Showing posts with label Shag Harbour Incident. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shag Harbour Incident. Show all posts

Thursday, July 12, 2018

Shag Harbour UFO Incident to be Investigated by Famed Cousteau Family Members

Shag Harbour UFO Incident to be Investigated by Cousteau Family Members

     A nearly 51-year-old mystery will be getting a fresh set of eyes in August, and they’ll belong to one of the world’s most famous families in ocean exploration.
By Alexander Quon
Global News
7-8-18

Celine Cousteau and Fabian Cousteau, grandchildren of Jacques Cousteau, are set to visit Shag Harbour, N.S., to investigate the infamous Shag Harbour UFO Incident next month.

The organization that promotes and celebrates the mystery made the announcement on their Facebook page.

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Shag Harbour UFO Incident – 50 Years On

Shag Harbour Incident – 50 Years On

      HALIFAX -- The first frantic callers to reach the RCMP were clear: something had crashed in the waters off Shag Harbour, N.S.

It was around 11 p.m. on the night of Oct. 4, 1967. Most witnesses thought it was a doomed aircraft.
By Michael MacDonald
THE CANADIAN PRESS
9-21-17

Among those who saw the string of flashing lights on that clear, moonless night were three RCMP officers, scores of fishermen and airline pilots flying along the province's rugged southwest coast.

Monday, May 22, 2017

Mystery Donor Saves Shag Harbour UFO Festival

Mystery Donor Saves Shag Harbour UFO Festival

     An Unnamed Financial Operator has swooped in to help save the Shag Harbour UFO Festival.

Thanks to a nameless donor, the festival marking the 50th anniversary of Canada’s most famous UFO mystery will go on.
By THE CHRONICLE HERALD
5-21-17

On Oct. 4, 1967, Shag Harbour locals reported seeing four orange lights in the sky. The lights dove to the water level, floated and then sank, residents said.

The event became known as Canada’s Roswell ...

Friday, August 08, 2014

UFO Festival In Shag Harbour Could Be Last of Its Kind

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UFO Festival In Shag Harbour Could Be Last of Its Kind

By Haleigh Atwood
www.thevanguard.ca
8-5-14

     When the annual Shag Harbour UFO Festival is celebrated on Aug. 9 to 10 at the local Incident Museum, it may be the last of its kind.

Located on the lighthouse route, the museum is a hidden jewel that tourists often accidentally stumble upon. Despite the remote location, the Shag Harbour Incident Society has seen over 550 visitors since June 8. Unfortunately, the museum cannot thrive on admission fees alone; it is a non-profit organization that remains privately maintained by the Incident Society, a society that is slowly running low on funds.

The outcome of this weekend’s Shag Harbour UFO Festival will partly determine whether the museum continues to run in 2015. Hopes are high and fingers are crossed as the festival is expected to bring in over 200 visitors.

There are many of events scheduled, including two symposiums featuring local witnesses, authors, and UFO researchers. . . .

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Calling All Shag Harbour UFO Witnesses




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Calling All Shag Harbour UFO Witnesses

By Chris Muise
thechronicleherald.ca
11-27-13

      In 1967, an unidentified object was witnessed above the ocean by many of the residents of Shag Harbour. Forty six years later, a new book chronicling that infamous night, and the effects it has had on those who were there, has launched.

Impact to Contact: The Shag Harbour Incident is a new book by authors and UFO investigators Chris Styles and Graham Simms, which is a follow-up to Styles' previous book on the Shag Harbour incident, Dark Object. The new book covers 20 years of investigations made by Styles.

“It was time again, between new research and things that hit the cutting-room floor the first time around, to do another work,” says Styles.

The Shag Harbour Incident, for those unaware, is a series of purported UFO sightings off the south shore of Nova Scotia on Oct. 4, 1967, where eye witnesses watched an unknown craft come down from the sky and submerge itself under the Atlantic Ocean. Searches were conducted, but no craft or debris were officially found.

“Dozens, even hundreds of people witnessed something coming down out of the sky that night,” says Simms. “All over the province, there were in fact separate sightings in addition to the Shag Harbour sighting.” . . .

Monday, August 26, 2013

Shag Harbour Incident: 43rd Anniversary of UFO Crashing into The Water


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Shag Harbour Incident: 43rd Anniversary of UFO Crashing into The Water

A Peek Into The Past: UFO's

By Brittany W. Verge
The Advance
8-25-13

Shag Harbour recently had their annual UFO Festival. It’s been 43 years since several people witnessed what they originally thought was a plane or some sort of air craft crash into the harbour.

      The incident is one of the most well documented cases of an Unidentified Flying Object sightings in the world.

The idea of flying saucers and aliens is a modern type of phenomena. As technology has progressed, humankind has become more intrigued with space travel and with space in general. Our imaginations run wild when we see things in the sky we can’t quite place.

But what if someone saw something years before the idea of spaceships. How would they describe it? Well here is an entry from Simeon Perkins Diary describing one such sighting:

October 12, 1796: “A strange Story is going that Fleet of Ships have been Seen in the Air in Some part of the Bay of Fundy. Mr. Darrow is lately from there by Land. I enquired of him. He Says they were Said to be Seen in the New Minas, at one Mr. Ratchford's, by a Girl, about Sunrise, & that the Girl being frightened, Called out, & two men that were in the House went out and Saw the Same Sight, being 15 Ships and a Man forwards of them with his hand Stretched out. . . .

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Witness Recounts Shag Harbour UFO Incident; Festival Set to Begin


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By BRIAN MEDEL
thechronicleherald.ca
8-8-13

Peter Goreham
Peter Goreham stands in front of the family home in Bear Point where he witnessed an unidentified flying phenomenon as a 13-year-old in 1967.
     BEAR POINT — Here’s a story that never grows old.

The 1967 sighting of what many believe was an unidentified flying object over Nova Scotia’s southern shore, particularly Shag Harbour, has been talked about for years.

And the annual two-day UFO festival is set to begin Saturday at the Shag Harbour Incident Society’s museum on Highway 3, in the heart of the fishing village.

But this weekend will be different. A previously unheard voice will be added to those who have already come forward to tell their stories.

Peter Goreham, a seaweed harvester from nearby Bear Point, was 13 when he witnessed something so unbelievable that he only speaks of it on rare occasions, and usually only with other locals.

It is well known that late in the evening of Oct. 4, 1967, several witnesses claimed they saw something crash in the ocean off Shag Harbour.

No aircraft were reported in the area that night, but a gooey mat of yellow foam, about seven centimetres thick, could be seen floating off Shag Harbour.

The incident was listed as a UFO crash. . . .

Tuesday, July 09, 2013

Canada's Official UFO Studies-YOUR NEED TO KNOW | VIDEO


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Canada's Official UFO Studies-Your Need to Know

By OpenMinds
7-8-13

    In this series of, Your Need To Know, OpenMinds explores Canada's Official UFO Studies, specifically, Project Magnet and Second Story, both established in the early 1950's. Additionally, OM shares details of the infamous Shag Harbor UFO incident. This case is one of the very few where a government agency formally acknowledges an unidentified flying object [UFO]. It was determined that no known aircraft was involved in the incident, so the source remains unknown to this day.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Celebrations Planned for 40th Anniversary of UFO Sighting

USO Emerging From Ocean
By Carla Allen
The Vanguard
9-24-07


Forty years ago on Oct. 4, 1967, RCMP officers responded to a report of a crash landing of an unidentified object near Shag Harbour. They observed a pale yellow light bobbing on the surface for a while before it sank.
     Government documents detailing the event said not a trace of the crash object was found.

The event continues to fascinate many today. To celebrate the anniversary, a newly formed society has organized the Lighthouse & UFO's 40th Anniversary of the Shag Harbour Incident.

Cindy Nickerson is the chair of the Shag Harbour Incident Society, a group formed last fall to work towards the construction of a permanent site for the display the history of Shag Harbour, including the UFO incident.

The society’s temporary museum is located opposite R & D Nickerson Fisheries Ltd. in Shag Harbour and has received close to 1250 visitors since opening in mid-June.

Nickerson says people are already inquiring about the UFO weekend.

“We had some people from Dartmouth, Halifax and the Valley asking about it,” she said.

The schedule is as follows:

Friday, Oct. 5:

10 a.m. UFO museum opens as usual. Local coral and fossil expert Derek Jones will have a display at the Shag Harbour Community Hall. His corals have been featured on a postage stamp.

4 p.m. Buffet supper at the Shag Harbour/Bear Point Fire Hall. Local dishes - $6 adult and $3 for 12 and under.

7 p.m. UFO talks at Shag Harbour/Bear Point Fire Hall. $5 adult, $2.50 12 and under. Local witnesses Norman Smith, Laurie Wickens, David Cvet a Toronto UFO researcher and diver, Don Ledger author and UFO researcher.

Ledger co-authored the book, Dark Object, and also wrote Flying Triangles, Swissair Down, and Maritime UFO Files. He has written other articles that have been translated into other languages and been a guest on several TV and radio programs. Society members recognize him as an expert on the Shag Harbour incident.

Saturday, Oct. 6

7 a.m. Lighthouse breakfast $5 adult, $2.50 child at the Shag Harbour/Bear Point Fire Hall

9 a.m. Collectables sale at the Shag Harbour Community Hall. Includes Avon bottles, dishes etc.

10:30 a.m. Norman Smith will lead a guided tour from ERMES to gazebo. Ledger will meet the group at gazebo. Smith will tell what he saw in ’67.

12:30 p.m. Local expert on Seal Island Ronnie Kenney will talk about life on this remote island.

2 p.m. Ledger will give a talk on UFOs at the Shag Harbour/Bear Point Fire Hall.

The above three events cost $5 adult or $2.50 child.

11:30 a.m. The Bon Portage General Store will be selling lunch. Lobster chowder, sandwiches etc.

An author from British Columbia, C. Anne Degrace will be attending the festival. She is working on a fiction book featuring Shag Harbour. Other Shag Harbour Incident Society members will be presenting talks on UFOs.