Welcome to UFOFAERIE, dedicated to collecting Fortean accounts where there are indications of crossovers between Faeries, Folklore, UFOs, the Paranormal etc in a single encounter, as well as other interesting reports. All accounts are sourced. Read and you will Understand...

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

June 1952, US, Little Spring Creek TN.

Marks of legs and center spike in chart, (sic), along with small heel-less footprints. Around 11pm man hears strange sounds and weird music, sees a shiny thing on the ground, with bright light coming through an open door. 4 or 5 men 4 1/2 to 5 ft. tall dancing and singing in high-pitched voices. Object aluminum colored, glowing orange and blue in spots, some of which were too bright to look at directly. Rotating lights on translucent ball at the end, and a center spike. Stood 3-4 ft. off the ground, 7-8 ft. thick at center, like two saucers stuck together. Men reloaded object, advanced toward witness with things in their hands that looked like guns, but stopped, apparently unwilling to cross a creek. Men walked up ramp or steps into object, which rose vertically in a twisting cork-screw motion, glowing brighter as it rose.

Source: Book - "Night Siege - The Northern Ohio UFO-Creature Invasion" by Dennis Pilichis

A couple of points in this UFO sighting simply scream faerie. First of all many faerie encounters begin with hearing strange music, singing, and the sounds of groups of people walking or tramping. Secondly seeing these entities dancing is A level faerie behavior. They are most often seen dancing in circles, and afterwards "faerie rings" remain on the ground. Remind you of crop circles or the other types of rings left by UFOS such as "UFO nests"  by any chance?  The connections are too deep and too constant to be ignored.
The other connection in this account is the entities aversion to crossing the river. It is well known that when being chased by an otherworldly entity, all one needs to do is cross running water and you'll be safe. Standing water does not count, such as lakes or ponds. But the running water is sacred and cannot be crossed by unholy creatures.

Here's another unusual tale of faeries dancing:

One day in August, 1862, David Evans and Evan Lewis had taken their wagons to Brecon, Wales, to pick up some timber needed for ship-building in New Quay. On the trip back, the men and their horses stopped for a short time by Cwn Dwr farm, near the town of Llanwrda. It was about two in the afternoon, and the men were watching reapers busily working in a field on the opposite side of the road, when Evans saw what he at first thought were small wheat stacks moving near a hill about 400 yards away. After a moment he decided they must actually be more reapers, because the fifty or so figures were all dressed alike and were walking fast along a winding footpath on the side of the hill, and Evans mentioned them to Lewis to get him to look over... which is when the first of these figures reached a level spot at the top of the hill and started dancing.
        As each of the remaining figures reached the level spot, they gave a jump and started dancing, joining the circle that they were forming on the top of the hill. The two men watched as the figures danced for a short while in a circle; then, one by one, each danced closer and closer to the center of the circle, in a spiral pattern... and then they disappeared one by one into the ground at the center of the circle! As Evans and Lewis looked on in disbelief, one of the figures reappeared at the center, looking all about him for a moment; then another and another, all acting the same, until the whole group was once again dancing on top of the hill. Once again they spiraled to the center, and vanished one by one... but this time no one reappeared.
        After staring at the hill for some time, Evans and Lewis finally decided they'd best continue their journey. They came across an old man working on the road, and briefly told him what they had seen and asked if he knew who they were. He replied he had no idea who the figures were... but his grandfather had once stated that the Tylwth Teg -- fairies -- used to dance in the area. And so Evans and Lewis felt that's what they'd seen, and that is what they reported the figures to be when interviewed years later by Jonathan Ceredig Davies, who then included this event in his 1911 book  
Source - Book - Folk-Lore of West and Mid-Wales.
Source -  Website - http://anomalyinfo.com/Stories/1862-august-wales-fairy-encounter

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