Did Early U.S. Colonists Encounter UFOs?

Pete Wiggin is a present-day UFO researcher who reads early colonial wills and land deeds to look for reports of UFO phenomenon during the early settling of the U.S. by Europeans. He found the following excerpt in the journal of John Winthrop, governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1588-1649:

“In this year (1639) one James Everell, a sober, discreet man, and two others, saw a great light in the night at Muddy River. When it stood still, it flamed up, and was about three yards square; when it ran it was contracted into the figure of a swine:

Exeter’s UFO window

Governor Winthrop’s journal entry goes on to say, “Diverse other credible persons saw the same light, after, about the same place.”

Carol Chapman

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Sorcerer Dwarf Legend in SW U.S.

I’ve heard from a reader that evidently there is a legend of the sorcerer dwarf among the Anasazi  people of the American Southwest. I wonder if the Anaszi legend of the sorcerer dwarf is derived from the legend of the same name in the Yucatan. Edgar Cayce said that the people of the Yucatan traveled to the U.S. Southwest. If so, they would have brought their stories of their beginnings and the stories of their far distant past with them.

Carol Chapman —

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Why the Puuc Route?

So, the big question is: Why the Puuc Route?

If I could be searching for information on the Maya, ancient and today, anywhere else in the Yucatan Peninsula, why was the Puuc Route so important to me? 

Why not Chichen Itza, which was also in the state of Yucatan? Why not the beautiful citadel ruin at Tulum or the mysterious ruins at Coba, both of which were in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo? Or what about the relatively undiscovered huge archeological site of Calakmul in the state of Campeche?

For that matter, why not Guatemala or Belize?  These countries are also in the Yucatan Peninsula. And they speak English in Belize.

Carol Chapman —

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The Puuc Route Deep in Maya Country

In Santa Elena, only 8.7 miles (14 kilometers) east of the Uxmal Archeological site, I met a young man named Miguel. When he said his last name I wasn’t sure if I had heard it correctly so repeated it as “Ulk.”

He corrected me by saying, “‘Ooc,’ spelled ‘U-c.’ It is a Maya name.”

A Maya name. I felt excited because I was looking for genuine Maya people.

“Do you speak Mayan?” I asked.

“Yes,” he replied. “But my mother speaks better.”

However, his mother was too shy to speak on camera so she stayed in the background and added suggestions in Spanish and Mayan as he spoke in an accented English.

We were on the Puuc Route deep in Maya country in the State of Yucatan. The Uc family owned a restaurant and gift shop where they sold wood carvings of Maya dieties.

I felt excited. If Miguel’s surname was Uc, his family must be original inhabitants of whole Puuc region since their name was part of the name of the region. I also felt grateful to learn how to pronounce Puuc correctly. I had been pronouncing it as “Puke.” Now I knew it was pronounced “Pook.”

Carol Chapman —

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UFOs, OBEs and the U.S.

Yesterday I said that it made sense that Russia would have a Chief Scientist of UFOlogy because I remembered, from the 1971 book Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain, that the Russian people had studied psychic phenomenon taking for granted it was real rather than the U.S. which has to prove whether or not it exists before the U.S. studies psychic development.

Today, I remembered that certain aspects of the U.S., not necessarily academic America, takes psychic phenomenon seriously. I have a girlfriend who used to be a trainer at Robert Monroe’s The Monroe Institute (TMI) in Faber, Virginia. She told me that many of the people who came to TMI for Out of Body Experience (OBE) training were members of the American secret intelligence service.

Carol Chapman —

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Psychic Discoveries in Russia

Yesterday I said: 

here’s some interesting possibly true information on Russia’s Chief Scientist in UFOlogy

Carol Chapman —

saying that I take such reports with a grain of salt – that Russia would have a department of UFOlogy. However, I remember the 1971 book by Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder, Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain and in so doing remember that Russia took the psychic realm very seriously.

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Russia Has a Chief Scientist of UFOlogy???

I tend to take these kinds of announcements with a grain of salt, nonetheless, here’s some interesting possibly true information on Russia’s Chief Scientist in UFOlogy: 

The president of the Academy for Applied Ufology, Academician Vladimir Azhazha, is considered to be the founding father of the Russian ufology. He shared his knowledge of aliens with Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin, who subsequently confirmed his status as the nation’s chief scientist in ufology. The academician has recently marked his 80th birthday and is currently working on an extensive collection of books (ten volumes) devoted to UFOs. It goes without saying that the traditional science does not treat ufology seriously.

Are Extraterrestrials harvesting human sperm and ovules? | Psychic|clairvoyant|psychic reading

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