Monday, April 28, 2008

The Big Black Delta of the Farallones

In the UFO community, there are things spoken of known as "Big Black Deltas". While this sounds like something of Southern provenance rendered hopelessly un-p.c. in 21st century America, it actually refers to a specific type of UFO. 


The typically "Big Black Delta" is a large (600' to 1 mile) long triangular aircraft, completely silent.

Think of a giant black scone, a thousand feet or more long on the two equal sides, gliding silently through the air. Decorated with lights, like an airplane, it is sometimes so low you can throw a rock and hit it. 

And then suddenly, it accelerates so quickly that it's gone from view within ten seconds.

Sounds fantastic? Yet it's been seen by hundreds of eyewitnesses across the United States and abroad. Including off the Farallones.

Publicly, Mysterious SF says: If legit, this proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that "BBDs" are actually government craft. How many aliens have called someone "idiot"? (Doubtlessly more than one UFO observer has deserved it.) Mysterious SF believes that 75% of all sightings of unexplainable aerial phenomenon are actually of government craft.

Privately, Mysterious SF says: If it is a government craft, which part of the government operates it? Mysterious SF theorizes that the craft are flown by private contractors, much like Evergreen and Southern Air Transport did during the Cold War, to give the government cover. "Of course we don't have BBDs!" the denial would go. The unfinished part of the sentence is, "...someone else flies them for us." 

And how does it fly, anyway?

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Mount Davidson & Redwood City UFO Connection?

From the San Francisco Chronicle, Thursday, October 27, 2005.

Residents across California and people as far east as Las Vegas reported seeing strange lights in the sky late Wednesday, according to Vandenberg Air Force Base on the central coast.
Read the article here.

Now, what ten minutes of cheap detective work will get you...click on the article link above, and look at all three of the photographs. In two of them, a green light is visible. (In one of them, a red light as well.) 

Then, check out this report at the National UFO Reporting Center. Location: Redwood City. Note the date. Key quote:
My family apparently saw a scene of two bright white objects destroyed by a green object.
What to make of it?

Publicly, Mysterious SF says: The similarity of the two reports is intriguing. If what was seen by both parties really did appear over Redwood City, the person quoted in the Chronicle article must have been north of Mount Davidson--considerably north. The phenomena must have been at a very high altitude, moved a considerable distance, or was actually two or more different phenomena for all of this to have been sighted in both San Francisco and Las Vegas. 

It's a little much. In particular, Mysterious SF is troubled by the repeated use of "a.m." to describe an event that happened in the evening. He asks, if this really happened to you, would you make this mistake? You might if you were inventing it in your head as you filled in the online form. 

The NUFORC report introduces more questions than answers. Who filed the report? The person and his family were in Redwood City, but where was the object *really* located in the night sky? Is this a hoax, inspired by the Chronicle story, and meant for someone like Mysterious SF to find and link to each other? If it is a hoax, why introduce the bizarre "space war" aspect to the story? Why say your wife and children saw most it if you aren't going to leave your contact information? Why invent the wife and children when you can say you saw it yourself?

A little advice for amateur paranormalists. Never get too excited about anything. There is almost always a rational explanation for everything. Your mind may be, intentionally or unintentionally, suppressing things that would make a rational explanation more plausible. Every student of the paranormal with a functioning, critically-thinking brain has had plenty of head-slapper, "I can't believe I believed in that" memories. (Don't even get Mysterious SF started on the first time he saw those "ghost orbs" in a night-time photograph of a haunted house.) Hint: many so-called paranormalists do not have such memories. 

Privately, Mysterious SF says: Sometimes, there isn't a rational explanation. 

UPDATE: Maybe it was a Grooloo.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

San Francisco Ghost Hunt Tour

Sparkletack has a review of Jim Fassbinder's San Francisco Ghost Tour


Mysterious SF has taken the tour twice, and has enjoyed it. At $20 a head the price is steep, but the tour is about 3 hours long and fairly interesting. Mysterious SF found Fassbinder knowledgeable (he knew, for example, of the Great Dr. Weirde and the Montadon House) and friendly.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Ghosts R Us

When Mysterious SF was a kid, back in the 1980s, "That's Incredible!" was one of his favorite shows. Not because he was a Fran Tarkenton fan, or because of that one memorable episode where Cathy Lee Crosby got her blouse wet on live television and had to frantically cover up. No, he enjoyed it because it covered subjects like those he covers here in his blog.

One of MSF's favorite episodes was one which amazed and delighted him so much that he remembers it to this day. It was the episode featuring the haunted Toys R US store in Sunnyvale. MSF was a frequent patron of Toys R Us back then, and saw occasional local TV news segments about the haunted Toys R Us on television. That's Incredible!, however, did a full treatment of the haunted Toys R Us, and even purported to photograph the ghost. Oh look,here's the photo!

Mysterious SF has...problems with Sylvia Brown. Actually, to be more accurate about it, he thinks she has a longstanding credibility problem. This may be the last article Mysterious SF is ever going to reprint with her associated with it, but only because he wishes to honor his childhood by including the haunted Toys R Us story. (sob).

Source: Koeppel, Dan, Adweek's Marketing Week, June 10 1991, v32, n24, p17(1)

 `ghost' tramps the aisles seeking his lost love

The children have left, and the din has subsided. Another hard day's shopping is history at the Sunnyvale, Calif. branch of Toys `R' Us. Yet there might be activity inside the vast, silent emporium this midnight, none of which has to do with the straightforward business of retailing.

Inside, it is said, toys topple from the their shelves. A skateboard rolls down an aisle, clanking aimlessly into a wall. But nobody is in this Toys `R' Us this midnight. Or anyway, nobody alive.

In the tony heart of high-tech Silicon Valley, could there really be such a thing as a haunted retail outlet?

"I'm a skeptical person," says Toys `R' Us assistant store director Jeff Linden. "But something's definitely happening here."

In the past few years, store management has tried to get to the bottom of several curious developments. Linden recounts stories of objects flying 20 feet through the air and hitting employees. Shelves left neat in a locked store have been found in disarray the next morning. And then there was the talking doll that cried "mama" over and over-but would only do so when put in a locked box.

If nothing else, it's attracting curiosity-seekers. "My daughter insisted we visit when she came here from Hawaii," said a woman (who declined to identify herself) at the local Chamber of Commerce.

But that doesn't mean that store workers laugh off the matter. "Some of our employees are spooked," Linden says. "They won't go into certain parts of the store alone." He hastens to add that the "ghost" hasn't affected day-to-day store operations in any tangible way. Yet the incidents were taken seriously enough that management let a local psychic visit the store.

"I thought they were seeing things," says `private psychic counselor' Sylvia Brown. I usually find ghosts in old houses. Not in a modern-day retail store." But Brown changed her mind when she walked into the store. "I felt something," she says. "Especially in the last aisle on the left."

It was in that supernatural aisle that Brown got permission to conduct a seance, a summoning of spirits.

Brown says the whole problem comes down to one scenario, namely that "Johnny is waiting for Beth." The ghost, she says, is one John Johnson, a circuit preacher who set up his tent in verdant Sunnyvale at the turn of the century. In those days, apples grew on the current site of the store. "Beth" is Elizabeth Yuba Murphy Tafee, daughter of a prominent rancher. But his love went unrequited. So poor Johnson-or "Yonny," as the employees have dubbed him-is doomed to tramp the aisles of the orchard qua toy store. He is reduced to bewailing his plight, searching for his lost love and occasionally beaning employees with a package of rubber ducks.

Of course, many observers consider the ghost about as real as a Ninja Turtle.

"My response is `Skeptics `R' Me,'" says James Randi, a prominent debunker of psychic phenomena. "There are lots of silly people who make all kinds of declarations."

But Brown can produce a photograph (see above) from the seance that she claims includes old Johnson. He is looming in the misty background, leaning against a store shelf. Brown says there was nobody in her group standing anywhere near that location during the seance.

Such "proof" doesn't cut much ice with Randi. And some of Brown's claims don't stand up too well when checked.

Brown says police are "constantly" responding to alarms at the store.

Lieutenant Andy Pate, of the Sunnyvale Department of Public Safety, says the store has "no more alarms than any other large retailer." But the stories persist. Local papers and TV have looked into the lovelorn spook.

"That's part of the hype," Randi says. "Why don't they install a video camera? Why don't they put the place under surveillance? Call me, and I'll get rid of the ghost in three days," says Randi. "Of course, I don't think they'd like that."

That may be the point. "Sales go up after reports of the ghost," says Linden. "A lot of people think this is a great thing."

So maybe nobody's in any great hurry to smoke out Old Yonny Johnson.

Publicly, Mysterious SF says: James Randi...what a buzzkill. 

Privately, Mysterious SF says: It''s hard to imagine an assistant director of a toy store trying to make "sales go up" with ghost stories. Children are frightened of ghosts and do not like them. That can only hurt sales. When Mysterious SF went to Toys R Us as a child and wondered if the one he was wandering was the haunted one, he wanted to know so he could GET OUT OF THERE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. 

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Mysterious SF Stink

Strange SF stink that will be difficult to place on Mysterious SF's Google Map. 

Source: San Francisco Examiner August 17, 1999 Page A 5

No Luck Sniffing Out Source of 

Mysterious S.F. Stink

Is a red tide behind wave of complaints?


Nobody seemed to know where it came from, and some impolite people from elsewhere said it was a natural condition, but San Francisco was stinky Thursday.

"We're getting sporadic and fleeting Bay Area complaints of an odor," said Terry Lee, Travel spokeswoman for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. "We have two inspectors out checking it out.

"San Francisco is not a place that normally has industrial type odors, so it's unusual." She said complaints of a smell in the air both Wednesday and Thursday came from "all over," from the avenues near the ocean, South San Francisco, the Marina and Foster City.

The widespread area where the smell was sniffed gave rise to speculation that the odor might be caused by a red tide, a phenomenon caused by algae blooming and mixing with other substances in the ocean.

Or to put it another way, red tide is a seasonal reddish discoloration of sea waters caused by large numbers of red dinoflagellates that kill fish and other organisms by releasing poisonous products that are extremely toxic.

Besides dead fish and other organisms, it causes stink.

Lee herself got a whiff of it and said the odor matched her prior experience with odoriferous red tide output. "It smells like seaweed rotting."

But a survey of red tide experts produced no reports of a current red tide affecting bay or ocean waters.

Said one official in Sonoma County's health department, which monitors red tide incidents because of their effects on shellfish and other marine life: "Have you considered it's just your normal smell? It smells great in Santa Rosa."

Publicly, Mysterious SF says: Red Tide isn't the only situation where a low tide will produce a bad smell. A combination of low tide and a hot day will bake all the seaweed, dead animals, and microbes and make the entire city stink to high heaven. 

Privately Mysterious SF says:  Don't have to be a dick, Santa Rosa.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Enter the Sea Serpents


It's time to start folding in the sea serpent reports. We'll roll into the topic with tongue planted firmly in cheek, but rest assured, it will get serious quickly. 


Published in the New York Times, April 5th, 1885. Originally published in the San Francisco Chronicle, March 28th, 1885


A COUPLE OF FISH STORIES


SAN FRANCISCO BAY FURNISHES A SEA SERPENT AND A MONSTER


The existence of the great sea serpent is no longer in doubt. It has been seen in the waters of San Francisco Bay. According to the statement of J.P. Allen, of the Bank of California, he and several other residents of Alameda were standing on the dock of the ferryboat Garden City yesterday morning, at about 8:30 o'clock, about midway between Alameda and Goat Island, when a huge black monster suddenly raised its head and neck from the water to a height of about 10 feet, opened its jaws, displaying a mouth two feet wide filled with rows of sharply pointed teeth, and after taking a curious glance at the passing steamer plunged again into the water, at the same time elevating a sixty-foot wall of water for some time, after which it made off in the direction of the Alameda baths, near which some fishing boats were anchored. Some incredulous persons whom the story was told say that the ferryboat struck a floating spar, forcing one end downward in the water and elevating the other as the steamer passed over the submerged end, and that after the steamer had passed the elevated end end fell back in the water with a splash. We may expect soon to hear of the destruction of the Alameda fishing fleet, or more probably the establishment of a hotel for Summer boarders in the vicinity of the Alameda wharf.


Besides the sea serpent, which gave a powerful impetus to the romancing powers of several reputable gentlemen crossing on the ferryboat, the bay yielded a sea monster of such strange appearance that the oldest tar on the seawall has not yet given it a name. The monster was first seen by Carl Sevening and John Peat, who were rowing near the North Heads at about 9 o'clock yesterday morning. The animal exposed a fiercely mustached head of a shape between that of a seal and a sea lion, surveyed the scene, took a dislike to the rowboat, and charged upon it. Just before reaching the boat the monster dived and came up under the boat, lifting it and the occupants, but not capsizing it. The enemy made a second appearance on the opposite side of the boat, four feet off, and was met with active battle. Peat deal a blow on the monster's head with an oar, knocking it out for a moment, and Sevening followed with another blow which knocked the beast silly. The pair then secured the animal with the boat's painted and began towing it, when the enemy came to time for a second round. This it began by towing the boat rapidly for a quarter of a mile. It then came to the surface for breath, when Sevening landed it a blow, gaining first blood, and ending the fight with a square knock-out. The enemy turned belly up and was towed to the foot of Larkin Street, where it took six men to land it. The animal measured 6 feet in length and weighed about 300 pounds. It had green eyes and a long, white bristling mustache. It had two flippers of great strength, which measured 1 1/2 feet in length. The capture will be kept at the foot of Larkin Street until noon to-day. 


Publicly, Mysterious SF says: most reports of so-called paranormal events and mysterious creatures resemble report #1, without the explanation about the floating spar.  


Privately, Mysterious SF says: report #2 is a present-day violation of the Marine Mammal Protection Act


Thursday, April 3, 2008

In-House Notes

Various notes on the progress of this blog...


1. This is the third try at this blog in ten years, and I think it's going to work this time. (Iterations #1 and #2 never made it off the ground. Incidentally, they were named Lo! SF, but that name was dropped when Mysterious SF decided he is not a Charles Fort fan. Blasphemy?Whatever.)

2. Plenty of material for fairly consistent posting on Tuesdays and Thursdays. I'll probably run out at some point without some input from readers. 

3. Interested in working with other web sites and groups, but let me get my blog legs first. 

4. Link to me! Link to me! Mysterious SF will reciprocate. 

5. This blog template is horrible. Do you want to know what the real mystery is? Why there are so few free stock Blogger templates. Unfortunately, Mysterious SF is probably stuck with it right now. He using a third party template, but ate his page elements, didn't play well with, well, anything, and was a pain in the neck to kill. So, it's back to ugly format. 

6. Comments are provisional and may be shut off at some point. Mysterious SF is not a huge fan of blog comments. As insightful and useful as they can be, they can also be obnoxious and abusive. Mysterious SF is not interested in feedback. Just remember: Mysterious SF didn't go to journalism school, he means no harm, and this blog is free. Remember all this and we'll have a grand old time. Mostly, he is more interested in more ideas and material for posts. 

7. Advertising is unlikely. I can't see how I'd make any money off this.