home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- BIZARRE OCCURRENCES PART OF AREA'S FOLKLORE 07/01/96
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Colorado Springs Newspaper
-
- By D'Arcy Fallon/Gazette Telegraph
-
- Brandy Edwards, 6, was playing In her yard, looking to the sky for rain, last
- August 27 when she told her father to look up. Tim Edwards then took videos of
- an object hovering overhead. Life as he knew It changed for Tim Edwards after
- seeing and videotaping what many believe is a UFO. Since then, the cafe owner
- from Salida has been nervous and jumpy, looking at the heavens for other
- sightings. "There are so many weird things up here," he says.
-
- On Sept. 23, Jeanne Shaw and her sister Loni Smith saw what they call a
- "mothership," the size of a football field going by a window at Shaw's home
- near La Veta. Shaw's children also saw the UFO, as did others in the area.
-
- SAN LUIS VALLEY -- Tim Edwards is a jumpy man these days. Some might say he's
- an ordinary guy reacting to an extraordinary experience. Others might say he's
- seen too many "Twilight Zone" reruns. Puffing nervously on a Marlboro, Edwards,
- binoculars around his neck, paces back and forth on the front lawn of his
- Salida home and gestures to the mountains above him. Up there. He gazes at the
- sky with palpable longing. "There are so many weird things up here," says
- Edwards, 42, a quiet man who runs a popular family care with his wife and
- father. Edwards swears he saw a UFO in August from his back yard, and he's
- still shaken up about it.
-
- "I don't look outside no more. I don't get no sleep."
-
- He's probably not alone.
-
- Over the years, several people in the San Luis Valley claim they've seen
- Bigfoot, cattle mutilations, glowing fireballs, and yes, oddly shaped UFOs and
- "mother ships" that twist and dart across the night sky. Residents of this
- sweeping, semiarid expanse of pinon and rabbitbrush say this is a mysterious
- place of sacred mountains and bubbling hot springs, of oddly-placed sand dunes,
- lush meadows and some of the richest soil in the country.
-
- At an average elevation of 7,600 feet -- more than a mile and a half above sea
- level -- the San Luis Valley is the highest and largest alpine valley in the
- world. Three times the size of Delaware and flanked by the Sangre de Cristo and
- San Juan mountains, the valley is home to a diverse group: yuppie stargazers,
- hardscrabble alfalfa farmers, sheep ranchers, folk artists, Guatemalan refugees
- and descendants of original settlers of the Sangre de Cristo land grant, who
- came from Mexico.
-
- Steeped in history and folklore. the San Luis Valley has long been a UFO
- hotbed. As long ago as 1917, the residents of Salida told of mysterious
- "vehicles of the air" flying about the night sky, according to a 78-year-old
- edition of The Salida Record.
-
- The valley "is one of the most sacred areas in North America to the indigenous
- people," said UFO expert Christopher O'Brien, who lives in the tiny, New Age
- hamlet of Crestone and tracks the valley's UFO activity in a bi-monthly
- newsletter, "The Mysterious Valley Report." (He also is the author of "The
- Mysterious Valley," due out this summer from St. Martin's Press.)
-
- Many American Indians considered the valley's Mount Blanca to be the Sacred
- Mountain of the East -- a door- way for the emergence of the Star People, often
- described as "arriving aboard flying seedpods," according to an article in
- Spirit magazine, which is New Age oriented.
-
- But Tim Edwards says he didn't see a flying seedpod on Aug. 27. He describes it
- as a silver cigar-shaped spacecraft.
-
- Like Richard Dreyfuss in "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," Edwards exudes
- an aura of nervous intensity as he talks about the sighting. It happened on a
- Sunday morning when Edwards was working outside on his house with his daughter,
- Brandy, 6, at his side. Brandy, worried that it might rain, looked upward and
- said, "Daddy, there's something up there in the sky," Edwards recounted last
- week.
-
- He brushed off his daughter's comments, but when she kept insisting he look up,
- Edwards said he realized she was right.
-
- There was something in the sky. The Wasson High School graduate grabbed his
- video camera and for more than a hour shot footage of the disc shaped or cigar-
- shaped object. It had oscillating lights that appeared to rotate from left to
- right, and it darted back and forth just above the morning sun. During
- subsequent sightings, Edwards shot videotapes showing small, white spheres
- emerging from the object. Edwards' first tape was shown in November on
- "Sightings," a TV show about UFOs and other strange phenomenon, and was
- analyzed by Village Labs, a digital video technology company in Tempe, Ariz.
- Village Labs president Jim Dilettoso said the tape wasn't a hoax or an optic
- aberration. He said it appeared to contain legitimate footage of a very large,
- solid, possibly three-dimensional object flying at high altitude. Whether one
- believes Edwards saw a UFO or simply an odd-looking plane, he swears he's a
- changed man.
-
- "They put some feelings in me I've never had before," he said. "When I was
- looking at the main craft, I got, like, an electrical impulse through my body.
- It was very important for the world to know the truth. Now I'm convinced we're
- not alone."
-
- The UFOs are buzzing the Earth because they're concerned about its inhabitants,
- much like humans are curious about whales and dolphins, said Edwards.
-
- And how should earthlings respond?
-
- With "brotherhood, universal love, and get rid of the nuclear stuff," Edwards
- said.
-
- "Not since Jesus was here has something so major come down," he added. "Most
- people are terrified that something could be out there." Or fascinated. On the
- eastern edge of the huge valley, on a windswept hillside near La Veta, two
- sisters, Jeanne Shaw, 49, and Loni Smith, 53, talked about their cosmic
- encounter.
-
- Before launching into her side of the story, Shaw explained she had always seen
- herself as "a bit of a skeptic" when it came to the paranormal. "Just because I
- see a little light in the sky, doesn't mean it's a UFO," she said. Shaw's
- sister, a property manager in La Veta, is the same way. In fact, neither of the
- sisters -- who grew up in Colorado Springs -- seemed quick to jump on the UFO
- bandwagon. And yet both are unshakeable in their explanation about what they
- saw one night this past fall.
-
- It wasn't a Black Hawk helicopter, as the Walsenburg police suggested to them
- when they phoned in alarm. Not a plane. Not a dream or an hallucination. It was
- a UFO.
-
- Here's their story: On Sept. 23, about 8:15 p.m., as Shaw, her two children and
- Smith sat at the kitchen table after dinner, they heard a strange humming
- outside their mobile home in the Navajo Ranch Resorts subdivision, located
- between La Veta and Walsenburg.
-
- "I heard, no, felt this humming noise," said Shaw, who moved to the La Veta
- area last spring after she got tired of life in Denver. "I felt something huge
- coming up the back of my lot."
-
- Smith: "It was a vibration, although the windows weren't rattling." They looked
- out the window and say they saw a slow-moving, rectangular-shaped spacecraft
- skimming the tops of the pinon trees. It had yellow and white oscillating
- lights in front and two red lights in the back, like a Cadillac's. They
- estimated it was as wide and long as a football field. Shaw: "It was huge."
-
- Smith: "It was monstrous. It was the mother ship."
-
- The sisters' words leapfrogged over each other as they attempt to explain their
- reactions to the sighting.
-
- Tumbling out of the mobile home, they stared, incredulous at the thing. Smith:
- "Our mouths were open to our navels. I felt like I was looking up at the bottom
- of a barge."
-
- Shaw: "My knees buckled. I screamed. It was in our face."
-
- As the object slowly moved away from them, Smith waved her arms after it,
- yelling, "Here we are! Here we are!"
-
- Shaw, petrified, slugged her sister on the arm. "Shut up!" she said. "They'll
- beam us up!"
-
- Shaw's son, Robert, 27, ran behind the spacecraft as it flew down the arroyo,
- trying to catch up with it. Shaw estimates it took about 20 minutes before it
- disappeared.
-
- Two miles away in the subdivision, another resident, Joan Newland, was getting
- ready for bed. She, too, heard a low humming noise and figured it was a
- helicopter. But the sound persisted, and her dogs were going wild. She looked
- out the window and gasped. Like Shaw, her knees buckled.
-
- "It was huge. I saw it going over the trees. It was a shock to see something
- that big. I thought, holy..., what is that?"
-
- Shaken and frightened, Newland decided to keep her observation to herself. Then
- she got a call from Shaw, asking if she'd seen something strange out her
- window. The women compared notes and decided it must have been a UFO. "What
- else could it have been'?" asked Newland plaintively. "There's nothing that
- could fly that low without making any draft or wind."
-
- Since that night, neither Newland nor Shaw has seen the spacecraft. Not that
- they've stopped looking.
-
- Newland: "We keep our eyes to the sky now."
-
- Shaw: "Only about 20 times a night."
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- LGM NEWSDESK - Avaliable at the Little Green Men BBS. 01342 844517 - 24 Hours
- Regularly updated - Fido: 2:440/217.0, Internet: lgmnews@nolimits.demon.co.uk
- Found any UFO related stories in the media? Please forward to the LGM NEWSDESK
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------