I actually saw this stuff a few days ago. Its ash. Mystery solved.
Printable View
I actually saw this stuff a few days ago. Its ash. Mystery solved.
film it.
post it.
if it was dust or ash, how could that be tied to a thread?
when i say flying, i don't mean that it flies, not fly like anything that lives.
it's more of a floating motion.
so it doesn't look alive ?
no, it doesn't look like it's alive.
here's my room again if you didn't believe me.
vine.co/v/bHhThBDEh5p
so what do you think it is after all this time ?
no idea.
all i know is that it's not normal household dust/dirt.
got it. your house is built on an indian burial ground.
no, but there is a church very close by.
i think the park and the homes on my road were once part of the church cemetery.
in 2006 i saw a big cluster of the floaty things in someone's home in Blackheath.
Quote:
The name is recorded in 1166 as Blachehedfeld and means the "dark coloured heathland".[1] It is formed from the Old English 'blęc' and 'hǣth' and refers to the open space that was the meeting place of the ancient hundred of Blackheath.[1] The name was later applied to the Victorian suburb that developed in the 19th century and was extended to the areas known as Blackheath Park and Blackheath Vale.[1]
An urban myth is that Blackheath was associated with the 1665 Plague or the Black Death of the mid-14th century. The idea that Blackheath got its name from its use as a burial pit goes all the way back to the medieval period, when it was almost certainly used for the disposal of the dead during the ‘Black Death‘. Virtually every part of London has a local tradition about plague pits under, say, the local school or the bakers. Certainly there were pits dug all over the place. The sheer number of bodies meant that the traditional churchyards became, as one contemporary put it, ‘overstuft’ very quickly. The name ‘Blackheath’ is popularly, if mistakenly, held to derive from its reputed use as a mass burial ground for victims of the Black Death in the 1340s and '50s.
i think i made a mistake. i think i actually saw the very first ones in 2004 and not 2006 as previously thought.
i've only seen them in clusters twice.
that time in 2006 in blackheath.
and once in my place in 2009. i had 2 witnesses that day.
They're too small to be the ghost of any adult human beings.
May be they are the ghosts of some teenage roaches you smushed
or maybe flies you may have swatted
bump