- cross-posted to:
- jingszo@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- jingszo@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/20001239
This encounter left the man marked by the burns, including his melted gloves.
No matter what you believe about the nature of “flying saucers,” there is one sighting labeled the “most convincing” UFO encounter in history. According to CBC, the Falcon Lake incident in Canada is being called the “best-documented UFO case” 50 years after the actual event.
According to the account, Stefan Michalak was in the woods when he encountered a pair of “cigar-shaped objects” nearby, changing hues while floating before taking a disc shape. Michalak started drawing what he saw, which made their way online years later, before trying to get closer to the object.
“He couldn’t make out any words, or anything, but he heard at least two beings communicating inside. He called out, offering mechanical help if they needed it,” the It Gets Weird podcast recently detailed. “As soon as he touches the craft, the fingertips just start to melt, so it’s so hot that it literally melts the gloves he’s wearing…He’s hit by this blast of air, that pushes him backward and sets his shirt and hat on fire. He’s stumbling backward, getting pushed by this wave of air and gas, and trying to take this burning shirt and hat off.”
The account goes on to say he showed symptoms of radiation sickness and had “severe burns” on his torso that look like a grate or Bingo card. Once released from the hospital, he returned to the locale to recover his “charred shirt, a melted glove and tools he’d left behind.” He maintained his story until dying in 1999, never saying he encountered little green men either.
The Canadian government released this as a UV glowing coin. I have the coin.
It’s awesome.
Now that’s cool.
Super cool indeed and I almost want one, but 1oz pure silver at $95 USD is not great, the metal is worth about $30 USD. I’d maybe do $50 for it because of the neat-factor but well over double the price is just too much for the false scarcity. Metal for me is more of an investment than a collection, that’s what comics are for!