Who: Several ghost hunters
When: Arrived before dusk
Purpose: To more formally investigate Gilson while it's still "haunted."
Results: EMF activity. The energy at Gilson started dropping as soon as the construction work began
across the street from the cemetery.
However, we did do a more formal investigation of the site on Walpurgis, April 30th.
The results were inconclusive. There were no clear patterns to the experiments
with pendulums. Although the EMF meter flared dramatically throughout the southern
half of the cemetery for several minutes, the meter did not respond on a visit the next
day.
During the EMF flare, we did check it against cell phone activity. We could not
artificially create the flare with the phones.
Who: Several reporters, casual investigators, photographers, and one ghost
hunter from Hollow Hill.
When: Arrived at about 6 p.m., stayed until about 8 p.m.
Purpose: Investigation and photographs, for October 27th Nashua Telegraph
articles.
Results: Unsettled and inconclusive energy. We hiked into the Gilson area at dusk. The energy was very low. Compass
readings by skeptics reached only a 10-degree shift, max. This is still anomalous, but
not so exciting as Gilson used to be.
There was a brief and very minor "cold spot" next to one stone.
The headstone glowed slightly more than it should have as
night arrived, but it was mostly a big disappointment. If I hadn't been actively looking
for these usually-reliable manifestations, I wouldn't have noticed them at all.
However, the gate glowed more than we've seen in the past, well past dark. Maybe they've
painted it with a more reflective paint?
My "sparkle" camera showed inconsistent sparkles in the woods. Maybe one out of five
flashes produced the silvery images. (A year ago, the ratio of successful flashes
would have been nine out of ten, or better.) However, the newspaper staff
commented about the sparkles in the beam of light from the flash, inside the cemetery walls.
We compared these with flash results from two other cameras
and there were no sparkles with them. Even if we try to explain the sparkles as dust motes
in the air, they should have appeared consistently with all cameras within, say, a two-minute
period.
Listening intuitively, there was far more rustling in the woods. It sounded
like people brushing against branches or evergreens. However, even on a psychic level, there were no corresponding
sounds of footsteps.
Listening naturally, with one's ears, the woods were (pardon the pun) dead quiet.
Except for an unusually brief serenade by the frogs in the swampy area, there were no animal noises
at all. No owls. No birds shifting weight as they slept. No scampering little animals, even
at dusk. It was eerie. Usually, there are far more natural noises at Gilson.
Mostly, the visit was uneventful. The gate creaked and moaned once; it's never
made a sound in the past. Branches fell in the woods across the street from the cemetery.
A couple of cars raced past the cemetery, illegally, and did not slow down even to look
at our flashlights in the cemetery.
At about 7:30 p.m., something felt very wrong when the photographer
was setting up his tripod,
lights, etc. However, that energy subsided as the evening progressed. My impression
in hindsight is, perhaps a spirit was nervous about what we were going to do, and then
calmed down once it was obvious that we weren't malicious.
Gilson is still a "sure thing" or as close as it gets, at least for
anomalous activity with a compass, day or night. Any hiking-type compass will work. We've
had success with an L.L.Bean zipper-pull compass (but not cheaper counterparts),
and with the $8 Coleman compass available at Target and WalMart.
What's key is to make certain the needle doesn't tend to "stick" as it floats.
Also, be certain to pause if the needle swings, so it's not a false reading from
simply motion as you walk. Make certain you're holding the
compass level, too.
Just walk through the cemetery and watch north seem to shift directions, from
ten degrees on a tame day, up to 90 degrees on a high-energy day.
You can do this at any time of day, but the later in the day, the better the results.
You can get positive results anywhere in the cemetery. The "hot" compass
regions seem to change from one day to the next. We do get the most consistent anomalies
in the vicinity of the Walter Gilson stone (with the hole in it), near the break in the stone wall
(back left corner of the cemetery, which people seem either repelled by, or drawn to), and
towards the left front of the cemetery.
By contrast, the EMF meter reads most often at the headstones nearest the gate.
Reminder: When visiting any isolated spot, but particularly cemeteries and sites frequented
by teens who are drinking, it's never wise to go ghost-hunting alone.
We've said it often, the problem is not the dead, but the living! *grin*