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Tell of a true ghost account. The winner gets a free case of Pabst Blue Ribbon.

2006-12-02 12:52:03 · 7 answers · asked by Sticky Icky the Wizard 1 in Entertainment & Music Other - Entertainment

7 answers

I have a good one.

A group of three friends and I once climbed a Elk Mountain, a smallish hikeable peak in the Wichita mountain range of SW Oklahoma.

Indian Legend says that Elk Mountain is the home of a vengeful spirit called the Deer Woman, or Elk Lady, who was feared for her propensity to disguise herself as someone a young man would likely follow, in order to lure young braves into the hills and then devour them.

We were unskilled hikers, in tennis shoes, no moutaineering tools, and not in athletic shape. We stopped periodically to rest, and catch our breath and enjoy the view. No one was climbing behind us,or we'd have seen.

When we reached the summit, we discovered the top wasn't just a peak, but that there was a flat, though boulder-filled plateaulike feature to the hilltop.
In the center of the plateau was a canyonlike depression strewn with boulders and debris and dead trees. We became disoriented, and could not remember the path we took to the summit. As we argued, a man we hadn't seen before approached us and asked if we were okay. He was dressed like a mountain climber, with hiking boots, ropes and climbing tools.

He said he had followed us up, and that we should cross the canyon to go back to the campsite.

we hadn't crossed the canyon to get there.

The others in my group insisted thet the hiker was right, and against my wishes we trudged down the canyon. We nearly got hit by a boulder that rocked loose as we made our way past . We climbed the far wall of the canyon, went to the edge of the plateau, and....

looked down at a completely wrong side of the mountain. The side we were on would have led down to the proving grounds of the local army base. There was no path, at the base no parking lot, nothing.

The man we had talked to had disappeared, and we never saw him again. Clearly, he had lied, trying to lure us to the wrong side of the mountain...

After another dangerous hike through the canyon, we went the opposite way and found the campgrounds and parking lot just where it should have been. We made it down okay.

By the way. Elk Mountain has seen probably a half dozen hikers die after getting lost at the summit.

Was the man a spirit? Could he have been the "elk Lady" in a disguise we would trust? We still talk about it, and we still don't know.

2006-12-02 13:15:12 · answer #1 · answered by chocolahoma 7 · 0 0

No No No. I think that if I drank that case of Pabst I might start having weird experiences but cold sober never.

2006-12-02 20:55:06 · answer #2 · answered by Rich Z 7 · 0 0

Well my Vice Principles (former Varsity High School Varsity Foot Ball Coach) grandfather died in my living room and two other small kids died in a fire in the 1800's.Ive heard men talking downstairs in my living room, ive heard a horse and carriage, ive smelt cigar smoke, when no one in my house smokes at all....ive had things move by themselves, and things turn on...
i also get creepy feelings like someone is watching my when i walk down my hallways at night (i live in a mantion) and my downstairs. My father has also seen awoman in my kitchen, wearing a pink victorian era dress...

2006-12-02 20:57:27 · answer #3 · answered by nyokosorano18 2 · 0 0

Lots of times, but I think hallucinating really sucks. The only ghost I ever saw wasn't even a real ghost.

2006-12-02 21:01:34 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Experienced them all after downing 40 ouncer of Captain Morgan.

2006-12-02 21:00:22 · answer #5 · answered by robert m 7 · 0 0

your another person who has no life

2006-12-02 20:53:58 · answer #6 · answered by srh077 1 · 0 0

ever.

2006-12-02 20:54:02 · answer #7 · answered by rizwano 7 · 0 0

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