Stories Of The Paranormal, The Unexplained, And All Things Incredible

September 20, 2009

September Sheep

One of the hardest things about blogging, at least for me, is the imagined limits of sticking to a topic. Infamous, incredible and ignored are pretty big topics but somehow ... oh the pressure. So screw it. This incredible blog is also going to be about things interesting, idiotic, irreplacable and a whole bunch of other words. And sometimes I'm just going to want to share. Like today.

I am very blessed to live in an area near wilderness and wildlife. Fresh from my camera today: September Sheep.

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September 15, 2009

Google Crop Circles

Sept 15, 2009: Google strikes again, with a theme of the mysterious and the bizarre celebrated on their home page for the second time this month. www.google.ca. This time it's crop circles.

Speculation is rampant on the Net about why Google is doing this - first a UFO abducts the letter O, then crop circles seem to forget about the letter L. Is it some weird marketing campaign? Is it something more sinister? Google doesn't seem to be telling.

Well, we love it. Everybody needs a little reminder of the mystery in life. that's what the Almanac is all about. Way to go, Google - keep it up.

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September 13, 2009

New Video - Molten Rain

The research for the Almanac involved hundreds of real-life mysteries. Juanita's criteria for inclusion into the book - verifiable from at least two different sources, a true mystery, before the year 2000, and more - meant that some didn't make the cut. Also, there are only so many mysteries you can put into a 365-day book.

So ... I've taken a few of the better mysteries from the trimmed pile and turned them into Youtube videos. Partly this is to advertise the Almanac, but also because some of these mysteries are simply too good not to do anything with. Watch them; you'll see what I mean.

They are also tremendous fun to put together.

Here is the first in the Incredible Almanac Youtube series, a mystery about an afternoon of molten rain. I call it Too Hot To Handle.

Enjoy it. Pass it around.

September 5, 2009

Google Has It Right

Sept 4, 2009: Google has chosen today to honour the incredible number of searches it gets for 'unexplained phenomenon'. http://www.google.ca/

More and more, people are experiencing the sensation that there is something more to this world than what we simply see - call it a feeling, an intuition, but it's too pervasive to be dismissed. Thus, people begin their search. You can read more about it on Greg Bishop's UFO Mystic blog, here.

What better time to get a book with 365 of the world's most amazing occurrences and unexplainable events? What better time to pick one up for your friend? A shameless plug, I know, but hey, it's our blog, and it happens to be true.

Mystery really is all around us. The unexplained is out there. Maybe, with a daily dose of the unusual and the incredible, we can sharpen our senses to see more deeply into the mysterious world we live in.

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September 4, 2009

Fact or Fantasy

Let me confess right now that I've stolen this image. I hope Isobelle Carmody doesn't mind because I'm about to rave about her latest book, Alyzon Whitestarr.

Written as a young adult novel that story, which I can barely put down long enough to write this, is about a young girl who discovers her supersenses after an accident.

(Why does it always have to be an accident or illness that uncovers these things? Why can wanting it be enough. Oh I know. The alternative would be hard work to uncover them - just like all thing worthwhile.)

In any case her newly enhanced sense of smell, for instance, can detect the different moods, thoughts and attentions of the people around her. Realistically overwhelming at first. Her other senses are also supremely altered.

This is not the first time this idea has been presented and it's not always in fiction. Marlo Morgan's Mutant Message Down Under accounts the journey she took with Australian aborigines and discovered many innate human abilities. Mind you the walkabout was no cake walk.

Roald Dahl writes in The Wonderful World of Henry Sugar

“All of us, you see, have two senses of sight, just as we have two senses of smell and taste and hearing. There is the outer sense, the highly developed one which we all use, and there is the inner one also. If only we could develop these inner senses of ours, then we could smell without our noses, tast without out tongues, hear without our ears and see without our eyes."