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@vortexhack3429 ай бұрын
i live in a 2 million dollar house
@heywoodjablowme81209 ай бұрын
@@vortexhack342 Why only 2 million? That's nothing special.
@driggs21099 ай бұрын
You should look into Eastern State Penitentiary and Waverly Hills Sanitorium, the latter of which is less than 3 miles from my house. They are both a couple of the most haunted places in America, and they have both been featured multiple times on different paranormal investigations. Waverly was where the show Ghosthunters televised live investigations on Halloween night twice. I must admit, I do have a very personal connection to Waverly Hills. Both of my parents worked there at separate times before they ever met. My dad worked there first, between the time Waverly closed in 1961 and before it reopened as Woodhaven Geriatric Center in 1962. He was security and walked what is known as the "Death Tunnel" or "Body Chute" to make sure no one was trying to sneak into the former TB hospital. My mother then worked there as a nurse's assistant sometime between 1974 and 1980 for a few years. Woodhaven closed in 1982 due to patient neglect (by official reports). They housed the physically disabled, dementia patients, and the mentally disabled. My mom told me of snakes getting into the building quite often, doctors and nurses taking patients to the fifth floor (which was STRICTLY OFF LIMITS to ANYONE else, including other staff) and doing some messed up stuff to them, and a mentally disabled lady that NO ONE ever wanted to attend to because she would save ALL of her poop and LAUNCH it at anyone who was stupid or fearless enough to open her door.
@jamesembrey59867 ай бұрын
i will
@karenthompson80386 ай бұрын
I wanted to answer your question no it’s the Cecil hotel in Los Angeles, California. That’s haunted where a girl named Elisa was talking to somebody while she was in the elevator, but there were cameras that showed nobody and she started freaking out looking in and out and the door is closed and she disappeared and then I think it was two weeks later, the water coming out of the sink in the hotel rooms were given a bad smell and color and they went to go check on the tanks and there she was but they don’t know if it was suicide or homicide because the covers are very very heavy on those tanks and they don’t know how she could’ve lifted it put herself inside pull that thing down when it takes three men to open it and then drown herself! It made zero sense
@dawnsoger67298 ай бұрын
I used to live not too far from Skinwalker Ranch. What I wanted to share with you, is that a local science teacher was first contacted to investigate the mysterious happenings at the ranch. His name was Joseph Junior Hicks. He and a friend of his were also contacted frequently about UFO sightings. So frequently in fact, that they wrote a book back in the 1950’s about Utah UFO’s. Joseph Junior Hicks was my uncle. He often told us about things he had witnessed. His son has his Dad’s notes and still follows up on reports that he receives. Uncle Junior, became such an expert on UFO’s and supernatural events that he would get calls from all over the world. You can search Skinwalker Ranch and/or Joseph Junior Hicks for more information. I will tell you, that my Uncle Junior was one of the kindest, most honest and amazing man I have ever known.
@dougtripp24319 ай бұрын
I lived a couple miles down the road from Ringing Rocks. It's actually a Boulder field left by a glacier. These rocks are all over the area but this small section is on state owned land. The real creepy thing is that if you take one out of its Boulder field, they won't ring unless you get a bunch of them together.
@leanndilorenzo46876 ай бұрын
I went there with my family (I'm originally from Southern NJ) when I was very young and LOVED it there.
@tylerandjuneslatoffandbarj19626 ай бұрын
I live by there! There are a couple boulders fields in the area. Bake Oven Knob is another place with rocks near the peak but they don’t ring lol
@ElizabethThompson-tj7qw5 ай бұрын
I didn't know that! Interesting
@cougarjrv98909 ай бұрын
You know what I love about Lewis's videos? I sit here explaining stuff like he can hear me! 😂😂❤❤
@MachellMoosey9 ай бұрын
I do to! It's the mom/teacher in me😅
@sreace7238 ай бұрын
Me too!!!
@S_Cooper04048 ай бұрын
LOL I thought I was the only one! 🤣😂
@krystalhickey62787 ай бұрын
Same😂
@kathrynwilliamson86317 ай бұрын
Yup, just like I could get an answer to my questions! I need to take notes and investigate some of these. Now that would be a cool trip!😎😉😊
@andyloy78099 ай бұрын
"A Jedi making a castle"😂
@LisaReisinger-p4w5 ай бұрын
I love how Lewis makes everything circle back to Star Wars😂😂😂
@MAGGOT_VOMIT9 ай бұрын
Hey Lewis the weirdest parts about the Coral Castle is, the castle has a 4ton rotating door made of solid coral that was so perfectly balanced you could open it with one finger, that is until the door needed repairing a few years ago and the parks dept couldn't get it sat back, exactly balanced. Another strange occurrence was when Ed Leedskalnin moved the castle to where it sits today. He told the truck driver to leave the big truck/trailer and pick it up the next day. The truck driver left to get lunch but had forgotten something so he came back 30min later and was shocked to find the huge trailer was already loaded with the castle's largest coral blocks!! 😳
@Myomer1049 ай бұрын
"Skinwalker" is a creature from Navajo myth. They were shamans who, after conducting a dark ritual, could take on the forms of animals, or even other people, by putting on their skins.
@andyloy78099 ай бұрын
Yes! ,💯
@connierohall42489 ай бұрын
There is also a tv show that does experiments on Skinwalker Ranch
@rodneybever95838 ай бұрын
Been camping near there several times and all I saw was nature. But I am a hardcore sceptic about that stuff. Someone else might have said they felt something because they thought they would
@Peter951119 ай бұрын
You're thinking of the Hotel Cecil in downtown LA where the girl in the water storage was found. That was partially the inspiration for American Horror Story: Hotel. I've stayed at the Roosevelt hotel. The only annoyance I encountered was the loud music from the bar downstairs when I was trying to sleep. There are so many other, more interesting mysterious places than the ones mentioned in that video. For instance, the Mystery Spot in Santa Cruz which is a total mind f*k or even the Winchester Mystery house to name a few.
@stephaniemccarthy16769 ай бұрын
Yep, yep The girl had a history of psychotic episodes
@CaenaGrey9 ай бұрын
Oohhh, I’ve been in the Winchester Mansion.
@iviui2d3i29 ай бұрын
Yeah, Hotel Cecil (also a temporary stomping grounds for, among other serials, Richard Ramirez; The NightStalker), and was renamed after the Elisa Lam incident and is now sporting the new name of "Stay on Main"... Right at the edge of the beginning/end of the notoriously infamous area known as, "Skid Row". The "Roosevelt" is more of conspiracy laden hotel, said to have been home to many a backroom 'handshake' deals of Political and Illegal business dealings, which may or may not have resulted in both extortion, bribery, and 'hitman for hire/rival assassination plots etc., The place for the speakeasy crowd of politicians and authorities whom were' on the take' and mobsters plotting out Under-the-Table re-zoning, 'incentivized' union busters, Post-Roaring 20's Prohibition era bootlegging... and on and on and on... D'Alesandro Family knows... Hi Nancy!
@cecilybilbrey80249 ай бұрын
You have to do the midnight Halloween tour at the Winchester Mystery House! Its much more atmospheric than the regular tour!
@CaenaGrey9 ай бұрын
@@iviui2d3i2 Not exactly… there are two separate sides. Stay on Main is just one side.
@roneldridge92819 ай бұрын
I have been to the White Eagle. The bartender there was actually one of the best mixologists I have ever had. Now watch me find out that no one by his name works there.😱
@frazzledhaloz31849 ай бұрын
Should check out The Vortex in Oregon..
@roneldridge92819 ай бұрын
Just moved from Arizona and went to a couple of those in Sedona... strange. It made me have goosebumps for no reason.
@rhondapease85169 ай бұрын
😂
@heywoodjablowme81209 ай бұрын
White Eagle is a cool place. Don't fear the reaper....baby take my hand😂❤😂
@MERollered9 ай бұрын
We used to have lots of fun at the White Eagle. Go to the Roseland for a concert and come to the White Eagle for drinks and a post show, then crash upstairs. That is how we used to do it. Now that McMenamins built their hotel, we go there now because we're getting old and staying up late for the post show is HARD.
@Jliske29 ай бұрын
12:30 you're thinking of the Cecil Hotel which is closer to downtown by Skid Row. Yes, LA has multiple historic hotels that feel off.
@bayoumeme77439 ай бұрын
What the government don’t tell you is the missing people in our National parks with glacier national park and Yosemite having the highest percentage.
@SC-gp7kt9 ай бұрын
Missing 411
@BBelle647 ай бұрын
Have you ever been? I’ve been to both, the wilderness is vast and there are predators. This is what happens when “city people” go hiking.
@marshalllucas837 ай бұрын
Look at missing 411, talks a lot about unsolved disappearances
@Pokeysaurus6 ай бұрын
They do, in fact, tell you. They tell you the most when you’re entering those places so you don’t fall and hit your head and get eaten by scavengers.
@eowynsisterdaughter6 ай бұрын
Lots of caves to, tons of disappearances overlap with cave systems we know, and those are just the systems we know of, it's conjectured there's a lot of underground tunnels that haven't been documented.
@dougbowers44159 ай бұрын
The case you’re thinking of was the Cecil Hotel in downtown Los Angeles. My partner was a health inspector who worked on the case. I lived 1/2 block from the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel for 1 1/2 years in the late 80s. It’s beautiful inside. A beautiful courtyard too.
@andrewjones99919 ай бұрын
I live in LA and I've only ever heard the Roosevelt is really nice. None of the spooky stuff. I've been to an event there but never spent the night. The Cecil on the other hand is creepy af and everybody thinks that.
@olivervandebeer74927 ай бұрын
I don't think I would own the house on Waverly Dr. in Los Feliz where the Manson family murdered Leo and Rosemary Labianca. It's too bad because the city has old Spanish Colonial homes and high-end real Estate. Hollywood Hill or Benedict Canyon either.. I guess I watch too many Hollywood documentaries.. LOL
@chrisdavis76179 ай бұрын
I don't travel much, but a couple years ago I did a road trip hitting all the Civil War battlefields that I could in the days I had. All of them had an affect on me. However, When I got out of the car in the parking lot at Shiloh Battlefield in Tennessee, there was a physical feeling that was different. The wind was blowing the tall golden grass in waves and there was total silence otherwise, no people. It felt like a wave of grief, I guess. I was awed and almost felt like I should humble myself and even bow down. It was something.
@tammycallahan91609 ай бұрын
Every time my husband and I drive pass Antietum battlefield we get sick to our stomachs. Always change our route. Wondering if you went near there and experienced anything odd?
@chrisdavis76179 ай бұрын
@@tammycallahan9160 I know we went there, but it must not have had the affect of Shiloh. I'll have to get my pictures out to see if it helps me remember.
@greeneyedlady55809 ай бұрын
I've had a similar experience when I was all alone a the Custer Battlefield memorial.
@sassymess71116 ай бұрын
It's very haunted.. that an LOUISIANA 😮
@seanmccarty11766 ай бұрын
I felt something like that at Gettysburg on cemetery ridge and at the open field where pickets charge occurred. If imagine Antietam and Shilo would have similar eeriness. Certain places are stained forever with the horrors of war.
@xineohpinakc2649 ай бұрын
He did not mention it but, the guy moved coral castle once as well...The whole castle. He loaded the trucks one large stone at a time but, would not let the drivers ever see him load the stones or remove them.
@wulfseig18649 ай бұрын
Rock geek here. Happy excited me went to Sedona to look at pretty rocks. Had an indigenous Navajo Nation guide. As soon as I got to Sedona something changed inside. Cried uncontrollably the entire week of vacation. Continued to cry for another 2 weeks. It was bizarre. Went to look at pretty rocks not on a spiritual journey. Those vortex things messed me up. Freaks me out even twenty years later. Like I mentioned, had an Indigenous Navajo Nation guide. He said I was feeling the collective pain of Earth. If that's true, Earth is inconsolable.
@kellytrimble70199 ай бұрын
The guy who built the castle was said to use magnet force somehow to lift these huge rocks. He never told anyone how he did it!
@w1975b7 ай бұрын
Leylines were mentioned in something I read. Leylines are energy lines of Earth.
@lindadianesmith60139 ай бұрын
I’ve been to Sedona. It definitely has an energy field (and I’m not a yoga type). I went on a group hike. The guide took us up on a rock and played a flute. It was cool. On the way down, I saw the twisted trees. At the end of tours, people usually disperse and go their separate ways. For some reason we decided to. Find a restaurant and have dinner together. It was a special evening with a group of strangers enjoying each other’s company.
@jeremybrooks29169 ай бұрын
In the state of Vermont there is the Bennington triangle where people have gone completely missing even while riding a bus full of other people
@misslora38969 ай бұрын
I wrote in a post yesterday on your channel about Sedona, AZ being my favorite place ever, not just because of the beauty, but the feeling I get there. I couldn't explain it, but it was incredible. After like my 2nd time going and talking about it to a few people, a couple of them mentioned it was probably ley lines and energy votexes they'd heard existed there. I'm no woo woo new age person, no drugs... nothing "different". I'd never even heard about those things before, but I can personally attest to what that place does and how it makes you feel... It's wonderful.
@sunnyday56217 ай бұрын
I would like to add the "Cosmos" in South Dakota. Balls roll uphill and other anomalies. Super Cool.
@michaelhill75529 ай бұрын
I have been to Sedona multiple times to experience the energy vortex. Good energy there.
@ladonnawhatley9049 ай бұрын
The Skinwalker Ranch was made into a show on tv! It was called The Secrets of Skinwalker Ranch!
@brookerickettson49509 ай бұрын
Not a full believer and the show is probably edited to keep you watching, but the things that they document, that are recored in real time makes you wonder. 1 or 2 weird things are ignorable, 10+ and its less easy to brush off as nothing is going on. Probably not aliens, but something suspect.
@seekexplorewander9 ай бұрын
I'm from and live in Philadelphia - 45-60 minutes from Ringing Rocks Park. It's f'ng scary! Seriously, if you spend any time outdoors, hearing the rocks for the first time, even if you know what to expect, is eerie as hell.
@cowgirljane33169 ай бұрын
He forgot THE MARFA LIGHTS in Marfa, Texas. Locals say they are alien lights. They have a festival every year.
@S_Cooper04048 ай бұрын
And The Brown Mountain Mystery Light in North Carolina.
@sassymess71116 ай бұрын
Also BAILEY'S PRAIRIE in Texas. Unexplained light people think is the ghost of "ole" Brit Bailey.
@sandrawalkerhaliburton18849 ай бұрын
I lived in Homestead, Florida and near the CORAL CASTLE. It is amazing to see this place. It is for real.
@peterphilly41489 ай бұрын
Personally, I think watching a video of Lewis spending a night in the abandoned asylum would be as entertaining as any food reaction video he might make in the future.....and the part about an operator calling rooms in the Roosevelt hotel to ask if they need help and then denying it happened would be a brilliant marketing ploy for a purportedly haunted hotel.
@vladyvhv95799 ай бұрын
Let's do some ghostbusting. I'll need someone to bring a diesel generator, a couch, and a coffee table. I'll bring the TV, Blu-Ray player, and movies. If ghosts do exists, we'll either drive them off watching Ghostbusters all night, or make some new friends.
@jpjh88449 ай бұрын
A friend of mine used to work as a tour guide for the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum
@waynedavis72459 ай бұрын
I don't think that's a good idea. I wouldn't be able to stop laughing and I might end up in the emergency room! Lol
@johngst429 ай бұрын
Sounds fantastic to me. I'll make the popcorn.
@The_Crucible7148 ай бұрын
He needs to start investigating & spending nights in haunted places in the UK & US. His channel would blow up immediately! 🤯
@RR_304-n6c9 ай бұрын
I live about 15 minutes from Weston in West Virginia and they have the ghost tours open at the Trans Allegheny Asylum around Halloween. I would never set foot in there but have friends that go every year to do the tours. You should check out the episode on Ghost Hunters as it’s one of the most haunted places in America. I don’t know if it is but I don’t want to find out. Also I would love for you to create a line of merch with a shirt saying Whaaaat?! It cracks me up every time you say that with your accent! It sounds so exaggerated. I love it hahaha
@jackiel12829 ай бұрын
@L3WG I kept rewinding when you flinched, to watch it again, and again..that was HILARIOUS 😂😂😂
@DarkDealer6669 ай бұрын
Lived most of my life in the Portland Oregon area. Never heard of the White Eagle until today. Interesting stuff.
@euphoniacarstairs29559 ай бұрын
I was in Sedona last April with one of my sisters. Lovely area. Great hiking. Something of a New Age mecca. Chapel of the Holy Cross in Sedona I visited in 1988, and it was an intense experience. At some point, sitting there in the chapel, I just started weeping and couldn't say why. The Chapel is another 'mini-vortex' and worth a visit if you're ever in Sedona.
@notmyrealname17309 ай бұрын
Yes, the Skinwalker Ranch is creepy as hell. The problem for me is that I am fascinated by it and can't stay away. I've been there about a dozen times, because it's only about a 2 hour drive from my house in salt lake city.
@samuraishogun83959 ай бұрын
I've driven all over this country. Out of all the places I drove to, there were only 2 places my GPS completely didn't work. Those 2 places were Skinwalker Ranch and Area 51. I was in a lot of other places that were in the middle of nowhere for hundreds of miles, and my GPS always worked. Even places I lost phone service like I couldn't make calls or use Internet, I still always had GPS working. It was a bit difficult to leave Skinwalker Ranch without the GPS because it's like a maze of dirt roads out there. Area 51 wasn't as bad because there was only 1 way in, 1 way out.
@otheusrex21909 ай бұрын
"there's a Jedi... making a castle" is the greatest thing I've heard today
@greggwilliamson9 ай бұрын
A show on the History Channel called "The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch" has 3 or 4 season aired. Awesome!! NASA Scientist, computer surveillance expert, security, etc. Many cool experiments!!
@kims39419 ай бұрын
Read the skinwalker book by george knapp. He was there for the first experiments after the owners sold the property. It keeps leading down more rabbit holes!
@valogden9 ай бұрын
They also did a couple of really good episodes about it on the show Expedition X last season.
@starparodier919 ай бұрын
7:55 Nothing better than watching Lewis get jumpscared 😂
@L3WGReacts9 ай бұрын
i knew you'd love it haha
@lynnw71558 ай бұрын
Lewis; I think you'll have to get your nerve up to be an honorary American. So many Americans rush bravely (maybe stupidly) into dangerous or spooky situations.
@timfeeley714-259 ай бұрын
You've got your own ringing rocks (bell stones) in The Lakes district, they're called the Ringing Stones of Skiddaw.
@diannehull97488 ай бұрын
What about the mystery spot in California? Check that place. Trees grow strangely, gravity works in reverse, water is poured down, then it stops abd goes back up . Many strange hsppenings there
@Morgaine9 ай бұрын
Lewis, you have to go to New Orleans when you're in the States and take a ghost tour there. The food there is unique and the history is amazing. If I were you, that's where I'd start.
@sassymess71116 ай бұрын
I know most of the ghost stories. The Andrew Jackson Hotel is haunted. MANY places are haunted in New Orleans.
@Ramona57-TX8 ай бұрын
I have seen things unbelievable in many different areas. Go to Boston where they had the Witch Trials or to the Plantations of the Old South, lots of ghostly things there.
@leighagrant78619 ай бұрын
I grew up on a farm and us kids were the rock pickers…as the field was ploughed we’d pile the rocks on the edge of the field to give the crops and machinery clear land…every season more rocks were found and piled. Some rocks were moved by tractors. So this seems normal to me the rock wall.
@WilliamSeitters9 ай бұрын
How is the MyrtlesPlantation not on this list?!? Creepiest place I've ever been and supposedly the most haunted place in the US
@ThisIsMyYoutubeName19 ай бұрын
Probably because of the fact they promote it falsely. It’s most known for the story about the slave who killed the mother and children by accidentally adding too much oleander in a birthday cake and instead of making them sick, they died. This story has been proven to be false as well as the story of the mirror, which wasn’t even purchased until 1970. They do have a very interesting history, but they didn’t feel it was enough and made up some stories that never happened. Any historian can debunk the story very easily, or a genealogist. The fact that they are lying about the history to gain tourist is just plain wrong.
@cp368productions29 ай бұрын
I have seen several videos of people investigating Skinwalker Ranch and it's freaky, lots of investigators have been scared out of there by coming face to face with a skinwalker.
@britt17849 ай бұрын
Yep I don’t think it was high enough up on the list! There is some real evil there with video proof of some of it!
@circuitd9429 ай бұрын
That was previous ownership. The current one just pretends to know what science means. Unless they sell that place they will just milk it for Netflix
@The_Crucible7148 ай бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed “Cowboys and Aliens” with Harrison Ford.
@jennas1takevlogs6117 ай бұрын
The White Eagle Saloon is truly haunted! Ive been there and i am a sensitive to the supernatural. I was scratched on my back, i heard disembodied voices, things thrown by unseen forces and so on. I will never go back!
@harobles29 ай бұрын
I am from EL Paso, Texas and I have been to Taos, New Mexico. I was there to visit my brother and his family. One night I heard a sound and I asked my brother what it might have been. He told me that I heard the Taos sound that a lot of people say they hear.
@keighan1_2709 ай бұрын
Ohh you also gotta check out the vortex in Oregon. Gravity is broken there, things roll up hill
@cassieprichard53949 ай бұрын
I love watching ghost hunting videos! I even took my mom on a ghost hunt at an asylum in Missouri with my mom last year for mother's day. It was awesome. I'd love to go on more.
@kittenisageek6 ай бұрын
At 6:10 regarding the Coral Castle. Apparently Leedskalnin was considering sharing the secrets. But people kept trying to steal the secret and newspapers wrote hit pieces about black magic. So instead he destroyed the box and his notes and refused to answer any questions about it in a useful way.
@jessica_in_japan9 ай бұрын
I stayed in the Roosevelt Hotel once about 20 years ago on a school trip (we performed in the Hollywood Christmas Parade). One of the girls I was rooming with and I were heading downstairs and waiting in the tiled elevator lobby for the elevator and we heard what sounded like high heels clicking on the hard floor beside us. We looked around and no one else was out on the whole floor, and the halls beyond the elevator lobby were all carpeted. It's my one and only ghost story in my life.
@timschlieper99619 ай бұрын
Sometimes I don't know what's better about these videos the interesting material or your genuine reactions 😂 they are hilarious sometimes thanks for the laughs keep up the good work
@JanelleMcMurtrey-mn8ty9 ай бұрын
I’ve been on ghost tours in Savannah Georgia. Very creepy and a lot of fun. Savannah is old, creepy & cool!
@marshalljones33419 ай бұрын
The center of the Universe in Tulsa Oklahoma is a trippy place too. Sound doesn't travel the same way there. I've experienced it myself.
@carolannmoore9898 ай бұрын
Born and raised in Miami... the coral castle is mysterious, and yes, it is still standing.
@GunsRgoodGovtRbad5 ай бұрын
LOVE SkinWalker Ranch mystery. I look forward to finding out exactly what's going on there.
@PlanDeviator9 ай бұрын
Love going on ghost tours and stuff. Having lived in a couple of haunted houses (one with a more sinister entity that we had to get rid of) you get used to it. I like seeing the ghost tours because I can tell the difference when the unseen are present. Keeps me on my toes and I can take the time to pray for the souls of those that have yet to move on.
@toddwilson63579 ай бұрын
I'm actually a Paranormal Investigator. I have my own team and we investigate both businesses and private homes since 2008.
@1Grim27Reaper939 ай бұрын
As an amateur ghost hunter I love ghost tours. I have done several ghost hunts and would love to do a ghost hunt at Waverly Hiss sanatorium in Louisville Kentucky
@victoriah.20839 ай бұрын
I had a book called, "The Cemetery Book" about famous worldwide 🌐 cemeteries, tours and travel clubs. First time I ever heard about people collecting "rubbings" of famous headstones 🪦 and creating photo albums of famous gravesites. In LA there used to be a "Hearse" tour to various famous celebrities. You do ride around in one.😮
@coleensakamoto68448 ай бұрын
Can't believe you've never been to Stonehenge! Oh, Lewis! It's AMAZING! I hope you go sooner rather than later. I've been twice. There are so many beautiful & mysterious places throughout the U.K. And SO much History!!! Would love to see videos of you at many of these interesting & historical spots. Take us all over Great Britain. To little hidden gems. To a REAL English pub! To Simpson's on the Strand! Haaaaaaw! They would be so much fun to visit with you & your girlfriend.
@BoneHead17769 ай бұрын
I lived in apartments right next to Coral Castle when I graduated HS. People would break-in at night pretty often. They would perform weird religious ceremonies. Mostly Santería and Voodoo. Dead chickens and goats were fairly common.
@cariann22203 ай бұрын
I grew up in bucks County PA and had no clue about the ringing rock park! Now I want to go camping there next time I go visit lol.
@krazeyhazey74919 ай бұрын
Dude, Bigfoot lives in the woods right next to my house!😮 I'm good on any places with a scary reputation!
@scottwilbur22609 ай бұрын
I've been to skinwalker ranch, and that area is crazy there are a lot of ufo sightings around there.
@rickmills48019 ай бұрын
Great book about Skinwalker Ranch: "Hunt for the Skinwalker" by George Knapp and Kolm Kelleher.
@beckymcreynolds69033 ай бұрын
Sedona is AMAZING!!We’re going back for a couple of weeks soon. Sound bowl therapy, reiki, hiking, shaman tours…. I’m scheduled for past life regression this trip
@krazeyhazey74919 ай бұрын
No ghost tours!! And stay away from any place with an evil name, like "The Devil's Path" they are named that for a reason!!!
@circuitd9429 ай бұрын
There is a devil path hiking trail. Nothing spooky. Just a difficult hiking trail
@greeneyedlady55809 ай бұрын
I've been to Devil's Punchbowl in Oregon numerous times. Just because someone gives an area a fanciful name to attract tourists doesn't mean that it's actually evil.
@adamwestwood8296Ай бұрын
There's also Devil's Slide in Utah next to Wyoming.
@timholubowitch90979 ай бұрын
The rock walls thing is wild lol. On the east coast north to south you find them in the cou try side. Mostly just used for marking property lines.
@benlewis95189 ай бұрын
In idaho we had to go out every spring on the farm fields to pick out big rocks that would affect the farming process. We then stacked them in an unused section in rows the same way.
@lil-vipe139 ай бұрын
I live about an hour away from where Shawshank Redemption was filmed. The Mansfield Reformatory, my brother worked there for a summer and he's not a believer. He is now.
@littleredwritinghead37819 ай бұрын
I'm one of the unfortunate people who is sensitive to the Taos hum. I went through on a road trip, and it disoriented me and made me physically ill. Everything felt wrong and too close to me, and I'm not claustrophobic. I had to get away from there. I got a nosebleed at one point as we were driving out of the area. Never going back there.
@kd37398 ай бұрын
Ghost tours are super interesting. New Orleans, Key West, and Knoxville, TN have been my favorites.
@stevenwilgus54229 ай бұрын
I've been to the Ringing Rocks Park in Pennsylvania. It's entirely true. They ring like a bell when struck.
@danaemccoy38689 ай бұрын
That was awesome! Some I’ve seen but allot I haven’t heard of! I would love to visit these places!
@zeroyum14739 ай бұрын
When I was in my thirties, I had a buddy that loved the White Eagle, so I have been there many times. It had a few sketchy biker's dues, but no ghost. I would not have gone there in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Portland has a huge number of tunnels under the city and bars like the White Eagle had trap doors where drunk men would be trapped and forced to work on ships leaving the port. Sometimes they would be held in the tunnels for days or even weeks. It was its own little world.
@The_Crucible7148 ай бұрын
There’s a “White Eagle” in NYC… Mmm delicious kielbasa!
@LilWeezy02139 ай бұрын
I go on ghost tours on a regular basis. I have participated in several ghost hunts, and was lucky enough to meet Ed and Loraine Warren when I was in high school and go on a tour of a famously haunted cemetery in CT with them!
@andrewjones99919 ай бұрын
Been to Sedona several times. The main attractions are a huge tourist traps but if you go off the beaten track it's amazing. Idk about any energy vortexes. I never felt anything like that but it's so beautiful I can see why people would think that. I live in LA and been to events in the Roosevelt Hotel. It's beautiful and super expensive. None of the locals take any of the haunting stuff seriously. I would never spend the money to stay there so I guess I'll never know.
@MERollered9 ай бұрын
I've been to the White Eagle, it's now owned by a local chain that tends to buy historical haunted places. You can rent guest rooms that are upstairs still. They often have bands that play there on weekends and some weeknights. The Shanghai tunnels are famous in Portland, the most drunk and the people who stayed the latest would get shanghai'd and be forced to work on the ships crews. If you go to McMenamins and search for the White Eagle, you can see it looks vastly different from what it's portrayed. My husband used to sleep there at times when we were first dating because you can get a full bed with bath for fairly cheap.
@MrBigPicture8359 ай бұрын
I've been to Sedona many times. There is an unidentifiable "energy" about the place...
@jensmith40059 ай бұрын
10:47 In Michigan, USA, we had a super huge mental asylum with underground passageways to many buildings. (get's cold here) Daring teen urban explorers, including me used to explore there. It was creepy but I never had a paranormal experience. So much stuff was left there: Patient files, dentist chairs, etc. They knocked most of it down and left one building for guided ghost tours.
@ashleydixon46139 ай бұрын
As far as haunted hotels go, one of the best is right here in my home state of Arkansas: the Crescent Hotel, in Eureka Springs. Labeled America’s most haunted hotel, it’s really a neat place to visit, along with the whole city of Eureka Springs, a quirky little Victorian town in the Ozarks. The hotel was a top-of-the-line luxury hotel in 1886 when it was built, but it’s had a strange history, as a girls college for a while, and later, in the 1930’s it was a fake cancer hospital, run by a quack “doctor” to scam desperately ill people out of all their money and leave them to die in misery. (The basement was the morgue, btw.) They do ghost tours that are also full of history, as well as a campfire ghost story time out on the lawn. It’s also just a really beautiful old hotel, full of history, in a beautiful, interesting little old town in the hills. (Plus, they always have a resident cat or two; always scores points with me.
@Elizabeth912-v6o8 ай бұрын
Savanna GA has one of the best ghost tours in the United States ❤!!!!! And ya ghost tours are common in most all major cities it's also a good way to learn you know just more of the history of the place you're visiting!!!
@kippnashleymiller37529 ай бұрын
I love scary and unexplained things. One example is when I was in high school a few of us went to an abandoned house out in the country. We were about 30’ into the house when I took off running ahead of them finding a closet to hide in so I could scare them once they came into the same room as me. It was pitch dark and we had no flashlights. I was laughing on the inside hearing them cuss me out cuz they knew my plan. I waited for a few more minutes realizing it was complete silence. I then realized they said to hell with me and all of them went outside. I realized the tables had turned and I was inside a damn closet to an abandoned house. I exited the closet extremely fast and came out the front door even faster causing me to not even put one foot on the steps that took you from the porch to ground level. I will still hide in the dark if I have a chance of scaring my friends & family. I’m two months away from 57 so I have lots of practice and good stories. I’ve also seen ghosts, spirits, entities, or whatever you wish to call them. I refuse to run from them. It’s not in my blood to run.
@RevPeterTrabaris9 ай бұрын
I never heard of the Lake Michigan Stonehenge until now, and I grew up living on the shores of Lake Michigan. Learn something new every day. Often from your video reactions. I have to admit that I am fascinated by all of them. Would love to learn more and understand as you suggest, Lewis. Unfortunately, all of this would be classified as paranormal and therefore mostly be dismissed. But they are fun to think about. Peace
@F.RichardRobinson9 ай бұрын
You see the fan like tree standing tall over the wall? It's called a compass tree. No matter how or where you plant it, the fan spreads opens east and west.
@danielthemangrande9 ай бұрын
adding the Sundown Wilderness and Slide Mountain Region of new york. Some of the oldest forests in the world are in the state. There is something unsettlingly of it being the sunniest days and I walk my dog and see a what might aswell be a lightless forest due the canopy being so thick.
@kennethriddle4339 ай бұрын
There's some slight misinformation here. Lobotomies and Electroconvulsive Therapy are still used in rare cases. Lobotomies are the last ditch effort when all other therapies have failed. ECT is still used in over 100,000 cases per year, though it's nothing like the movies like to make it out. For some people these are literally the only thing that can help them.
@Assasengirl2 ай бұрын
Ghost or Haunted tours are super popular! We have them for the Underground Railroad in Cincinnati as well as other well known haunted spots. Even Shawshank I think has them
@danielmcgraw79089 ай бұрын
I may have mentioned this before, but you should Google America's Stonehenge. You'll find it is in New Hampshire, it's carbon dated to over 4000 years and it's on dry ground.
@edhaynes41079 ай бұрын
Carbon dating only works on objects which were once alive.
@danielmcgraw79089 ай бұрын
Seems to me that anytime I heard of carbon dating, it was the results of samples taken from the hearth or immediately around it. That would suggest firewood and bones, both of which were once alive!
@richardd40249 ай бұрын
Don't forget Carhengein Alliance, Nebraska (Stonehenge built of vintage 50s and 60s Caddilacs).
@davebyers28199 ай бұрын
I live about two hours from Weston, WV and have toured the asylum. There’s also an old prison in Moundsville WV that has ghost tours. I’ve seen some weird stuff in there.
@maryjacobs66839 ай бұрын
Hello! I live near Ringing Rocks park in Pennsylvania. My kids used to love scrambling all over the rocks and hitting them with a hammer on weekend visits. It's a shame he didn't show any pictures of the large 7 acres / 2.83 hectare field of boulders. (The boulders in the field are piled about 10 feet / 3 meters deep).
@mistydevillier21977 ай бұрын
Oh, I would definitely go on haunted tours. I love that stuff.
@RockPowerUSA9 ай бұрын
You picked a good one because this guy who's narrating for you sounds believable and seems to care. I've lived in the United States practically all my life and I'm 60. I didn't know about this guy. One guy moving all that stuff and creating weightless "buildings" with boulders from pyramid secrets should have been on my radar. My mind's blown or there was more to the story and it's a myth. I could be stupid but I watch a lot of KZbin. 😏🤔🥴
@kristiswa5 ай бұрын
Coral Castle is real and Ed is fascinating. If you get to South Florida, it's a must-see.
@kristiesexton85338 ай бұрын
You should look up the ringing rocks in Montana. there right outside of Butte Montana.
@katehaynes57358 ай бұрын
I can't believe Area 51 wasn't on this list.
@CaenaGrey9 ай бұрын
I’ve been to the White Eagle Saloon many times. It’s by where I used to live and work. We went there on our lunch breaks a lot. I didn’t think it was particularly creepy, but the McMenamins own it now, and rumour has it they only buy haunted places. I can confirm the stories about the Shanghai tunnels. I have worked in several bars that have them in the basements. They’re mostly bricked up now, but they used to give tours through some that still went through. It is creepy down there, and we used it as a Green Room for bands. Heard some weird stuff through the amps.
@winterman639 ай бұрын
Eliza Lam case was at Cecil Hotel, not the Roosevelt.
@davidotto37319 ай бұрын
I have gone ghost hunting many times. Taken some ghost tours as well. We have a place in eastern Ohio called Salt Fork State Park that has had a lot of Bigfoot sightings. We have been there a lot too.
@NeuroPedsDad9 ай бұрын
I grew up around/near "Skinwalker" ranch. You generally don't talk about the experiences you have. It's considered bad luck, taboo. If you talk about it, bad or worse things seem to follow. BTW, it's not just the ranch but the entire basin. Actually a lot of Utah to be honest. I'm not saying I believe but if my native friend tells me that I place I planning to go camping isn't a place I should spend the night. I moving my campsite. You can see and hear some strange things in the night when your out in the desert.
@GloriousShiva429 ай бұрын
I want to visit the area so very much, sounds interesting.
@Cookie-K9 ай бұрын
Can you imagine everything that's on the ocean floor?...I mean think about it....from the beginning of time til now....crazy
@Anonymously-speaking9 ай бұрын
The narrator said skin-walker ranch but I heard SKYwalker ranch and I was thinking what the heck is creepy about skywalker ranch?! I’m an idiot.
@pattireinheimer56128 ай бұрын
I love ghost tours! It was one of my favorite things to do back in the day when we travelled more often.