Posted: 11 Jul
2014 11:00 AM PDT
Aylmer, ON,
resident Brian Cundle says he captured this photograph of an orange
light/object over Lake Erie while standing at the shoreline at the end of
Dillon Road, near Dealtown, ON, several years ago. (Contributed photo)
Have you seen
something strange in the night sky around Chatham-Kent.
It seems some
people have recently and not so recently.
I received a
text last Saturday from a former co-worker, Pete Zubyk, about a strange orange
light in the sky over Lake Erie while at Erieau the night before around
10:30-11 p.m.
He described
how the light became larger as it approached from the west. He said it stopped
then took off upwards. He said the light appeared again about 30 seconds later
far way from where it was last seen.
Knowing Pete
doesn't drink, I figured he really saw something, so I posted a request on the
Chatham Daily News Facebook page to see if anyone else had seen this light.
Turns out
three people had seen a similar light last Thursday night.
I also
received an e-mail from a local resident, who wished to remain anonymous,
stating he and his fiance had seen a strange orange light flying over Chatham
on Friday, June 27 between 10-10:30 p.m.
“It was
wild....we watched it for upwards of 30 seconds ... a brilliant
orange light
tracing across the sky, but not as fast as a shooting
star ... just
a steady tempo,” said the e-mail.
“We thought it
might be a meteor....but there was not trail.”
He added, “the
orange did seem more 'natural' than mechanical ... it did not have any FAA
required strobe lights – just an almost soothing orange glow.”
He estimates
the light was at about 10,000 feet, adding, “the final bizarre
aspect of our
experience is that there wasn't a cloud in the sky and it
was tracking
well within our field of view when it suddenly disappeared.”
I also
received an interesting e-mail from Brian Cundle, of Aylmer, who provided
photographs of an orange light he took from the east shore of Rondeau
Provincial Park several years ago and from the beach at the end of Dillon Road
near Dealtown.
Cundle said he
has spoken to many people over the years who have witnessed strange sightings
in the sky in the area.
“You'd be
surprised, I think, how many ordinary folk have regularly seen this phenomenon
and have kept it to themselves fearing ridicule,” he wrote.
However,
Cundle believes people are less fearful of the topic of unidentified flying
objects these days and would be interested in it.
I heard from a
mother and daughter who saw a similar strange orange light over Lake Erie about
three years ago that stopped them in their tracks as they took an evening
stroll and prompted them to head back home.
They tell
their story whenever the topic of UFOs comes up around the bon fire.
Strange things
seen in the night sky likely all have an explanation, says Matt McCall with the
Windsor Centre of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada.
“It really
could be aircraft,” he said, noting there are military air bases in Ohio and
Michigan that do test flights of aircraft that are being developed and are not
known to the general public.
“I do know
they (U.S. military) will fly a lot of stuff over Lake Erie because that whole
area doesn't have any other air traffic,” he added.
McCall has
seen strange things over Lake St. Clair he figures have come from the Selfridge
Air National Guard Base in Michigan.
“I've seen
things really, seemingly disappear, right in the distance, but it doesn't phase
me,” he said,
When planets
are seen close to the horizon it can create an optical illusion making them
appear larger and brighter, McCall said.
He added the
Earth's atmosphere can also create an optical illusion with planets and stars
in the night sky.
“Venus is
confused constantly for being a UFO for how bright it is,” he said. “When it's
on the horizon, it can be huge.”
He said the
same thing happens with the moon from time-to-time.
McCall has
seen the atmosphere play optical tricks with Sirius, also known as the Dog
Star.
“I've seen
that thing appear to twinkle red to blue,” he said. “There's no red to it . . .
but the atmosphere made it go red, blue, red, blue . . . like it was
flickering.”
McCall said it
is just an illusion, because the star returns to its normal blue colour as it
rises higher in the sky.
Whatever the
reason for these strange sights in the night sky, it sure can make for some
interesting conversation.
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