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	<title>Hollow Hill &#187; What&#8217;s not a ghost</title>
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		<title>What&#8217;s not a ghost &#8211; the basics</title>
		<link>http://hollowhill.com/whats-not-a-ghost-the-basics</link>
		<comments>http://hollowhill.com/whats-not-a-ghost-the-basics#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Mar 2008 22:12:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fiona Broome</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[What's not a ghost]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hollowhill.com/ghosthunting/whats-not-a-ghost-the-basics/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Sometimes, people are understandably eager for something to be a ghost. A haunted house or graveyard can seem so exciting. A &#8220;real&#8221; ghost experience grants instant celebrity to the storyteller. </p> <p>Sometimes the obvious is most easily overlooked, especially under stress, late at night, and in an unfamiliar setting where everyone&#8217;s nerves are on edge. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Sometimes, people are understandably eager for something to be a ghost.   A haunted house or graveyard can seem so exciting.  A &#8220;real&#8221; ghost experience  grants instant celebrity to the storyteller. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Sometimes the obvious is most easily  overlooked, especially under stress, late at night, and in an unfamiliar setting  where everyone&#8217;s nerves are on edge.   </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2"><strong>Haunted houses</strong> </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Do a reality check before deciding that an odd experience is a ghost. </font></p>
<ul><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2"></p>
<li>If an <strong>object seems to move</strong> by itself, check the floor or surface with a carpenter&#8217;s  level.  You can pick up a cheap one for under $2, and it&#8217;ll fit in your purse or pocket.   If the object is lightweight, check for drafts, too.</li>
<li>If you sense <strong>a cold spot</strong>, check it with a thermometer.  Use a candle or  other draft detector, to see if you can find where it&#8217;s coming from.  In old houses,  I often find drafts from electrical outlets on outside walls that are not insulated.   Check around light switches, too.  Carry a roll of masking tape with you, as a  short-term way to shut out these drafts.</li>
<li>If you hear <strong>ghostly footsteps</strong>, wait until the phenomenon has stopped (or  until daylight, if you&#8217;re more comfortable) and try to duplicate the sound by walking  wherever the footsteps came from.  Was it really footsteps, or the house settling  or shifting as the temperature dropped at dusk?</li>
<li>If <strong>windows open themselves</strong>, check the hardware.  Make certain they&#8217;re really closed.   Try the window to see if the counterweight isn&#8217;t right, and the window opens too easily.</li>
<li>If <strong>windows close themselves</strong>, try propping them with a piece of pipe or other  solid object.  Ghosts pop those props out, gravity usually doesn&#8217;t.</li>
<li><strong>Snapping window shades</strong> can mean defective hardware. Or, maybe the coil has been  too-tightly or too-loosely wound.  Let it release, and then rewind it yourself.</li>
<li>If you genuinely think it&#8217;s a ghost and you&#8217;re in the dark, use caution when  turning on lights.  In our experience, lights usually banish the phenomenon.  However,  shortly after turning the lights off again, <em>if</em> it was a ghost, he/she may  return with a vengeance.  If you&#8217;re nervous, leave the location and return again in  daylight hours to look for natural causes of what you witnessed.</li>
<li><strong>Poltergeist phenomena</strong> is its own animal, so to speak.  First, try to repeat  the incident yourself, using natural means <em>that could have occurred the first time.</em>   (A dish can fall off a shelf if the shelf is shaky.  A dish cannot fly across the  room and smash on the wall unless someone threw it, or rigged it.)If you cannot duplicate what happened, keep a log of similar events that  occur at this location in the future.  Often, the energy source for poltergeist  phenomena is a teen or pre-teen.  (Though the spirit itself may be very real, and  is <em>not always the same as</em> the &#8220;focus&#8221; of the energy.)
<p>More poltergeist events will happen when the energy source is nearby, so you&#8217;ll  have less activity during school hours, for example.</li>
<li>However, do <em>NOT</em> get caught up in what I call the &#8220;Randi complex&#8221;  (referring to skeptic James Randi).  Just because you <em>can</em> make something  happen, doesn&#8217;t mean that the phenomenon is a fraud, hoax, or error in judgement.Yes, I can probably rig stairs so they sound as if someone is walking on them.   No, that doesn&#8217;t mean that <em>all</em> stairways have been rigged when people hear spectral  footsteps on them.</li>
<p></font></ul>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2"><strong>Ghost photos</strong> </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Most people are careful when taking &#8220;ghost photos.&#8221;  However, even the most  experienced photographer can forget the basics. </font></p>
<ul><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2"></p>
<li>Do not point your camera towards the sun, or  so the sun can highlight something on your lens. There are devices made to prevent this, if it&#8217;s a regular problem.</li>
<li>Make certain that nothing reflects the sun <em>towards</em> your lens, such as  a polished gravestone, a foil candy wrapper in the grass, a metal veteran&#8217;s marker,  your car windows/trim, rings on your fingers if one hand is supporting the front  of the camera, and so on.</li>
<li>The following will produce false anomalies:  fingerprints on the negative;  a folded negative; a scratched negative; rushed printing at the one-hour (check  the index print, which should be fine); very old film; film left in a hot car for  too long, or in the hot sun; film that goes through the &#8220;old&#8221; metal detectors in  airports (most airport scanners are fine now.)</li>
<li>This will sound silly, but these things can happen at the worst moments:  Watch  for floating milkweed or dandelion &#8220;puffs&#8221; that can look like orbs in the sunlight.   <em>If they appear, do not take photos until they&#8217;re gone.</em>  Or write down the  frames that will be affected, and keep the notes with your developed photos and negatives.Do NOT think &#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll remember that frames 12 &amp; 13 are just milkweed thingies.&#8221;   You won&#8217;t, three years from now when you review your photos as you&#8217;re clearing out your files.</li>
<li>It can never be said too often: If your camera has a strap, remove it or put it  around your neck (or wrist, if small) while taking photos.  Yes, most straps are black  and the rods in photos are white, but let&#8217;s be extra careful for skeptics. (And, no,  that is not an invitation to debate the camera-strap issue.)</li>
<li>Take two photos of everything, as closely together as you can, without moving an inch.   Then, if it&#8217;s a reflection, it&#8217;ll be in both photos and the same.  If it&#8217;s an anomaly,  it&#8217;ll either move or vanish.  Anomalies are usually static.  They are actively moving  and will be different in two consecutive photos.</li>
<li>If you&#8217;re scanning a photo (with an anomaly) for online use, try to make an  uncompressed, unmodified print available for viewers.  This prevents people from  saying, &#8220;Oh, she just increased the contrast to make that <em>look</em> more dramatic.&#8221;</li>
<p></font></ul>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">  </font><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">In general, it&#8217;s important to rule out normal causes for what seems to be a paranormal event.  Experience is  the best teacher and will save you hours of confusion as well as embarrassment when a simple explanation is found.</font></p>
<p></font></p>
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		<title>Noises that are not ghosts</title>
		<link>http://hollowhill.com/noises-that-are-not-ghosts</link>
		<comments>http://hollowhill.com/noises-that-are-not-ghosts#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Dec 2005 22:12:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fiona Broome</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[What's not a ghost]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hollowhill.com/ghosthunting/noises-that-are-not-ghosts/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>As I write this, it is December, a time of year when many people start hearing &#8220;ghostly noises&#8221; in their homes. </p> <p>In many cases, these will be ghosts. </p> <p>However, there may be logical explanations, and those should be considered, first: </p> </p> Temperature changes cause houses to moan, shift, and creak. Desert climates [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">As I write this, it is December, a time of year when many people start hearing  &#8220;ghostly noises&#8221; in their homes. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">In many cases, these will be ghosts.   </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">However, there may be logical explanations, and those should be considered, first: </font></p>
<ul> <font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2"></p>
<li><strong>Temperature changes</strong> cause houses to moan, shift, and creak.  Desert  climates have the widest temperature swings between day and night, but even temperate  climates have seasonal changes that can cause your house to shift slightly.   And when a couple of floorboards rub against each other and echo in an attic,  the noise can sound like someone in agony.</li>
<li><strong>Settling houses</strong> make snaps, thuds, creaks, and groans.  If your house  is new, it may be settling.  A hastily-poured foundation, or one poured at the wrong  time of year, can produce outrageous noises for years after the house has been built.There are other reasons why a house can &#8220;settle.&#8221;  If you&#8217;ve had an earthquake in your  region, your house may now be settling back into place.  If you&#8217;ve had unusually high  rainfall, or a drought, the ground around your house will shift.   A piano or waterbed moved in or out of a room can cause the whole house to readjust itself.</li>
<li><strong>Critters in the walls or attic</strong> can sound bizarre.  The scurrying  noises alone can sound like little ghostly footsteps.  A bushy tail of a squirrel  or raccoon, rubbing on all sides of a narrow passageway inside a wall or alongside  a chimney&#8230; Well, you&#8217;ll be convinced that a ghostly woman in a full Victorian  skirt just passed you.If two animals decide to argue or chat within your walls, in your basement,  or overhead in your attic, sometimes they sound like ghostly whispers, or a  full-fledged argument in a strange dialect!</li>
<li><strong>Check for even smaller critters</strong>, such as wood ants or termites.   If they&#8217;re weakening the house&#8217;s structure, the house will moan and groan as   it shifts its weight.</li>
<li><strong>Is there construction going on near you?</strong>  Perhaps rocks tumble  from their recently-blasted niches, at a certain hour of the night when the  temperature dips low enough to cause contractions and shifts.  The roof of a  new house can make astonishing noises, especially at night.  Ask anyone  who&#8217;s put a roof on a house, or repaired one, about the nails that pop out overnight.</li>
<li><strong>If it happens at the same time every night,</strong> it&#8217;s not necessarily  a ghostly hour.  Temperatures and humidity change at night.  When these natural  effects reach a &#8220;critical mass&#8221; level, the house may shift.  A loose shingle  may pop up again.  The mortar in your chimney may contract just enough to cause  dust to echo as it tumbles to the ground or hearth.  These kinds of things  happen night after night. It&#8217;s part of the natural cycle of a house.This &#8220;critical mass&#8221; effect is usually at approximately the same time, each  night.  Seasonal changes and <em>un</em>seasonable variations can shift the hour back  or forward, but it&#8217;s still within the same approximate time period.</li>
<li><strong>Do you live near a commercial area?</strong>  You may live far enough from a  shopping center that you don&#8217;t hear the garbage collectors&#8217; trucks.  However, when  they lift one of those huge containers of trash and empty it into the truck&#8230; <em>wow!</em>   If that noise echoes off a neighbor&#8217;s siding or cement wall, it can seem as if something  is crashing on your patio, or in an another room, particularly if the windows are open.</li>
<p></font></ul>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">  </font><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Not all ghostly noises are this easily explained.  However, consider the logical  answers first.  Perhaps your noise <em>is</em> a ghost, but you won&#8217;t know  unless you use  your critical thinking skills to explore the alternatives. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">And, just because the noise <em>could</em> be faked, or caused by something  logical&#8230; well, that doesn&#8217;t mean that it <em>is.</em>   </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2"><em>Webmaster&#8217;s note:</em>  When I was a kid, I used to hear noises in the attic overhead, many nights.   My parents dismissed my insistence that it was a ghost.  &#8220;Squirrels in the attic,&#8221;  they replied, and nodded sagely.   </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Well, we did have a lot of very friendly squirrels in our neighborhood, and a  nest in our backyard.  I tried to accept my  parents&#8217; logical explanation of the noises. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">However, when we were selling our house and had it inspected, I mentioned  the squirrels in the attic.   </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">&#8220;No evidence of that,&#8221; the house inspector replied.  &#8220;I&#8217;ll check again.&#8221; </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">And so he did.  And he found no place where a squirrel could get into the  attic, and no evidence that animals of any kind had been up there. </font></p>
<p><font face="arial,verdana,sans-serif" size="2">So, even when the answer seems logical, it might still be ghosts.  I may  never know if our house&#8217;s nightly noises had been a ghost, or something else.<br />
</font></p>
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