We
are not alone - lights in the sky
By
GEOFF TAYLOR - Waikato Times
Some
call them crazy. But for people who believe they have seen UFOs, it is a very
real experience.
Some
of them are on a mission to find out more.
So
many times Suzanne Hansen will go back to the moment which occurred 29 years ago.
If
only she could just once fill in the gaps in her memory of a bizarre and frightening
night in 1978.
Fridays
were always a long day, the opportunity for Hansen, 23, and her husband to stock
up in Gisborne for the week ahead, before returning to their isolated home on
East Cape where she taught at the local school.
On
this occasion, after they shopped they had dinner with friends and didn't get
on the road until 10.30.
They
had an almost three-hour drive ahead of them.
About
11.30 they reached an isolated point high up in the hills between Tologa Bay and
Tokomaru Bay, and saw something they would never really speak about to each other
again.
Hansen
knows how many people react to her story.
She's
seen it in their faces for years.
UFOs
- the word conjures up images of skinny creatures with big heads.
The
alleged cover-up of a UFO crash in Roswell, New Mexico, the films ET and Close
Encounters of the Third Kind, bizarre tales of alien abductions that have been
tabloid fodder for years.
Always
good for a chuckle.
Yet
what Hansen says happened to her that night still inspires her nearly 30 years
on as she administers Ufocus NZ, an organisation she founded in 2000.
Ufocus
NZ catalogues and investigates New Zealand UFO sightings - and it has received
48 reports in the last 12 months.
About
a week ago the organisation, based in Tauranga, publicised its work for the first
time.
Since
it featured in news reports Hansen has received 100 emails from people wanting
to report sightings.
She
says most are historical sightings people have only told family members about,
but now feel able to confide in Ufocus NZ.
A
chance to finally get the secret off their chest.
It
seems they've come to the right person.
When
Hansen and her husband came over the brow of the hill that night, the bottom of
the valley ahead was out of sight.
She
still dreams of being able to peek down that valley a little further. What they
did see was the whole valley bathed in a bright white light.
It
was like someone had flicked a switch, but the light was brighter than the brightest
sunlight.
The
car stalled and the couple sat there stunned.
On
either side of the valley she could see virtually every tree lit up so brightly
they had a silvery white colour.
Initially,
Hansen and her husband were panicking and yelling at each other. Then they started
whispering.
Her
husband tried to reassure her it was probably caused by possum shooters with a
spotlight. Hansen knew that was rubbish.
They
sat staring fearfully.
She
suggested driving back to Gisborne.
Anything
to avoid going towards the light.
Hansen
began to notice her arms and legs were feeling numb and tingly.
She
heard a deep buzzing sound and felt dizzy and faint.
She
tried to talk to her husband to ask him if he felt the same, but she couldn't
speak.
Her
next recollection is sitting next to him in the dark, both of them staring out
the front window of the car.
She
grabbed her handkerchief and wiped away condensation from the inside of the windscreen.
"The
light's gone," Hansen said to her husband.
"Shall
we go now?"
"Okay,"
he mumbled.
They
set off and travelled in silence for the rest of the journey.
Hansen
felt extraordinarily tired the next day, which she put down to a late night.
But
her ears were painfully sensitive and she suffered several nosebleeds.
She
couldn't remember anything about the trip home - not even putting the groceries
away.
She
tried to discuss the incident with her husband, but he didn't want to talk about
it.
It
seemed to scare him. Hansen couldn't forget it.
For
a long time afterwards she stopped going out on fishing trips at night.
Car
lights shining in the windows at night would send her running for cover.
She
believes they were abducted by aliens that night, but is reluctant to talk about
it, knowing how absurd it sounds.
The
late 1970s and early 1980s were a busy time for UFO sightings around Gisborne
and the east coast, a period known as the Gisborne "UFO Flap".
The
Gisborne Herald had a field day with more than 200 reports including accounts
of lit-up valleys or hillsides - exactly as Hansen describes - strange aerial
buzzing, cracking or exploding sounds, sightings of shiny metallic craft and even
sightings of humanoid figures in silver suits.
Reports
tailed off in the mid 1980s.
Senior
Hamilton air traffic controller Graeme Opie was living in Gisborne at the time,
but didn't even hear about it.
He
was a young man, doing his own thing, rarely bothering to read the newspapers.
But
in March 1995, Opie's own world would change when on the job at Hamilton Airport
he saw something he couldn't explain.
At
1.20pm on March 9, Opie looked south of the control tower and observed an unusual
object with a trail behind it.
It
had an orange tail, its edges sparkling in a way similar to a fireworks sparkler.
"It
was definitely not a fireball or meteorite. It was travelling virtually horizontally."
He
says when he held out his arm as if to frame what he was seeing, the shiny head
of the object would have been 2mm in diameter.
He
saw the object for about 1 ½ seconds before it disappeared behind clouds.
He
says the object travelled in a 23< arc across the sky in the space of a second.
When he lost sight of it he checked with Auckland air traffic control to see if
it was registered on their radar screens - it was not.
Using
the expertise of his training, Opie has estimated the object was travelling about
39,000 km/h.
Opie
had always been interested in aviation and UFOs, but this was a big moment for
him; it gave him something concrete to work on.
At
the same time as Opie made his sighting, Air Traffic Control Rotorua received
three calls about an object in the skies above Bay of Plenty heading west.
The
Hamilton tower also received a phone call.
Three
minutes before Opie's sighting, two fisherman near Pudney Rock, near Motiti Island,
Bay of Plenty, reported the same object.
The
next day the Waikato Times reported the sightings, quoting school children at
Cambridge and a farming couple at Te Kawa.
Opie
speaks deliberately and carefully, perhaps as a result of a long career in air
traffic control.
He
avoids emotional references to his sighting.
"I
consider that what I saw from the control tower was a UFO - definitely some sort
of controlled UFO or craft. It is very interesting that it did not appear on our
radar screens."
Soon
after the sighting Opie connected with Hansen and ultimately has become a major
figure of Ufocus NZ.
Hansen
and Opie are among nine members of Ufocus NZ Network which is spread around the
country and provides a formal reporting system of UFO sightings.
While
some of the 48 reports it has received in the past year were explained by natural
phenomena or other conventional causes, most could not be explained, says Opie.
New
Zealand has a rich history of UFO sightings. Hansen says for some reason a high
percentage of sightings have been around the central North Island and volcanic
plateau.
New
Zealand's most famous sighting was the "Kaikoura lights" in December
1978.
On
December 21 the crew of a cargo plane saw strange lighted objects around their
aircraft.
The
lights tracked them for several minutes before disappearing and reappearing elsewhere.
They
appeared on Wellington air traffic control radar, on aircraft radar and were sighted
by hundreds of people.
On
December 30 an Australian TV crew onboard a cargo ship filmed a similar event
between Wellington and Christchurch.
In
a world first, UFOs were filmed, tracked by Wellington air traffic control and
observed by witnesses simultaneously.
Never
before had there been such comprehensive coverage.
One
of the objects followed the aircraft almost until it landed. When the aircraft
took off again it was followed by an enormous orb-like object for 15 minutes.
Again
the event was filmed observed and tracked, and the Kaikoura lights film footage
became renowned worldwide.
The
Defence Ministry attributed the sightings to lights from squid boats reflected
off clouds, unburned meteors, or lights from the planet Venus or trains and cars.
Ufocus
NZ is hosting an international conference on UFOs and related topics in Rotorua
in September 29 and 30.
Hansen
shares information with similar organisations all over the world.
Opie
tells of a phone call he received the night before his interview with the Times.
"I
had a guy call me last night who has a sighting in 1948, but sat on it all this
time because he didn't want to be regarded as a crank.
"Suddenly
we are getting people who are coming out. People who've only ever been able to
talk to their family about this but are now saying 'at last I can get this off
my chest'.
"If
you talk to those people, there's no sensationalism. They are not after media
coverage - they just want to get it off their chest."
Can
all this talk of UFO sightings be for real?
Opie
is measured and careful, but some of Hansen's comments on the Ufocus website seem
far-fetched.
A
cynic would suggest UFOs appear to follow her around. She saw her first UFO when
she was eight and she and her family saw an orange cigar-shaped object hovering
over the Bombay Hills.
She
recalls seeing a UFO south of Hastings where she remembers feeling the car being
lifted off the ground.
In
1978, around the time of her episode driving from Gisborne to East Cape, Hansen
recalls being terrified by buzzing and bright lights above their house at night.
Again
she suffered fatigue, hearing sensitivity and nosebleeds afterwards. Again she
hints she may have been abducted.
On
another occasion on the East Coast she saw a UFO while riding a horse.
In
1995, 12 days before Opie's sighting, Hansen believes she saw the same UFO.
The
website says on February 25 at about 10.30pm she felt the sudden and urgent need
impulse to go outside her Tauranga house.
"Having
experienced close encounters for most of her life, Sue had long ago learnt to
follow such spontaneous intuitive feelings which have invariably led to advantageous
events or meetings," says Hansen's report on the group's website.
Hansen
says she saw a large bright green ball of light heading over the Kaimai Range
towards the sea. She then saw another light - this time with a brilliant reddish
orange glow.
Its
descent slowed and the two lights converged. The lights vanished behind Mayor
Island.
"It
appeared almost as if the green light was 'escorting' the larger reddish light
during the final visible part of their descent."
Hansen
says numerous sightings have occurred in the Bay of Plenty over the years, especially
around Mayor and Motiti Islands.
"Local
witnesses of highly strange events have long speculated on the possible existence
of an underwater UFO base out at sea beyond the islands."
Does
she worry if people think she's loopy?
"That's
okay if they're sceptical. If they haven't experienced it I would hope they would
have an open mind - but I'm not here to convince them."
She
says people expect her to look eccentric and are surprised by her appearance.
"They
expect me to have big jiggling earrings and lots of jewellery and a big full skirt."
She
says Ufocus NZ has a formal documenting system that doesn't try to make assumptions.
"We
are never going to say 'it is' something; we are saying 'we don't know what it
is'."
Hansen,
who has four children, taught at primary and secondary school for more than 20
years and is an experienced counsellor.
She
has spoken at UFO conferences in Australia and the US.
Asked
why she has seen so many UFOs, Hansen doesn't know.
"Maybe
I've just been in the right place at the right time. A lot of people see them
but don't talk about it."
Opie
says scepticism is just what is needed because it promotes more research. He welcomes
it.
He
says some of the UFO sightings over the years could be put down to military aircraft
being trialled.
"But
some of the speeds - certainly with my one - are not explainable by anything man-made.
The majority of them had speeds and trajectories and manoeuvres that don't obey
the laws of physics.
"The
only explanation you can give is that they are not man-made.
"I
believe in the theory that we are not alone." He says it is "arrogant"
to believe ours is the only planet with life on it.
Both
suggest the name UFO has been tainted by suggestions of aliens, just as the phrase
"flying saucers" was before that. They say the term is being redefined
as UAP (unidentified aerial phenomena).
"You
have to get away from ideas of little green men and flying saucers," says
Opie."
He
is in a position of seniority at the airport but says he feels supported by staff
and management.
"No
one has called me a kook."
Waikato
University director of religious studies Doug Pratt says people who believe in
UFOs may often be "gnostics" seeking wisdom and searching for knowledge
that leads to salvation and enlightenment.
He
says in a sense UFO believers fit into the category of gnostics as they believe
in an esoteric line of wisdom that's not publicly verifiable.
Gordonton-based
David Riddell, editor of the New Zealand Sceptic, says Ufocus NZ does appear to
have a genuine spirit of inquiry which he approves of.
But
he is sceptical about UFOs.
"We
are aware of how easy it is to misconstrue things, and our understanding of the
world we live in is very limited."
Riddell
says the universe is an incredibly big place and it is highly likely there are
many places that have life.
"But
it's one thing to have intelligent life and it's a substantial step to have that
level of technological life."
He
says there may be intelligent life, but not necessarily life capable of making
space ships which can travel to other galaxies. He says it's important to understand
the vastness of the universe.
For
example, even if there were a billion planets capable of sustaining life in the
universe, the distances are such they would still have to travel up to 2 million
light years to reach Earth.
He
says just because something is a mystery, doesn't make it an alien spacecraft.
Riddell
says UFOs are not the first phenomenon of its kind and refers to the great Zeppelin
scare of 1909.
In
the tense pre-WW1 period in 1909 there was great fear of Germany's Zeppelin airships
which were considered a danger to the allies.
After
news stories reported the issue in New Zealand, between July and August there
were thousands of sightings of Zeppelins.
In
some cases whole towns reported seeing them despite the fact there was no way
Zeppelins could be in New Zealand skies.
"People's
perceptions are coloured by their social conditioning. In a world where they expect
to see aliens they probably will."
Riddell
says up to two million Americans have reported being abducted in the last 30 years,
which equates to one every few minutes.
He
suggests many encounters are more likely episodes of sleep paralysis and hypnopompic
dreams - dreams that occur in between sleep and waking.
In
such instances people imagine things and have some sort of paralysis and often
overwhelming terror. Seizures are another possibility.
Riddell
says it's a bit surprising to see a new UFO organisation starting up, because
the worldwide phenomenon is in decline.
Several
such groups in the US and Britain have closed down for lack of support in the
last couple of years, a fact recorded in newspaper articles.
Hansen
says there is no doubt UFO groups have dwindled, but there's a good reason for
this - the growth of the internet.
"What
would you rather do on a cold night? Go to a meeting to talk about UFOs or research
on the internet?"
She
says interest from followers is as high as ever.
Riddell
also says with so much information freely available and secrets so much harder
to keep, proof of UFOs should have been found by now.
Hansen
and Opie see momentum building as governments around the world begin to disclose
their files on UFOs.
Several
countries, including Brazil and France, have done so in recent years.
Both
hope the world will get to the bottom of what UFOs are and where they are from.
"If
I find out they are from the US military I will be very disappointed," Hansen
laughs.
One
senses deep down Hansen doesn't have any doubts.
She
just has to remember that lit up valley in Tokamaru Bay when she was 23.
"It
was as if the light was shining from every direction at once and yet at the same
time it was clearly originating from something.
"The
magnitude of that light I saw that night, I couldn't begin to describe it in words.
"I
would just love to know what caused that."