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Media write up from the Packhorse Inn:First off! I am not looking to get fame out of my work, but I believe that by getting media write up's for educational purposes is a great thing, after all there are so many dedicated Researchers and investigaters of the Paranormal out there that the evidence of a after life could exsist needs to be shown to the world! Imagine if I didn't bother to design a web site of my own just kept it to myself? People wouldn't get to see my work to be able to judge for themselves.. Media is good if used in the right way, its a soucre of spreading the word of what we do and opening people's minds to another possiblity of thinking. The hang up people got about Media and the paranormal is that they think "media" and conect with paranormal then come up with fake!! why on earth people do this I really don't know? If Albert Einstien hadn't told the world of his thoery on "relativity" just kept it to himself, we wouldn't have the gift or choice of knowing so. So when People researching the paranormal get write ups of a media nature, please think twice before jumping to the conclusion "Fame seekers" or "fakes" This was written By Geoff Ward from the Western Daily press, following my visit to the Pack Horse Inn. He picked 5 best pictures that came through for me on the night, but these are only in the hard copy. I feel Its one more step forward for our cause that more people can look into ITC methods and experiment and make up their minds. "GATEWAY TO THE AFTERLIFE."08:00 - 05 October 2007Could the extraordinary sequence of pictures shown above be communications from beyond the grave? These perplexing and somewhat disturbing "spirit images" were captured on special video equipment during an experiment by a group of para- normal investigators at a historic pub near Bath.Lance Reed, who works in the branch of paranormal research known as video ITC - "instrumental trans-communication" - joined mediums and investigators at the 15th-century Packhorse Inn at Southstoke.ITC claims to be a method of recording the presence of spirits using electronic equipment, including digital recorders, tape recorders, TV and radio sets, computers, telephones and radios.The most common form of ITC is "electronic voice phenomena" (EVP) as depicted in the 2005 Michael Keaton movie White Noise.Group spokesman Garry Evans, of Paulton, North East Somerset, said: "I find this absolutely fascinating. It offers extra proof to the everyday man in the street that there is an afterlife."We all know spirits don't live in camcorders and TV sets so they have to pass the lens to be captured."Facial features are evident in the majority of frames and it's very rare two faces are the same, so this is more than one spirit person, either a resident of the property under investigation or passing through the area at that time and wishing to have their presence recorded."There were other unusual happenings during the night, including icy blasts of air."There was an experience with a chair that refused to move and was then dragged across the floor just a few minutes later but there was no one in the bar," said medium Garry. "The front door was shaken vigorously, but there was no human intervention."The Packhorse Inn was very active paranormally yet until now had never been investigated, added Garry, who said the team wanted to thank landlord Stephen Peart for making them welcome.The video aspect of ITC was discovered in 1985 by the German psychic Klaus Schreiber, who had messages via EVP to point a video camera at a blank TV screen and send the output of the camera back into the TV, causing a feedback loop. "This caused a tunnel from which churning mists were to be seen," said Lance, 35, of Aberdare, South Wales."Out of these mists appeared images of people who had crossed over to the other side. This was a major breakthrough in ITC research."It knocked me off my feet and that's why I decided to put full-time research into this method and, combined with EVP, I feel we are getting closer to making a bridge to the afterlife."n When a priory was established at Southstoke more than 700 years ago, monks built a guesthouse or hostelry nearby, and the ghost of a monk has been reported at the Packhorse often over the years.The inn was, and still is, divided by a passageway. It was once the custom for the dead from the Packhorse cottages opposite to be taken to the local churchyard via this passageway. "The word through the grapevine was the pictures I recieved that night amazed alot of people around the area of Bath city!" Back to TopCopyright©Lance Reed 2007/2008. |