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Posted Nov 28.06
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  MYSTERY OF BIZARRE FLOATING ORBS OVER SE ENGLAND

Dec 01.06

Hundreds of people who thought they were seeing UFOs may have been duped by pranksters letting off a stream of flying Chinese lanterns.

Bright orange lights seen hovering over Hove had baffled police and airtraffic controllers last week.

But witnesses who spotted the orbs close-up said the lights, seen moving together in parallel formation, could have been merely heated balloons tethered with string. The "Chinese lantern balloons" are even being sold in packs over the internet.

The Argus first reported the unexplained flying objects on Saturday after readers called to report the weird floating phenomena.

Sussex Police and air-traffic controllers at Shoreham Airport said they had both received inquiries about the UFOs, with as many as eight seen in the sky at one time.

But witnesses have since come forward to claim that what they saw was far from unexplainable.

Vince Meegan, of Holland Road, Hove, said he was walking with his two sons when he first saw the bright lights near the King Alfred Centre, late on Saturday, November 18.

He said: "The first two or three were too high to see properly but then the next few remained at about 30m so we could get a reasonable look at them.

"They appeared to be small translucent paper octagonal boxes, around the size of a shoe box, with a night-light candle inside.

I'm sorry if this is disappointing but the Martians aren't arriving just yet."

Readers from as far afield as Texas and Arizona have contacted The Argus to discuss the strange orange lights.

Yvonne Treszer, of First Avenue, Hove, said she saw between 40 and 50 of the glowing objects rising above the city's rooftops.

She said: "By the time I managed to find my camera and figured out how to put it on a night setting there were only three hovering in the sky. Then, typically, the camera ran out of batteries."

Ellie May, 30, of The Drive, Hove, began seeing UFOs in her parents' garden in Shoreham in the summer.

But she said they looked quite different from the Chinese lanterns others could have been watching.

She said: "The ones we saw were bright white, not orange, and there were about six of them, all moving independently in different directions, not with the wind.

"We're still none the wiser to what they are and I've seen more since - we've got quite used to them."

But Rob Whitehead, co-ordinator of Lancashire Anomalous Phenomena Investigation Society (LAPIS), said the mystery of Hove's floating lights could be quite simple to solve, after similar sightings in Liverpool and Nottingham.

He said: "I'm pretty confident the recent sightings can be attributed to UFO lanterns', which people are buying and launching in increasing numbers.

"The lanterns can be bought easily on the internet and appear as bright, orange balls of light that glide silently across the night sky. Depending on the wind conditions, people often report the objects appear to hang motionless in what appear to be deliberate, usually triangular formations."

The lanterns have even been released to celebrate people's weddings and birthday celebrations, he added.

Rick Barber, from South Carolina, explained how, when he was young, friends would put lighted candles under plastic bags to create miniature hot-air balloons.

Most witnesses were surprised to hear the UFOs could be faked so easily but said it wouldn't stop them watching the skies.

Justin Campbell, of Somerhill Avenue, Hove, said: "I counted 15 lights in all. I was shocked at how uniformly they moved. It's a bit weird but I'm not surprised they aren't real UFOs."

(Original headline: UFO tale was just hot air... )

.:Story originally published by:.
The Argus Sussex / England | Andy Dickenson - Dec 01.06


REPORT #1

Bright lights in the skies have baffled police and air-traffic controllers.

The unidentified flying objects have been likened to similar strange orange glows seen over Liverpool and Essex.

Witnesses said thousands of people may have seen the bizarre floating orbs.

Air-traffic controllers at Shoreham Airport and Brighton police said they had received inquiries about the UFOs, with as many as eight seen in the sky at one time.

James Gordon-Johnson, of Preston Park Avenue, Brighton, said he was leaving a restaurant in Shoreham with his brother at 11.30pm on November 18 when he saw "what appeared to be a very big orange light in the sky".

He added: "It was very, very bright but static - it wasn't rising or falling. Another one then appeared in mid-air. Then another.

"It must have been somewhere over Hove Lagoon but the lights were so bright thousands of people must have seen them.

"The next morning I got a phone call from a friend of mine who saw the exact same thing."

Mark Sztopel, from Brighton, told The Argus he saw seven lights moving slowly in an easterly direction across the city at midnight.

He added: "I'm a big plane enthusiast so I know what the lights and characteristics of a plane look like at night, and I can tell you now that these definitely weren't planes."

A spokeswoman for Shoreham Airport said staff had received emails from people inquiring about the glowing objects.

She said: "We closed at 7pm so there was nothing happening here. We've no idea what they could have been."

Police said they also received a report from a man in Hove who said he saw "approximately eight planes coming in over the sea, with no flashing navigation lights, towards Gatwick, in a dead line".

Officers contacted air traffic controllers at Gatwick who said they knew of no movement in the area.

Sue Heard, a police spokeswoman, said: "We were called out and made checks to establish it wasn't a known aircraft.

"It certainly seems pretty baffling on the face of it but there was a meteor shower on Saturday so maybe the two are connected."

A cloud of comet dust produced a Leonids meteor shower over the weekend, which managers of Herstmonceux Observatory said peaked on Saturday night with a display of shooting stars.

UFO spotters have also linked the orange lights to sightings in Liverpool and Essex, recently revealed as hoaxes created using open flames suspended under plastic bags to produce mini hot-air balloons.

But Mr Gordon-Johnson, 33, said: "These weren't meteors - there's no way they were meteors. They were far too big and bright and low in the atmosphere.

"They looked like they were about 3,000 or 4,000ft up. As I kept looking at them they just sat there. I was trying to think of explanations but couldn't think of one.

"It was very odd. If it was just a balloon you wouldn't have seen another just appear at the same altitude. There was no sound. Nothing at all."

(Original headline: Mystery of orange UFOs )

.:Story originally published by:.
The Welwyn & Hatfield Times Sussex / England | Andy Dickenson - Nov 28.06


REPORT #2

A UFO scare was sparked after the police were flooded with calls about a fleet of 'spaceships' invading the coast of Britain.

Thousands of people spotted the bright orange orbs off the Channel coast at Brighton.

Police and air traffic control centres were inundated by reports of the strange spectacle, the Daily Express reported.

Shocked witness James Gordon-Johnson said: "I hadn't been drinking. I was sceptical about UFOs before but this has changed my mind.

"I saw this big orange light in the sky. Then another one appeared in mid-air. Then another. And another."

Experts are baffled by the phenomenon, but believe it could be linked to a meteor shower.

The Hermstmonceux Observatory in East Sussex said a cloud of comet dust had produced a meteor shower which peaked with a display of shooting stars.

And an earlier Ministry of Defence study into UFOs concluded that many sightings could be "glowing clouds of gas created by electricity charges."

(Original headline: Riddle of UFO 'invasion' )

.:Story originally published by:.
Evening Standard London / England - Nov 28.06

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