Back in the 80’s I do recall a group of ultra-lights flying over our house (in Wappingers Falls) one evening, low, in formation and with lights. My first thought was “Here come the UFO reports”.
I'm assuming it was light enough to tell what they were, but if not — how did you identify them?
I'm thinking of that video and the overwhelming foolishness of what they said about what they were seeing. Can one look directly at an elephant and speak aloud of its catness?
Yeah, I used to do that. Very dangerous though. Best way is to make a balsa wood cross and affix a line of birthday candles to each row. Makes a flying cross, sure to confuse the locals. Doesn't fly very far though, and you have to make sure it doesn't start a fire when it lands.Translucent plastic shopping/garbage bags with a candle suspended underneath to heat the air in the bag and make the bag glow have been popular UFOs.
AFAIK, The Stormville Flyers was just a bunch of guys who flew out of there. I don't think there was any official group. The occurences made the news for a while and then they stopped. I heard about the FAA clamping down on them through a pilot friend of mine, but I don't remember if that was ever published in the paper.
This is what I am seeking, but with some documented backing. Thanks for the anecdote Spindrift.
Those would be good. I can't find anything other than text posted on web pages that declares it was a hoax. Scans of newspaper articles would at least support the story.Besides a few newspaper articles and the Discover magazine article I don't know what documentation there could be.
I only want some confirmation about the Stormville flyers' hoax/prank. All I can find is mentions of it happening and I want to know if it did actually happen.DONN: Why do you need articles to confirm what you already know? Do the two Hudson Valley videos show anything other than honest to goodness man made aircraft flying in formation? The two videos are as worthless as the Roger Patterson Bigfoot film.
The only difference between the two cases is that all of the Hudson Valley sightings involved conventional aircraft whereas the Phoenix Lights consisted of military flares and military aircraft. Those pesky prosaic explanations always spoil the fun.
FOLLOW UP
thines kindly sent me photocopies of the DISCOVER Magazine November 1984 that contained an article with quite a lot of detail re the Stormville flyers and their hoax.
I have scanned it and placed it into a PDF (1.8mb) on my google drive. Here is the link:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0ByXVQD8awBcLTm0yR09vTDRKdmc/edit?pli=1
(I hope that link's okay.)
The details in the article should give me a few more avenues of web research, however I'm inclined to use it as the "evidence" I need to call this hoax plausible.
Thanks for all the info and help from those in this thread.