you should check my underpants, more specifically the back side of them, there seems to be this angry ghost there always growling, occasionally he leaves evidence of his presence in the form of a green or brown stain.
2007-02-26 10:46:54
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answer #1
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answered by John P 6
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There's a website called Ghost Towns Of America, something like that, I'll post the link later on. It list all the ghosts town in America. Really it does, it has every state. While a lot are just towns that are deserted, there are a few really good ones that are supposedly haunted.
If you're trying to stick to the Virginia area, try Pennsylvania. It's not thaaat close, but it's a lot closer than the others. I would deffinitly visit Centralia if I was in that state. The real back history to the town is interesting and supposedly it's haunted from all the deaths that happened because of the coal mine. That and it's the location that Silent Hill (the videogames, novels, and movies) were based on, except they changed the name to Silent Hill.
http://www.ghosttowns.com
2007-02-26 18:56:26
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answer #2
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answered by daniellemorinxo 1
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I have seen alot of ghost hunting shows done in New England in the old castles. Good Luck!
2007-02-26 18:46:48
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answer #3
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answered by Gringarican 3
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You should get a book called Weird U.S, OR they have regional books, like Weird New Jersey, Weird Wisconsin, etc. So they MUST have weird Virginia. In these books they mention all the "weird" and "spooky" spots in your state. It's really cool. :-)
2007-02-26 18:46:41
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answer #4
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answered by Hector 2
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Sounds like fun !
You can check out these sites
http://www.westvirginiaghosthunters.com/
or
www.ghoststudy.com
they have a forum where you can ask other members in your area for locations
Happy ghost hunting
2007-02-26 18:49:45
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answer #5
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answered by travelgirl218 5
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how about going to mexico and getting krunk with everyone else that is normal and having a good time.
2007-02-26 18:46:52
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answer #6
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answered by Doss 2
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If it were me I would go to Burkittsville.............
The Township of Blair was located in North Central Maryland, two hours from Washington, D.C.
Several children accuse Elly Kedward of luring them into her home to draw blood from them. Kedward is found guilty of witchcraft, banished from the village during a particularly harsh winter and presumed dead.
By midwinter all of Kedward's accusers along with half of the town's children vanish. Fearing a curse, the townspeople flee Blair and vow never to utter Elly Kedward's name again.
The Blair Witch Cult is published. This rare book, commonly considered fiction, tells of an entire town cursed by an outcast witch.
Burkittsville is founded on the Blair site.
Eleven witnesses testify to seeing a pale woman's hand reach up and pull ten-year-old Eileen Treacle into Tappy East Creek. Her body is never recovered, and for thirteen days after the drowning the creek is clogged with oily bundles of sticks.
Eight-year-old Robin Weaver is reported missing and search parties are dispatched. Although Weaver returns, one of the search parties does not. Their bodies are found weeks later at Coffin Rock tied together at the arms and legs and completely disemboweled.
Starting with Emily Hollands, a total of seven children are abducted from the area surrounding Burkittsville, Maryland.
An old hermit named Rustin Parr walks into a local market and tells the people there that he is "finally finished." After Police hike for four hours to his secluded house in the woods, they find the bodies of seven missing children in the cellar. Each child has been ritualistically murdered and disemboweled. Parr admits to everything in detail, telling authorities that he did it for "an old woman ghost" who occupied the woods near his house. He is quickly convicted and hanged.
Montgomery College students Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard, and Michael Williams arrive in Burkittsville to interview locals about the legend of the Blair Witch for a class project. Heather interviews Mary Brown an old and quite insane woman who has lived in the area all her life. Mary claims to have seen the Blair Witch one day near Tappy Creek in the form of a hairy, half-human, half-animal beast.
In the early morning Heather interviews two fishermen who tell the filmmakers that Coffin Rock is less than twenty minutes from town and easily accessible by an old logging trail. The filmmakers hike into Black Hills Forest shortly thereafter and are never seen again.
The first APB is issued. Josh's car is found later in the day parked on Black Rock Road.
The Maryland State Police launch their search of the Black Hills area, an operation that lasts ten days and includes up to one hundred men aided by dogs, helicopters, and even a fly over by a Department of Defense Satellite.
The search is called off after 33,000 man hours fail to find a trace of the filmmakers or any of their gear. Heather's mother, Angie Donahue, begins an exhaustive personal search for her daughter and her two companions.
The case is declared inactive and unsolved.
Students from the University of Maryland's Anthropology Department discover a duffel bag containing film cans, DAT tapes, video-cassettes, a Hi-8 video camera, Heather's journal and a CP-16 film camera buried under the foundation of a 100 year-old cabin. When the evidence is examined, Burkittsville Sheriff Ron Cravens announced that the 11 rolls of black and white film and 10 HI8 video tapes are indeed the property of Heather Donahue and her crew.
After an initial study of the bag's contents, select pieces of film footage are shown to the families. According to Angie Donahue, there are several unusual events but nothing conclusive. The families question the thoroughness of the analysis and demanded another look.
The families are shown a second group of clips that local law enforcement officials consider to be faked. Outraged, Mrs. Donahue goes public with her criticism and Sheriff Cravens restricts all access to the evidence; a restriction that two lawsuits fail to lift.
The Sheriff's department announces that the evidence is inconclusive and the case is once again declared inactive and unsolved. The footage is to be released to the families when the legal limit of its classification runs out, on October 16, 1997.
The found footage of their children's last days is turned over to the families of Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard, and Michael Williams. Angie Donahue contracts Haxan Films to examine the footage and piece together the events of October 20 - 28, 1994.
2007-02-26 18:48:38
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answer #7
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answered by flightpillow 6
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Any cemetery at night is great. But, if it's locked, don't enter. You'll get arrested!
http://www.ghoststudy.com/new/evp.html
2007-02-26 18:49:49
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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My pants!
2007-02-26 18:46:15
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answer #9
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answered by Chris 2
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