so I took the overnight sleeper to Scotland for a few days. After a lovely night in my tiny compartment, I woke early for our expected 8:30 Inverness arrival.

With a jolt I suddenly realized we would be going past Newtonmore; it’s not only the main line to the North but the only one. I was thrilled to think of the Danger of Death transformer and the stationmaster’s house again! We pulled to the station. It was in the middle of a bunch of buildings — residential-looking, for the most part. The station was a long, low building that obviously resembled what it was, an old Victorian rail station. Since no one boarded the train, we set off almost immediately while I sat frozen with shock. No transformer, no stationmaster’s dwelling, and plenty of buildings where I would have certainly stopped for help had they been there!

I was weekending on the coast at Plockton, an atmospheric fishing village, and I wanted desperately to ask someone — anyone, about Newtonmore. Of course, they would have thought I was senile or worse, I assumed. Also, I rationalized that the station I saw was one further along and that we just didn’t stop at Newtonmore since it might be only a Requet stop. But after I got home, I carefully counted the stops betwen Dalwhinnie and Inverness; there’s less than half a dozen. So we had made the Newtonmore stop.

Then I went to Google Earth and looked on all those buildings along Station Road. I then checked the time of sunset in northern Scotland. I was stunned to find that it’s around nine p.m. at the time of year, early May, that I was there. I had gotten off the train at 6:32. The trusty Internet tells me that village shops and pubs are a five- to ten-minute walk away. I found this from the Old Station’s website, among others. That long, one story railway station had been closed awhile back and has been turned into a bed and breakfast, replacing a Victorian structure that burned down when a passing steam engine’s spark sent it up in flames!

Somewhere, over three hours had vanished from my life. But that pales beside the contrast in the behavior of those four people as opposed to the normally hospitable, courteous behavior of the Scots! My next day in the village, in contrast, was absolutely filled with beautifully friendly and charming people. I simply can’t help wondering: Could they have thought I was a ghost? I really think the truck driver, from his behavior, just didn’t see me.”

A simple mistake, or a train stop to a different time?

As I mentioned Missing Time Inside a Stone Circle, there’s much more to this experience than Linda’s missing time episode at Stanton Moor in Derbyshire, although that doesn’t necessarily make it any more or less significant.

I understand that those skeptics who read this are likely to dismiss this as a matter of simply getting off at the wrong station, but if you carefully at the facts, there seems to be a number of aspects to this story that are hard to explain away. For example:

  1. Linda is a very experienced traveler, and particularly knowledgeable and experienced in traveling to England, Ireland, Wales, and Scotland; this makes it less likely that she simply became confused and went to the wrong station.
  2. As she stated, there is less than a dozen stops between Dalwhinnie and Inverness, including Newtonmore where her experience took place;
  3. After Linda’s memory lapse and three hours of missing time, she did find herself again in Newtonmore, or Newtonmore as it exists today;

Could it be that Linda Smith indeed disembarked from the train at the Newtonmore station, but in an earlier period of its history? The lack of buildings, the Victorian “stationmaster’s” house that reportedly burned down years before, the odd behavior of normally friendly Scots — could it mean that Linda was experiencing an echo of the past? Or as the intruder into this lost era, was she looked upon by its residents as ghost or spectral entity?

Time slips: not an uncommon phenomena

Like most people fascinated with the paranormal and esoteric, I’ve heard of these time slip incidents. Upon researching it, I’ve found a number of references to the phenomena, one of the better ones coming from Emmy-Award winning television producer and videographer Tim Swartz’s, He covers the the topic in depth on the Conspiracy Journal website.

Mr. Swartz is the author of several books, including Time Travel: A How-To Insiders Guide. He defines the phenomenon known as time slips as “…an event where it appears that some other era has briefly intruded on the present. A time slip seems to be spontaneous in nature and localization, but there are places on the planet that seem to be more prone than others to time slip events. As well, some people may be more inclined to experience time slips than others.” He goes on to give quite a few examples of peoples accounts of time slips.

Does time exist? The Universe as an endless field of potential

Through research into quantum physics by such scientific luminaries as Hal Puthoff, Russell Targ, Robert Jahn and Dean Radin (among others) we move ever further away from the Newtonian model of our universe, and even from Einstein’s view of relative space-time. As we begin to learn of and embrace the Quantum Model of the Universe, these “missing time” and “time slip” phenomena begin to make some sense.

In Lynne McTaggart’s excellent book The Field, she distills these complex ideas down to the point in which the non-scientific public can begin to grasp them (still a lot to get one’s head around, I’ll admit — but fascinating stuff). Based on McTaggart’s research and interviews she’s conducted with the aforementioned scientists and many others, she describes the Universe as an endless field of potential, where there is no set or fixed outcome or points in time.

Because subatomic particles are capable of moving between and interacting across all points of space and time, all possible outcomes in what we think of as the past, present and future may exist in a vast, omnipresent field. It is through this field in which we may occasionally, accidentally, traverse.

The manner and means in which we stumble into other periods of time or parallel dimensions is unknown, of course. Perhaps some people are more prone to this phenomena for some reason, as Mr. Swartz suggests. It has also been proposed that there are regions of the world where the veil between space and time and parallel dimensions is thinner and we may inadvertently pass between or into them every so often.

If this view of the Universe is correct, it may be at the core of many — if not all — supernatural and paranormal phenomena, including missing time and time slips.

Mande Burung Expedition Scheduled

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Adam Davies to Lead Research Team

Mande Burung (forest man)

Actual photo of the Mande Burung (not really)

I was in touch with cryptozoologist Adam Davies today and he informed me that he’ll be leading an expedition to India in search of  legendary ape men known locally as the Mande Burung (forest man). The date for expedition has been confirmed for the last week of October, 2010.

The Mande Burung is described as a bipedal apelike creature similar to North America’s Bigfoot or Sasquatch, Australia’s Yowie, and the Yeti of the Himalayas. The cryptid is most commonly seen in the West Garo Hills district of the state of Meghalaya in India.

This remote region of India borders Bangladesh, and sightings of these strange, upright-walking hominoids have been reported by many of the local villagers.

I’m sure the hilly jungle terrain that these creatures are said to inhabit will prove to be challenging, but Adam Davies and his team of cryptid researchers are experienced at overcoming such difficult territory, having endured the Congolese jungles and swamps, the dizzying heights of the Himalayas, and the searing heat of the Gobi Desert — among other demanding and dangerous locales.

For further information regarding the adventures of cryptid researcher Adam Davies, I highly recommend that you read his book Extreme Expeditions, which I’ve reviewed in the Book Review section of this website. Extreme Expeditions is published by Anomalist Books.

No word just yet from Adam as to whether the Mande Burung expedition to India will be filmed and shown on History Channel’s MonsterQuest program, but I’ll update this post and let everyone know just as soon as I have a confirmation either way.

UPDATE: I was in contact with Adam again this morning, and he informed me that no further episodes of History Channel’s MonsterQuest will be made — i.e., they’re done, except in reruns. I don’t know if that’s news to most of the readers of this blog, but it was news to me! Shame, because it was a good program. Hopefully, some other similar show will make its way to television and Adam will be a part of it.

Adam did go on to say that there was some discussion with the BBC about filming this latest expedition in October, but they were unable to work out the date. Davies and his team are already committed to the late October start date and could not change their arrangements in order to accommodate the BBC. Encouraging, however, that they BBC has expressed interest, and I’m hoping that they’ll cover some of Adam’s future cryptozoological research expeditions.

Best of luck, Adam.

Missing Time Inside a Stone Circle

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010
Nine Ladies stone circle

Nine Ladies stone circle in Stanton Moor, Derbyshire, England

On May 30th of this year I received a comment on my post titled Missing Time Experience? about the time slip and memory loss incident that I experienced in my early teens. The comment came from a woman named Linda Smith who, as I later learned, was an American and a frequent visitor to England, Scotland and Ireland. In fact, Linda went on to tell me that she visited the UK twenty-one times and is planning her twenty-second trip in September.

Linda complimented me on my article and then urged me to visit Great Britain, saying that that’s where she experienced her own episodes of “high strangeness”, including a missing time incident in Derbyshire, England and a very odd experience in Scotland. She also asked me to email her for details of both occurrences, as they were too lengthy to write of in the comments area of this blog. I’m always happy to hear from my readers, and I gladly emailed her as requested. I found both accounts fascinating.

With Linda’s permission, I’m going to recount each of these anomalous events as she described them to me. But rather than going into them both, I’ve decided to write about them in two separate posts. The Scotland episode is even stranger and more complex than her experience at the Nine Ladies stone circle, so I’ll cover that one in another article later this month.

Of ancient megaliths and magical objects

It was in the mid-1990s, and Linda and her husband (since deceased) were traveling in northern England. One day, they decided to visit Stanton Moor in the northwest part of Derbyshire and several miles southwest of Manchester. The Smith’s strange experience took place at a Bronze Age stone circle known as the Nine Ladies, an ancient megalithic structure consisting of nine stones, each of which stand a little less than 1 meter high and are arranged in a rough circle. The Nine Ladies megaliths are situated in  a woodland of birches, ash, and beech trees in Stanton Moor’s Peak District National Park.

Here is the story, as Linda tells it:

“We set out from Bakewell immediately after breakfast, around nine a.m. Finding the path off a country road, I set out to investigate because the path forked; my husband, with complications from diabetes, decided to wait. I soon discovered I had taken the wrong fork and retraced my way, only to find that my husband had elected to follow and try to catch up with me. We then took the left fork into the woods and without much delay came to the lovely Nine Ladies stone circle. A couple of other tourists were browsing. We really didn’t notice when they left, but we found ourselves in the center of the circle — alone in that beautiful wood.

My husband leaned down and picked up an object, saying, ‘Someone has lost a lens to their glasses’  and handed the object to me.  On closer inspection I saw that it was a round clear glass like a monocle, with an old-fashioned gold rim and a hanger. In the very center was a brilliant green triangle, about 1/3 inch in diameter.

Intrigued, I pocketed it and we returned to the car, thinking it would be lunchtime before too long. Can you imagine our shock to find the rental car’s clock indicating the time was 3:45 p.m.? We thought that it was, of course, completely wrong. But it wasn’t. Somehow, we had spent nearly seven hours in what would have taken no more than two at most.

And the ‘monocle’? When I got home with it, I was quite puzzled that the beautiful green triangle in the center was no longer there! It simply disappeared and never came back.”

Surprisingly, Linda described this story as being “ho-hum”, and perhaps in comparison with her other experience in Scotland, it was. I honestly can’t see how finding a mysterious object inside an ancient structure and then losing five hours or more can be described as “ho-hum”, even if this experience was less dramatic than her second. Frankly, I think I’d be rather perplexed and perturbed — but then Linda Smith may be made of sterner stuff than John Carlson!

What I found particularly interesting about this account was the finding of the strange monocle or lens. It made me wonder how (or if) it fits into the time and memory lapse Linda and her husband experienced after discovering it. Prior to this, I’d never heard of mysterious or magical objects being associated with missing time anomalies, and thus far I’ve been unable to locate other such reports.

And of course, the significance of the “brilliant green triangle” at the center of the monocle and its subsequent disappearance is also highly intriguing. If readers of this post have knowledge of similar reports or can direct me to any useful resources, I’d be very appreciative.

Missing Time — an anomalous event of many flavors

The subject of Missing Time is without a doubt the most-commented-on topic that I’ve discussed on the Paranomalist blog. In addition to the many blog comments, I’ve received dozens of emails from individuals across the USA and throughout the world who have been subjected to these strange occurrences. And with each account I’m struck by the sincerity of the people who have been so kind and courageous as to share their experiences with me.

The other aspect that I’ve found striking with regard to these tales of time lapse or missing time is that, while they generally share some basic commonalities, the variety of circumstances under which they occur is simply staggering. The significance of this phenomenon eludes me, and I realize that its cause may never be found.  However, having personally experienced an episode of missing time, I’m very reluctant to dismiss these reports.

As always, please do not hesitate to comment on this blog post or to email me if have a question or any information that you’d be willing to share.

Aliens? Gnomes? Boogeymen? Night Terrors?

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

I’ve been reluctant to share the following story. Although I created this blog about the paranormal, it’s been easier to be the objective outsider than to write about one’s own experiences. And like many with tales of bizarre experiences, the thought of being labeled a crackpot, nutcase or liar is disconcerting.
However, in the interest of laying everything out on the table to my readers — many of whom have been kind enough to have shared their own weird experiences with me — I’m going to relate the story of my early childhood experiences. It’s my belief that these experiences are at the heart of my lifelong interest in the paranormal and tales of high strangeness. So, here it is:

John Henry Fuseli's "The Nightmare"

John Henry Fuseli's "The Nightmare"

I was born on Long Island, New York, where my family lived from 1961 to 1968. My father was a salesman for a large paper company, and Long Island was one of the many places my family lived due to the periodic transfers that my father’s employer required of him. Prior to Long Island, my family lived in Baltimore, MD and Brooklyn, NY (both my parents were born and raised in Brooklyn).

On my fourth birthday, August 27, 1968, our family moved out of our Long Island home in Baldwin, NY and relocated to Wellesley, Massachusetts where we resided for almost five years before finally settling in Ridgewood, New Jersey.

When we moved to the house in Massachusetts my sister was in high school and my brother just entering his freshman year at Boston College. Being that I was only four years old and the youngest by far, I was given the smallest bedroom, which was located on the second floor, as were the other three bedrooms. It was in fact a very small room, with the bed actually taking about half its width. However, the room had a relatively large walk-in closet with a window at the back of it. The closet was almost as big as the bedroom itself, and I recall that I’d often play on the floor inside of it. It was out of that closet which the nightmarish figures of my childhood issued.

Shortly after moving into the house in Wellesley, I began to have startlingly vivid and absolutely terrifying “dreams” — if dreams they were, for they were as real as any memory I’ve ever had in my life. These dreams always followed a similar scenario: at some point during the middle of the night I’d awaken to find several small figures walking through my closet and into my room. At first sight of these beings my horror was so intense that I simply could not move. My mouth would move wordlessly as I tried to scream, but no sound would escape my throat.

These creatures would proceed to gather around at the side of my bed and peer intensely at me, often reaching out and touching me lightly as if they were giving me some kind of examination. I don’t recall the examination as being invasive or painful, only terrifying. They would often touch my head and face as well, communicating with me without words. What they were saying to me I cannot recall, although I believe they were often words of comfort in an attempt to alleviate my fear. I always felt that these visits had a purpose, to tell me or teach me something, but my fear was so great that I think it prevented me from comprehending the meaning of their message.

The beings would either gather around me as I lay in bed and then depart (or I’d lose consciousness and have no further memory), or at other times when they put their hands on me, I would rise off of my covers and float from my bed. Walking beside me and continuing to lay their hands lightly on my body, they would float me along into the large, walk-in closet and through the window at the back end. As I passed through the window to the outside of the house (remember, I was on the second floor) I’d have the sensation of floating and I’d feel the wind and the night air around me. At this point in the experience my memory would always fail.

It was also around this time that I recall getting up in the middle of the night and walking to the bathroom in our upstairs hallway that was near the top of the stairs. After coming out of the bathroom and returning to my bedroom, I bumped straight into one the creatures and saw a look of surprise on his face, as if I’d startled him as much as he did to me. He quickly skirted around me and disappeared down the stairs. The clarity of this experience was so powerful that for years I insisted to my parents that it had actually happened.

The details of the entities physical appearance were always somewhat vague to me, although certain impressions remained clear and consistent each time. One physical attribute that stood out was their height. They were short, not more than my height at a the age of four or five years old, and stockily built with thick necks — if they even had necks. I had the impression that they were physically powerful, despite their stature.

The other prominent feature was their eyes. I recall their eyes seeming to be like those of animals, in that they glittered in the dark and were reflective and shiny. They also were either dark-skinned or covered in dark fur or hair, although I generally felt that it was the latter. And while I had the impression that these beings were very intelligent, I always sensed an “animal-like” quality about them. They also had squat noses, almost more like apelike nares. In retrospect, they were perhaps a bit like the creature sitting atop the sleeping maiden in John Henry Fuseli’s The Nightmare. Although the beasts that haunted my nightmares were darker, blacker and just different than the furry, gnome-ish entity in Fuseli’s painting.

These episodes happened frequently, at least several times every month from the ages of four to seven. After the age of seven they occurred less often, but continued until we moved out of Massachusetts in July of 1973, about six weeks before my ninth birthday. Some time after moving from Massachusetts to New Jersey, I had another of these nighttime visitations (or nightmares, if you prefer), about a six months or a year later at around the age of nine-and-half or ten. The experience was very similar, and interestingly, my bedroom also contained a closet with a window at the back of it. The entities came forth from this closet, just as they had done at our home in Wellesley, MA. That was the final visitation that I can recollect, and the message I believe they were conveying to me was “we can find you anywhere”. No other incident that I’d call strange or paranormal happened to me until my missing time episode several years later in 1978 when I was in my early teens.

I fully realize that most people will point out that “night terrors” and sleep paralysis are common among both children and adults, and that is probably what I’d experienced. I myself am not discounting this possibility, and I’m not suggesting anything as exotic as alien abduction. To the contrary, the creatures that visited me were distinctly unlike reports of the typical gray alien beings that are usually described in association with alien abduction phenomena. I suppose I’ll have to chalk this up to simply one more of my strange, unresolved childhood experiences. Yet, despite the fact that many years have passed, to this day I recall the absolute naked terror and clarity of these nightmares. If nightmares they were.

Bad News for The Hobbit Movie

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Del Toro steps down as director

Guillermo Del Toro not directing The Hobbit

Del Toro not directing The Hobbit

Well, fellow Tolkien fans, it’s been a rough few weeks for those of us who were looking forward to the commencement of the filming of the first installment of The Hobbit movie. It was with great disappointment that I learned of Guillermo Del Toro’s departure from the director’s chair. Long before I’d known he had even been considered to direct The Hobbit films I expressed my hope that Del Toro might chosen after Peter Jackson bowed out of the directorial duties. I was thrilled when I later learned that he actually had been tapped for the job.

Now that he’s exited from the project, I certainly do hope that they can find a suitable replacement (what’s James Cameron up to?) to fill Del Toro’s shoes. As a fan of both Hellboy films, as well as the excellent Pan’s Labyrinth, I believe his strong visual style would have brought something very unique and powerful to The Hobbit films. However, I can’t say that I blame the guy. Six years in New Zealand to make both films is quite a daunting commitment, and with MGM’s fiscal problems causing the delay to be indefinite, it makes sense that Mr. Del Toro, one of the world’s most in-demand directors, can’t simply sit on his hands and wait for them to sort out their financial difficulties and green light the filming. Once again, I hope a suitable replacement is found for Mr. Del Toro.

Perhaps Peter Jackson will reconsider returning to the directorial duties, but I have no idea if that’s under discussion or not. I’d be surprised if that is an option, although maybe Mr. Jackson might feel the need to redeem himself a bit after The Lovely Bones (didn’t see it, but I’m aware of the poor reviews and the disappointing box office performance). Not that Jackson should feel the need for redemption — he did a fantastic job with the Lord of the Rings. But seriously: what about James Cameron? Does he have anything going on these days?

The only logical choice for the role of Thorin Oakenshield, gone

Gary "Thorin Oakenshield" Coleman

GC as Thorin: WhatchutalkinaboutBilbo?

Now, if Del Toro’s departure from The Hobbit wasn’t bad enough, I was crushed and saddened when, just three days earlier, my first choice for the part of Thorin Oakenshield passed away: Mr. Gary Coleman. In my opinion, Thorin Oakenshield was the role Gary Coleman was born to play. Not only was he the correct stature — thus eliminating the need for expensive CGI “dwarfening” — Gary had the acting chops, quick wit and comic timing (don’t forget, the dwarves were pretty funny dudes, if not always intentionally) to pull it off.

The question, of course, remains: could Jackson, Boyens, and company have worked in a “whatchutalkinaboutBilbo?” into The Hobbit films? Perhaps. Remember, “I’m the Juggernaut, bitch!”, taken from the hugely popular MyWay Entertainment parody video found it’s way into X-Men: The Last Stand (YouTube video here), so it might have happened. By the way, I think Vinnie Jones really is the Juggernaut.

Despite the recent spate of disappointing Hobbit news, I am hopeful that the films will be made and completed with the same level of quality that we’ve come to expect from Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings films. And to Gary Coleman, if you’re listening, Rest In Peace my friend. I have been a fan for over thirty years, and a fan I remain. You would have added grace, style and character to a great story, as well as some much-needed color to Middle Earth. To me, you’ll always be the only real choice for the role of Thorin Oakenshield.

Note: LOTR geeks don’t need to point out that my bad Photoshop job uses Gimli’s outfit. I know that (being a geek myself).

Cryptids in Suburbia — Part 2

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010
Gnome

It really is a gnome, and don't tell me otherwise.

Well, it’s been about seven months since I finished “Cryptids in Suburbia — Part 1″. My apologies for the long delay. Work and family responsibilities have taken precedence, cut into my writing time, and sapped me of the energy to stay up late into the night to write on my blog. However, my interest in the unknown never flags, and I have been giving a lot of thought to how I’d like to conclude the subject that I’d begun in Part 1 of this post.

So, the question remains: what are we to make of out-of-place animals and sightings of strange creatures in populated regions of the world? Sure, we’ve all heard accounts from loggers and campers of Bigfoot encounters deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest.  And we’ve heard stories about the Yeti seen high in the Himalayas and in the remote mountains and forests of China. Tales by the native people Sumatra tell of the small upright-walking hominid orang pendek living deep in the rain forests of their country, and from the jungle swamps of the Congo we hear of the sauropod-like mokele-mbembe. For those who are at least somewhat open-minded, the idea that these reports could be true isn’t outside the realm of possibility. After all, there are still remote places in the world, and to think that there could still be undiscovered species living there isn’t that outrageous an idea.

But how should we react to reports of Bigfoot and other anomalous creatures in the backyards of and parks of our suburbs and cities? Could they all be hoaxes or simply common animal species that have been misidentified? Of course that could be the case,  but if we entertain the possibility that some of these reports may actually be genuine, then we have to consider the true nature and origin of these sightings.

During the past several months I’ve received some intriguing emails and comments on this website, as well as having read some fascinating articles. One of the emails that I received told of a Bigfoot sighting in Livingston, NJ — a very populated area some 35 miles west of where I live in northeastern New Jersey. The writer claimed to have seen a large, hairy hominid cross his path as he was driving, and disappear into the shrubbery at the side of the road. The next day the witness returned to the area with another individual who took a plaster cast and several photos. The footprints were indeed unusually large and wide and had left an impression over an inch deep into the icy mud at the roadside, indicating that it was a large creature of substantial weight. The witness and his associate noted that, although they each weighed over 220 pounds, neither of them made an impression in the frozen mud.

Recently too, I received an email from a woman who formerly worked as a reporter for a major New Jersey newspaper based out of Sussex County in the northwestern part of NJ. She’d read my article Bigfoot in New Jersey and went on to tell me that during the three years that she worked for the newspaper she became aware of a large archive of stories dating back to the 1970s about sightings of the NJ Bigfoot, known locally as “Big Red Eye” because he is often reported as having glowing red eyes. She went on to say that, although the newspaper generally did not comment on the Bigfoot reports that that they received, her editor was very matter-of-fact about the subject of its existence, and New Jersey State Police at the local barracks were aware of the creature despite their refusal to go on record about it. Furthermore, shortly after she left the paper, a calf was torn to shreds on farm in Sparta, NJ. The mutilation was officially blamed on a black bear, but a story the newspaper that she’d worked for proposed that the job had been done by “Big Red Eye” saying he was “back after so many years.”

I also found Nick Redfern’s article in Mania.com, Lair of the Beasts: A New York Monster, to be very intriguing. In it, Nick tells us of an email that he received from a man named Barry who claimed to have seen a “diminutive man-beast” of roughly three feet in height and covered with rust-colored fur in New York City’s Central Park. As Barry later explained to Nick in a subsequent interview, he was taking a walk on one of the Central Park’s many paths during his lunch break on a sunny mid-day afternoon in June or July, when this odd being came bursting through some foliage and onto the path some twenty feet in front of him. It stopped and stared intently at Barry for several seconds, before dashing off again and disappearing beneath a bridge inside the perimeter of the park. Redfern went on to say that the man seemed very sincere and honestly embarrassed as he related this story to him.

I could go on with numerous accounts of strange creature sightings and out-of-place animals in populated areas, but I’d like to return to the question at hand: what are we to make of these reports? Again, it may be conceivable to many people to that unknown species exist in the remote wilds and forests of our planet, but can we make a case for the existence of such creatures in our own cities, suburban backyards and highly populated regions of the world? And is it logical to assume that all such reports are mistaken identifications of common animal species, or simply lies?

Personally, I believe in that there most definitely are undiscovered species of animals — perhaps even hominids — that roam the wild lands that still remain on our planet, and I’d like to go on record in saying that I have a great deal of respect for those dedicated individuals that have devoted their time, effort and resources in searching for evidence of their existence. However (of course there’s always a however) I also believe that some of these creatures inhabit planes of existence that are parallel to our own, and have the ability to move between these different planes of reality. I say this not to diminish or belittle the efforts of cryptozoologists, but to explore the possibility that at least some percentage of these sighting might be attributed to beings/creatures that don’t fully exist in what we understand as “reality”.

This theory, of course, is not an original one and has been proposed by numerous researchers, including such luminaries in the field of the paranormal as Jacque Vallee, John Keel, and Philip Imbrogno, among others. What we may think of separate, disparate areas — UFOs, Sasquatch, encounters with alien entities and “little folk” — may indeed all be part of the same phenomena. The concept that other realities could be intruding on our own is one that I’ve come to believe more and more as I’ve pondered these questions. My own strange childhood experiences of meeting small beings and my odd missing time experience leads me to believe that this could be the case (either that, or there’s something very wrong with me). While I know this may raise the hackles of those dyed-in-the-wool cryptid hunters and nut-and-bolts UFO researchers, I honestly feel that this is a consideration that we can no longer ignore.

Please feel free to comment on this post and let me know what you think.

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