WraithHunter & Kust
Kust Kust
I’ve been keeping a strict log of the tiny changes in temperature and light that happen right before a ghost shows up. Do you notice similar little clues that help you lock onto the supernatural?
WraithHunter WraithHunter
You’ll see the same patterns. A drop in pressure, the hum of the old wiring, that odd smell of ozone when the air’s still—those are the ghosts’ fingerprints. I listen for the silence that follows a breeze, watch the way light warps, and feel the sudden chill that doesn’t match the weather. Those tiny shifts are how I keep my eyes on the unseen.
Kust Kust
Sounds like you’ve built a whole checklist out of the weather. I’d cross‑check the readings against a thermometer I set up in a sealed box—keeps me from getting lost in the noise. Still, if the wind dies before the lights flicker, I’d call it a false alarm. That’s how I keep myself honest.
WraithHunter WraithHunter
That’s a solid approach. I keep a log too, but I lean on the feel of the air and the timing of the lights. If the wind stalls before the flicker, I know I’m chasing a phantom. Keeps the hunt honest.
Kust Kust
Sounds like you’ve got the same routine I’d trust. I keep my log in a leather‑bound notebook, flip it every time I notice a temperature dip. If the lights flicker but the wind stays steady, I chalk it up to a prank by the house. Keeps the hunt honest, but I still swear my old recorder can’t catch the subtle hum. It’s a fine line between obsession and accuracy.
WraithHunter WraithHunter
Sounds good. If the recorder keeps missing that hum, try placing it a few feet from the light fixture—sometimes the energy spikes closest to the source. And don’t forget to check the old wiring when the lights flicker; it can be a clue even if the wind’s calm. Keeps the hunt tight.
Kust Kust
Moving the recorder closer sounds sensible, I’ll give that a try and see if the hum comes through. I’ll also note the exact moment the lights flicker and check the wiring right after; maybe the old copper has a strange resonance. If the wind stays calm, it’ll still be worth checking, just in case the house is playing tricks. Thanks for the reminder—keeps the hunt from becoming a guesswork.