Thursday, November 27, 2014






"Rods" (occasionally referred to as "skyfish", "air rods", or "solar companies") is a term utilized in cryptozoology, ufology, as well as outdoor photography to refer to elongated artefacts through light-rods made by cameras. Videos of rod-shaped things relocating rapidly via the air were claimed by some ufologists and also cryptozoologists to be alien life forms, "extradimensional" creatures, or quite tiny UFOs. Subsequent experiments revealed that these poles appear in film as a result of an optical illusion/collusion (especially in interlaced video clip recording), and are generally indications of a flying pest's wingbeats.

Different paranormal interpretations appeared in the prominent society, and one of the more outspoken supporters of rods as unusual life forms is Jose Escamilla, who claims to have actually been the first to film them on March 19, 1994 at Roswell, New Mexico, while trying to film a UFO. Ever since, Escamilla has actually made extra video clips and embarked on lecture tours to promote his cases.

Unidentified Flying Rods Creatures


The Straight Dope writer Cecil Adams called poles a scam "where unethical folks are exploiting an unsuspecting public for profit", and said that investigators have shown that rods are mere techniques of light which result from just how graphics (mostly video pictures) of flying insects are recorded and also repeated. Specifically, the quick flow before the video camera of an insect flapping its wings has actually been shown to produce rodlike impacts, as a result of motion blur, if the video camera is shooting with fairly long direct exposure times.

After going to a lecture by Escamilla, UFO private investigator Robert Sheaffer wrote that "several of his "rods" were clearly bugs zooming across the industry at a high angular price" as well as others appeared to be "appendages" which were simply birds' wings obscured by the electronic camera direct exposure.

Security electronic cameras in the center's compound recorded video footage of flying rods identical to those revealed in Jose Escamilla's video clip. Huge nets were set up and also the same security electronic cameras then caught images of rods flying right into the catch. Subsequent examinations confirmed that the appearance of flying rods on video clip was an optical impression developed by the slower recording rate of the cam.

In 2012, the Malaysian independent paper Daily Express stated that a British tourist called Matthew Lazenby had "uncovered" poles in a cavern in Sabah. Lazenby explained the "fishing pole" as insect-like creatures unlike any recognized animal, and revealed his intention to record a specimen. Previous efforts to record rods in China only produced moths and other pests.

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