This is
certainly odd enough but their behavior appears to track that of aircraft of
some sort. We are not getting high speed
acceleration and course changes or for that matter any bobbing. Why not military glider training with lights
to prevent training accidents?
The one natural phenomenon
which I conjecture to exist is the giant methane bubble produced plausibly by
slime molds. This conforms to a number
of unexplained observations which has produced convincing reports including
physical evidence.
In this instance
the slow apparently untroubled speed conforms to a glider scenario and
accompanying aircraft. It is also a
reminder of just how much light in the sky activity does take place, unremarked
but potentially misleading to the observers.
Orange Orbs Over
South Carolina?
For the last several years, the south eastern portions
of South Carolina have remained a frequent hub for observation of mysterious
lights in the night sky. Reports of colorful, illuminated spheres of light have
both made headlines in the news, as well as having drawn attention from UFO
enthusiasts around the country.
Among the more widely circulated reports of these
illuminations, objects seen off the coast of the Myrtle Beach area, as well as
numerous descriptions of aerial illuminations further inland, have garnered the
attention of researchers hoping to determine if there could be some variety
of natural phenomenon, or perhaps even a military presence, that could
exist as a source for the lights.
Recently, South Carolina’s unexplained illuminations
became the focus of a night time video that has begun making rounds on the web,
which appears to show a large, orange orb of light being escorted by what the
camera operator says were likely military jets. What does the footage
represent, and is there an ongoing military presence over South Carolina that may
have led to reports of some of these strange lights in the sky?
The footage, taken my Mr. Milton Finch, was captured
on the evening of January 15, 2014, at approximately 7:50 in the evening, local
time, near his home in St. Stephen, South Carolina. Below is a segment where
the video is featured, with commentary, on a recent edition of the UFO
Planet vignette, beginning at 16:07:
Mr. Finch, with whom I correspond frequently, shared
the following about his observation:
I suddenly felt the urge to go outside. I asked my
wife to get the night vision video equipment. I went outside and looked to the
north. The moon was full.
Little or no wind. Clear for the most part. I witnessed an orange sphere
that de materialized from sight. My wife came out and we were both looking
north. I began video taping the event and scanning the
northern sky. We then noticed some bright flashing lights to the north. Three
at first. Then right behind the three flashing lights, we spotted an orange
sphere. It was followed by a smaller red light or sphere. That was followed
by another flashing light. The flashing lights were noticeably smaller than the
larger orange and slightly smaller red spheres. They were proceeding slowly
to the west. The duration of the event was about 10 and a half minutes of
video.
“The orange sphere was about the size of an
aspirin,” Milton says, noting that it was very apparently round in shape. “We
lost sight of the objects due to trees to our west,” Milton related further.
“Also, there has been a good amount of military aircraft in the skies this
evening. More than usual.”
The video and subsequent report were featured at
the UFO Stalker website,
where Mr. Finch also shared details about the encounter.
There are small airports at Summerville and Mount
Holly, located to the north and northeast of St. Stephen, respectively. The
largest and most heavily-trafficked airport nearby is the Charleston
International Airport, which is located parallel to Joint Base, an Air Force
outpost with which it shares runways.
Joint Base, under the command of the 628th Air Wing, features
an engineering complex allocated under the Space and Naval Warfare Systems
Center (SPAWAR),
which is purportedly the largest single employer in the Charleston area. Joint
Base is also the busiest surface port in the defense transportation system
located anywhere in the United States. Based on this information, the presence
of varieties of aircraft in the region that appear to be advanced or of
official origin might be expected, due to the heavy traffic at Joint Base.
Have you made similar observations of strange
aircraft, particularly in southeastern South Carolina? Feel free to share your
own experiences in the comments section below, or email me
directly with your
story.
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