UFO Startles Ferry Crowd
There is one
clue in the behavior of UFOs which suggests
strongly that their origin lies beyond our
solar system. It is their attitude toward
water. As far as we know, Earth is the most
watery of planets in our particular system.
Perhaps in some form water lies in or under
the clouds of Venus or in the gaseous layers
of the outer planets. To a small degree it is
almost certainly present on Mars.
But large
deep bodies of water such as ours seem
definitely unique in our solar system.
Presumably, therefore, if our space visitors
came from a neighboring planet, they would
approach our lakes and oceans with wary
respect. Without such watery expanses of their
own, they would never feel at ease on or in
ours, no matter how advanced their technical
development.
But the
striking fact is that, where water is
concerned, UFOs appear far more at home even
than ourselves. They seem to regard it as an
element barely distinguishable from air and,
except for apparent interest in sampling it
(ref. May-June issue), they treat it with
indifference. They have been seen flying into
it and emerging from it at full speed.
Observations of strange subsurface luminous
discs suggest they may even live under it.
Now we have
learned of a case in which a UFO was observed
boating on a lake much as we would on a casual
outing. For a few minutes the object looked
like any vacation craft, but then there were
differences.
Although the
incident occurred in 1952, it did not come to
light until recently when it was reported to
us by two of the witnesses. They were Stewart
Sanborn of Ladysmith, B.C., an electrical
operator with the provincial power system, and
his cousin by marriage, Mrs. Dorothy Sanborn,
a Red Cross nurse now responsible for the
medical care of an Indian settlement in B.C.'s
Cariboo country. Another witness was Mrs.
Sanborn's late husband, Gordon.
“We were
living at Summerland on Lake Okanagan at the
time,” Sanborn said, “and Dorothy and Gordon
had just arrived from Vancouver to visit us
for a while. As it was her first trip to the
Okanagan since leaving her home in England, we
had set out on a motor trip for the day to see
some of the country.
“It was a
clear bright morning in September, and when we
reached the ferry slip to cross over to
Kelowna we realized we would have to wait a
bit because we could see the ferry still on
the other side. And then about half a mile
north of the ferry we noticed this other
thing.”
“I remember
pointing it out and saying what a beautiful
white boat it was,” Mrs. Sanborn added. “It
was moving around so gracefully, and though we
still couldn't make it out very well at that
distance, it seemed to have a smooth round
design we had never seen before.”
As the three
watched from their car in admiring curiosity,
they noticed the strange craft had started to
move across the lake in their direction. By
that time cars for the ferry were beginning to
line up behind them, so others were also in a
position to observe what happened next.
"We could
see the wash coming out from either side, yet
somehow the boat, as we thought it was, didn't
seem to be moving very fast," Sanborn said,
(Mrs. Sanborn compared it to a line from
Dante, "Hasten slowly") "As it came closer we
still thought it must be some unusual kind of
modern boat. It looked like a round hard hat
sitting on a platter. -
“But there
was something about that wash that looked
different and that started us wondering.”
Although
neither could explain precisely what the
difference was, possibly it was caused by the
circular shape of the craft moving lightly on
the surface, like a flatly thrown stone.
“Then
suddenly it really surprised us.” Sanborn
continued. “It was a few hundred yards away
when all at once the wake disappeared and we
realized the thing was in the air. It changed
direction to the right so that it came
straight toward the ferry dock and then it
stopped dead, less than 100 feet in front of
us and about 50 feet above the water."
Despite the
17 years that had since elapsed, Sanborn's
memory of that experience was obviously still
very much with him. He shook his head in
amazement as he spoke of it and seemed to live
the whole experience over again.
His cousin,
on the other hand, said she had not thought of
it for a long while, though she was
sufficiently impressed at the time to make a
note of it in her diary.
“We sat in
the car spellbound,” she said. “We couldn’t
believe what was happening and afterwards, for
some reason, we had no desire to talk about
it. It was as if we had been told not to.”
The
witnesses described the object as about 30
feet in diameter and having a haziness which
made the outline indistinct. Also it had a
translucent quality which gave them the
impression that anyone inside could have seen
them without being seen in return. (A
description of translucence often occurs in
sighting reports in which the UFO is
domeshaped, such as this one.)
“It stayed
there, absolutely silent, for a minute or so.”
Sanborn said, “and we definitely had a feeling
it was watching us. Then it started back
across the lake. By this time I was out of the
car to get a better look and I told the others
I wished I had a pair of binoculars. An
American tourist in the car behind heard me
and said, ‘Here take mine. I've seen enough.
He looked as if it had scared him.”
Through the
binoculars Sanborn watched the object reach
the opposite shore, just over two miles away,
in five or six minutes, giving it a leisurely
speed of about 20 m.p.h. Then it seemed to fly
parallel to a trail bordering the lake before
it shot up and disappeared.
After a
moment Sanborn handed the binoculars back to
their owner, and he remembers how they stared
silently at each other in disbelief.
“I guess I
looked just as shocked as he did,” Sanborn
said, “and it must have affected the others
the same way. We were a pretty quiet bunch
going across on the ferry.” Having seen and
been examined by a craft that may have come
from a world light years away, it was no
wonder.