Saturday May 25, 2013
Weird Varmits in the Paranormal
With no official guest this night, we hosts
Henry Foister,
Kat Klockow,
Ceiling Cat
(CC)
Barbara Duncan
and I discussed "Weird Varmints of the Paranormal."
We started with the
Pukwudgie
and the
Banshee.
Kat moved on to aquatics: the
Charles Mill Lake Monster,
even suggesting doing an
image search
on the creature.
Before hitting the first break, we discussed the enigmatic
Rods;
on return we quickly segued to the awesome
Black Eyed Kids,
particularly their
Sacremento sightings,
they're being apparently
solely in America
seemingly, and discussed the
Leanne Davies encounter,
We segued into
Shadow People;
I spoke of an
awesome photo of a Shadow Person
controversy, the link to which Kat immediately recognized having seen.
I neglected to point out that sometimes they have
glowing red eyes.
I did mention the
"Shambling Mound"
story I experienced, as we'd discussed how sometimes what is thought to be something solid isn't.
We moved on to
Skin Walkers,
both the Native American lore and European lycanthropes.
We spoke about a
terrifying encounter
a woman had.
Tonight along with those in the US, the UK, France, Australia, Equador, and Finland, it seemed we had "a ton" of listeners in Canada
(actually outnumbering the rest of tonight's geographical listeners).
Kat brought up a
Beast of Bray Road
in
Elkhord Wisconsin,
which Kat suspects could be a misidentified animal, although there was even
a movie made
about it.
CC and Kat leaped at bringing up the peculiar
Dover Demon
and the red-eyed monstrosity known as the
Enfield Horror.
Noting our time winding down, Henry quickly added the topic of
Sirens.
Henry conveyed our guest the next week would be
Bruce Tango,
of TAPS and
Ghost Hunters.
I gave out
my site's Paranormal View hub page,
indicating people from there can find the show's respective report pages, that we're very
findable on Facebook,
the official
Paranormal View page
page.
Kat gave out her
HuntForGhosts page
site; Barbara didn't officially give out her
Facebook
information, but it was inferred.
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