Showing posts with label says. Show all posts
Showing posts with label says. Show all posts

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Sasquatch Are Here Says Outdoorsman

Brian Vike's Favorite Cases.

Newspaper Article.

By Bernice Tick.

Prince George Citizen Staff.

A Prince George man whose greatest passion has been hunting for big game admits he's hooked on proving the existence of sasquatch.

Leo Selzer, who has spent 41 years hunting in the bush around Prince George, is convinced the illusive creatures are around, and he spends as much time as he can in the bush area where he believes they live. He says he's had one pretty clear sighting and several occasions when he's convinced he was communicating with his" furry friends."

In the mid- 1980s when Selzer was moose hunting in the Gregg Creek area west of the city, he did his loud moose calls that bring in the bulls during rutting season.

After a few calls I heard a response -- like someone banging on a tree about a kilometer away. I would call. The right away, bang, bang. A small black bear appeared, wandering towards the banging sounds. The bear stopped and stood up on its hind legs looking towards a tall fir tree, and then all of a sudden it hightailed in the opposite direction toward me, veered off and went over the ridge."

It was then that Selzer saw a tall, dark-coloured creature step out from the cover of the fir tree into the open, and then quickly stepped behind the tree and was gone," said Selzer, noting that logged-off has little human activity. In 2000 Selzer was again hunting at Gregg Creek when, at about 400 metres, he spotted what he first thought was a large bear standing on its hind legs watching the hunters.

"It was standing next to a large, broken-off fir tree and was about the same dark colour, maybe greyish around its shoulders and on its chest.

Thinking it could be a grizzly, I kept a close eye on it, watching it shift its weight from one leg to the other a couple of times for about a half hour.

"All of a sudden it was gone, but later I realized a bear would never stand on its hind legs for that long without getting down and back up again," said Selzer.

After studying that area closely, he's concluded the creatures leave landmarks and directional signs by piling trees into X marks behind closely knit trees, and bending and shaping spindly trees into arches and shaped pointers carefully threaded through willow tops.

He believes Sasquatch eat bark from trees like aspens, and has seen markings showing large fingernails and teeth were used to remove bark.

He's also seen large footprints, but hasn't been fortunate to be able to photograph then fresh or complete.

"One footprint, going up a grade, was pretty clear, about 13 to 14 inches long, eight inches wide at the heel, and about six inches wide at the top of the ball of the foot. There were indications of possible toe impressions about one to three inches beyond the ball of the foot."

 

In 1994 on the Hoodoo Lakes road he could hear three individual voices give out a holler or two which was responded to by" jabbering type of language."

"I thought it must be some drunken people back there on a bush road or something, but I later found out there is no road or clearing in that area."

In mid-June, Selzer came across an area in the Gregg Creek, about 300 to 400 yards long, containing a series of blinds and shelters, and tepee-like frameworks he believes were built by a sasquatch.

The blinds are waist to shoulder height with logs and trees pushed together to form a lean-to like structure.

"The frameworks, up to 50 feet high, are made with long spindly trees intricately intertwined to form the structure., "said Selzer.

Brian Vike in Houston, who reports on unidentified flying objects and such matters, has received reports from residents about sasquatch sightings in the Buck Flats area.

"Two Houston women, driving up Buck Flats road, were startled recently when a large animal walked upright across the road in front of their vehicle.

"The animal, described much like a sasquatch, mad long strides into the forest, but did not turn to look back at the women."

He said a camping party at Silverhorne Lake reported hearing chilling screams in the night coming from around the lake, which cannot be associated with the known animals in the region.

"One other sighting was reported on the Morice River Road when two people fishing witnessed a large two-legged animal on the opposite bank of a river walk slowly into the forest and disappear," said Vike.

American William Dranginis, said he saw a bigfoot once - hairy, 7 feet tall, and sprinting through the woods of Virginia.

The 12-second sighting changed the life of Dranginis, who outfitted a 24-foot mobile veterinary clinic as a Bigfoot Primate Research lab.

Equipped with scopes, radios and a Night-Sight camera that can detect an animal in the dark at 800 yards away, he heads out at least two weekends a month. But still no second sighting for Dranginis, who would like to push legislation to protect the creatures.

"Do not shoot it," said Selzer.

"They mean no harm, but they are curious, and incredibly intelligent beings."

Selzer's latest reported sighting on July 20 came from a visiting couple from Saskatoon.

They told Selzer that, while driving Highway 16 East at about 8 p.m. near Tabor Mountain, they saw what they first thought was a large man crossing the highway.

Describing the creature as about 7 1/2 feet tall covered with hair, thick barrelled shoulders and narrow waist, they said it crossed the road about 100 yards ahead of them in about three steps.

The couple, who have never believed in the sasquatch theory, were so haunted by the experience they couldn't sleep.

After they got home they contacted Selzer, who has added his investigation of the area to his website: http://sasquatch-pg.net.

The Prince George Citizen newspaper - http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/

Monday, March 15, 2021

UFO Survey Says We’re The No. 3 Town For Sightings

Brian Vike's Favorite Cases.

Newspaper Article.

By Jennifer Lang.

Move over Kermode bear. A flying saucer might make a more fitting symbol for Terrace.

It turns out Terrace is B.C.’s UFO capital  - and one of the top spots in the country for sightings – according to a national survey released last week.

In fact, a record number of sightings here helped push Terrace into the 2002 Canadian UFO Surveys’ top for the first time.

Remarkably, Terrace is in third place – behind such urban heavyweights as Toronto and Vancouver.

The survey counted 25 eyewitness reports from here in 2002.

Calgary and Hamilton also appeared in the top 10 for the first time. Other urban areas reporting a significant number of sightings were Winnipeg, Edmonton, Ottawa and Whitehorse.

In all, the survey compiled 483 eyewitness reports from across the country, with one third or 176, originating in Canada’s westernmost province.

Contrast that with just six UFO sightings reported in Saskatchewan last years.

Joining Terrace in the top four is Houston, B.C., home of Brian Vike, the northwest’s resident UFO researcher.

Vike, who investigates reports of UFOs and other unexplained phenomena, including crop circles, says his phone has been ringing off the hook since the survey was released last week.

Terrace residents have been seeing some curious objects in the sky over the past year, according to Vike’s website.

Some flying objects were barrel-shaped, while others looked more like cigars or had blinking lights.

Unlike stars or airplanes, they moved oddly over such familiar locales as Braun’s Island, Jackpine Flats and the southwest skies towards Prince Rupert.

Vike is just one of the contributors who assist in compiling the survey, which consists of reports from regionally-based UFO researchers from across Canada that are compiled into one database.

The survey is headed up by Geoff Dittman and Chris Rutkowski of Ufology Research of Manitoba (UFO ROM), a prairie-based group that has been compiling UFO reports since 1989.

The survey defines UFOs as any unknown flying object seen by a witness.

That means the survey includes reports that were later found to be known objects, such as stars, plants, meteors, or aircraft.

The researchers believe it’s important to verify that eyewitnesses who report UFOs have indeed seen something – rather than imagined it.

The survey suggests most UFOs are actually conventional aircraft or an astronomical object.

On average, about 13 per cent of sightings are unexplained. Last year, 87 cases were unknown out of 483.

“As with previous studies, the 2002 Canadian UFO Survey does not offer any positive proof that UFOs are either alien spacecraft or a specific natural phenomenon,” the report says.

Most sightings, about 4 out of 5 , occur at night, but reports of “daylight discs” accounted for 15.8 per cent of sightings last year.

Sightings in 2002 peaked during the months of July and August, but also in February, according to the report, a pattern that held true in the northwest.

The typical UFO sighting is witnessed by two people, suggesting the witnesses are actually seeing something real, the survey says.

The report assigns a “strangeness” rating between one and nine to each sighting, with nine being the strangest.

The 2002 survey’s average strangeness rating is 3.6 – which is not strange at all, the report says.

“Hollywood-style flying saucers are, in reality, relatively uncommon in UFO reports. “

Terrace Standard - https://www.terracestandard.com/

Sunday, March 14, 2021

Wellington West Palm Beach UFO Sightings Were Probably Floating Lanterns Expert Says

Brian Vike's Favorite Cases.

Newspaper Article.

By Mitra Malek

Posted Jan 3, 2011 at 12:01 AM

Updated Mar 31, 2012 at 8:46 AM

Glowing orange and red lights floated across parts of Florida’s sky New Year’s weekend, including in the Wellington and West Palm Beach areas, setting off a state of wonderment among witnesses.

But those UFOs weren’t so unidentified after all.

The drifting bulbs and streaks were probably floating lanterns, said Brian Vike, founder of the paranormal blog The Vike Factor, which fielded about 250 e-mails, 30 or so from Florida, noting the strange sightings worldwide.

“They’re all lit up and glowing,” Vike said. “They’ll go up and down and sideways, so it looks pretty weird.”

A woman and her fiancé saw two “red orange” lights float over them while taking a walk in Wellington around 6:55 p.m. Jan. 1, the blog showed.

A West Palm Beach resident saw four red lights “spread equally apart coming in from the south heading north” at about 10:30 p.m. on New Year’s Eve,, according to the blog.

Wellington resident Carol Coleman spotted a “reddish-orangish-yellowish” glow at perhaps 9:30 p.m. Jan. 1, but didn’t think much of it other than noting it was “strange.”

“It reminded me of the tails of the fireworks,” said Coleman, who didn’t write to The Vike Factor.

Massachusetts resident Brian Milne and his wife spotted similar floating orbs of red on New Year’s Eve in Fort Myers. The couple had a pretty good idea of what flew slowly above because they have set off paper lanterns in Cape Cod.

“If you don’t know what the thing is, you’re going to think it’s a UFO,” Milne said. “A couple of them up there gives it an eerie feel.”

The lanterns are often made of a flame-retardant paper, similar to a paper bag. In the opening, which faces the ground, a wire frame holds a candle. The flame heats the inside of the paper, making it glow like a lantern. The heat causes the lantern to rise, like a tiny hot air balloon, up to about 500 feet, Milne said.

When the flame dies and the bag cools, it floats back down.

Vike said he’s fairly certain people spotted floating lanterns over the weekend. In fact, many wrote to him later confirming it.

“There’s some good stuff out there that you can’t explain, but this is probably” the lanterns, Vike said.

The Palm Beach Post News - https://www.palmbeachpost.com/

The Newspaper Article - https://www.palmbeachpost.com/article/20110103/NEWS/812017798

Friday, April 10, 2009

New Jersey UFO Hoax Was A Good Thing Says Dan Aykroyd ?

Dan Aykroyd finds that the New Jersey UFO hoax was a good thing ? Aykroyd says it is a good thing, meaning the UFO hoax as it brings more attention to real cases, this while signing vodka bottles for his many fans.

Well personally speaking, Dan's comment is a little out there as far as I see it. It is tough enough to try to figure out at times which reported sighting is a hoax or the real deal. Now having Dan say this, he certainly is not at all helping the UFO field. I personally worked my butt off and drove hours and hours, spending alot of my own money going to meet folks who "claimed" they had a UFO/alien encounter. After visiting with some of these people, nothing happened and I wasted time and money which could have been better spent on a real honest sightings. I certainly was not a happy camper and I sure don't find promoting the idea that reporting hoaxes is good for the UFO business.

So to hear Dan Aykroyd come out with a silly and disappointing statement is beyond me. His comments just do not help and makes me really angry to say the least.

You can read and watch the video here: http://www.nj.com/morristown/index.ssf/2009/04/dan_aykroyd_weighs_in_on_the_n.html

Brian Vike, Director HBCC UFO Research and host of the Vike Report UFO Eyewitness radio show. email: hbccufo@telus.net Blog: http://hbccuforesearch.blogspot.com/ http://www.hbccufo.org http://www.hbccufo.com http://www.hbccufo.net http://www.brianvike.com http://www.hbccufointernational.org

HBCC UFO Research, Box 1091 Houston, British Columbia, Canada - VOJ 1ZO

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Man Witnesses 'Odd' Sighting In Vaughan Sky - UFO

Posted: January 11, 2009

Vaughan

January 10, 2009 11:00 AM

UFO researcher says cluster of red lights 'weird'

BY KIM CHAMPION

Carmine Montemarano saw it and he wants to know if you saw it, too.
It was on Dec. 26 about a half an hour or so before midnight, when something that looked like fireworks caught Mr. Montemarano's eye. He was standing outside in the driveway of his cousin's house on a quiet street in the Major MacKenzie and Islington area of Kleinburg, bidding goodnight to relatives after a Christmas gift exchange.

"There was five or six bunched up bright, red lights," he said. "They were a little bit bigger than stars, and they were pretty far up there."

Both Mr. Montemarano and his cousin, Carmine, stared at the cluster of lights for a good five or six minutes, he said. They tried to capture images on an iPhone but the objects were too far away. The pair then watched as they flickered, and vanished. And no, they weren't drinking that night, Mr. Montemarano said.

To read the entire article, please visit the York Region's website: *UFO Researcher Says Cluster Of Red Lights 'Weird' *