High Strangeness Day 2 || #matthewshaves

The Star Ariel Homage to Bleu De Chanel Top: Bergamot, Lemon, Peppermint, Pink Peppercorn Middle: Nutmeg, Spice, Jasmine Base: Sandalwood, Incense, Patchouli, Vetiver, Labdanum January 17, 1949. The Star Ariel climbs into clear skies over the Bermuda Triangle, its course steady, its final transmission calm, until the signal cuts without warning and the aircraft simply vanishes; in later accounts, radio operators reported a brief COLOMBIA distortion just before contact was lost, and witnesses spoke of a strange light fixed high above the flight path, unmoving, watching, and beside it, something even harder to explain a perfect black cube suspended in the sky, silent and without motion, as if waiting, and though no trace of the aircrait wes ever found, the story endures that the Star Ariel did not fall inte the sea, but was taken, drawn upward into whatever havered there, beyond the reach of radar, beyond the reach of return. Fun Fact: As early as the 1950s, pilots Aying over the Bermuda Triangle reported glowing objects pacing their aircraft, sometimes climbing straight up at impossible speeds; decades loter, U.S. Navy aviators described encounters with craft showing similes behavior, fueling the theory that whatever moves throug fiese skies has been there far longer than we think.