Friday, August 7, 2009
Let me begin with a spine chilling yet exciting bit of stuff.....
Being a web worker, i get ample of scope to browse the net and suck out all that is spooky and scintillating...I know many of you will think that i am crazy.yea i am.but who isn't??If i am talking about something weird then there are millions who are reading it as well..It is such a provocative aspect....Your senses will automatically get stuck up even if you are a non-believer!!!!!!!
As i was travelling across the pages of some paranormal activities, i stopped at something called "Ghost Hunting".can you imagine?? I have heard ghosts hunt but how can we hunt ghosts?????? Yes, this is true....It is a community in UK.....London and Scotland with its haunting castles and a rich gothic literature seems to be a hotspot of the ghosts!!! London has always been a place teeming with paranormal activities with myriad stories of apparitions, poltergeists and bloody vampires.
London Paranormal is London's premier ghost hunting community. They engage in offering overnight paranormal investigations at some of the capital's and the south-east's most and least known haunted locations, giving the public the chance to experience the paranormal with a non-biased, open minded, viewpoint.
There was a recent activity : SPOOKY SUFFOLK SUMMER: "Spooky Suffolk Summer" comes to it's climax at the county's best known and largest museum. The Museum of East Anglian Life in Stowmarket extends over 75 acres, upon which sits 15 restored historic buildings. Our Location for the night, Abbots Hall (currently not open to the visitors) lies at the heart of the museum and is reputed to house a wandering apparition that scares people senseless, leaving them to run and never return. The current Abbots Hall was built in 1709 upon the site of an older house, on land once owned by the Abbot of St Osyth. The Hall is situated in historic gardens, although the property is currently not open to the visitors of the museum. There is a lesser known fact that Mary Tudor has a connection to the estate. Like most historical properties, it has seen extensive rebuilding and extension over the centuries and has been the ancestral home to several families. The current house is built in classic Queen Anne style and its faded grandeur is seen in many of the rooms; however they still seem to exude the personality of the past inhabitants. The last owners, sisters Vera and Edna Longe set the land aside for the development of the Museum of East Anglain Life.
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