The
Tokomaru Bay Illuminated Valley
By
Suzanne Hansen, UFOCUS NZ Network
Copyright © Suzanne Hansen 2007
Background.
The late 70s and early 80s heralded a time of intense UFO activity around
the city of Gisborne and in the East Coast region north of Gisborne, North
Is, NZ, and in particular, in the Waimata Valley and surrounding rural
areas. This quickly became known as the ‘Gisborne UFO Flap’,
although similar UFO ‘flaps’ were occurring worldwide at that
time, and the renowned NZ ‘Kaikoura Lights’ sightings occurred
in December 1978.
The Gisborne
UFO flap was characterized by sightings of humanoid figures in silver
suits (seen by ordinary farming folk); unusual shaped, matt or shiny metallic
craft; huge areas of blazing white or orange light covering whole valleys
or hillsides; strange aerial buzzing, cracking or exploding sounds (sometimes
emanating from visible craft); and reports of abduction experiences.
The local ‘Gisborne Herald’ newspaper was able to print a
veritable feast of newsworthy accounts over a period of months and a number
of amateur investigation groups sprang to life. The major time of
the flap occurred during 1978 and 79, and after that, reports began to
drop off into the early 80s. The Gisborne flap never attained the
worldwide notoriety of the Kaikoura lights, which had stunning film footage
and ATC radar confirmation in its favour. However the sheer numbers
(over 200 officially reported) of credible, everyday people in the Gisborne
and East Coast areas who saw other-worldly objects and events in the sky,
far outweighs any other UFO flap that has occurred in New Zealand.
It also ushered in the beginning of ‘classic’ alien abduction
experiences in NZ – the kind characterized by contact with ‘the
greys’ (although we do have reports of earlier contact experiences).
East
Coast Highway 35, North of Gisborne, March 1978
Taking
the long way home.
In 1978, my husband and I were living in a remote township on the East
Coast and had been to the city of Gisborne for the day shopping.
We had dinner in Gisborne, visited friends, and left at around 10.30pm
on our 2 ½ -3 hour journey home. High up in the hills between
Tologa Bay and Tokomaru Bay, there was an isolated part of the highway
where the farmhouses were few and far between. From this vantage
point, you could look out over a series of hills and valleys. We
reached this point of the highway at around 11.30 at night, just over
an hour out of Gisborne.
As we reached the high point of that stretch of road and proceeded over
the brow of the hill, we were absolutely shocked to suddenly see a massive area of bright, white light emanate up into the air from the paddocks
on the floor of a valley less than a kilometer away from us. It was as
if someone had flicked a switch as we came over the hill - darkness, then
sudden bright white light. The car stalled. At first we were
stunned; what on earth could be making a glow like that? The valley
floor itself was obscured from our vision by a couple of small hillocks
or rises. On either side of these, we could see the sides of the
valley lit up so clearly, that you could virtually see every tree on the
hillsides, and lit so brightly, that they looked a silvery-white colour
within this light. We had never, ever seen anything like it.
It was brighter than the brightest daylight – but in fact it was
a totally different kind of light altogether. The light was so intense,
and seemed to permeate everything so completely, that there appeared to
be no shadows and yet great detail was still distinguishable. 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.
Momentarily numb with disbelief, we stared at this strange, dense light
- frightening in its intensity, and awesome in its magnitude.
Having gathered
our wits somewhat, we began to panic like hell and yell at each other
about what it could be, but the high strangeness of the situation quickly
took over with surprise and confusion rapidly turning to shock and disbelief.
We had no logical explanation for this spectacle and were so over-awed
that we lowered our voices and began to speak in whispers. I was
scared by the fact that we were in a very vulnerable position in the middle
of nowhere with no phone to use if we needed help. I started panicking
in case the car wouldn’t start again, and I said to my husband that
we were definitely not going any further along the road towards
that light until whatever it was went away, or until we knew what it was.
I was even prepared to drive back to Gisborne. We looked back along
the road hoping that some late-night traffic would be coming along, but
none did. We were both very afraid and didn’t know what
to do. My husband tried to reassure me (and himself) by saying that
the light was probably caused by possum shooters with a spotlight!
I think his rational mind was frantically searching for a familiar explanation
or ‘box’ to slot the experience into so that he could deal
with the sight before him. Well having lived in the country most
of my life, I’d never seen a hunter’s spotlight that powerful,
that it could light a whole valley brighter than daylight in every direction,
and shine a couple of hundred feet up into the air as well!
Into
the light?
While we were sitting there looking and whispering – a relatively
short space of time - I began to notice that my arms and legs were starting
to feel numb and tingly – like when you get ‘pins and needles’.
My body suddenly felt very tired and ‘heavy’. The whole
atmosphere began to change and feel very strange – quiet, distant,
vague and otherworldly. Within seconds, I became aware of a deep
buzzing sound, and at the same time I felt slightly dizzy and faint.
As the buzzing rapidly increased, I began to try to tell my husband, wondering
if he felt the same, but I found myself unable to move my limbs and I
cannot remember ever finishing what I was trying to say.
My next recollection was of us both sitting very still in the car.
There was no light to be seen – everything was in darkness.
I felt drained. We both just sat staring out the front window of
the car - I don’t know how long for. Eventually I must have
collected my thoughts somewhat, because I can clearly recall taking out
my handkerchief and wiping the inside of the windscreen (why I don’t
know), but my husband seemed to be still and listless. I recall
saying to him, “The light’s gone.” He didn’t
move or reply so I said, “Shall we go now?” He mumbled,
“Okay”. He started the car up, and we set off on the
remainder of the journey. We must have had no energy or inclination
to talk, because I remember traveling in silence.
Reality
sets in.
The next day we both felt extraordinarily tired, and attributed it to
the fact that we had had a late night. I also experienced painfully
sensitive hearing for several days and everyday noises caused considerable
pain and reverberation in my eardrums. Any unexpected sounds frightened
me causing my heart to race, my armpits to prickle in a cold sweat and
my mouth to go quite dry (symptoms similar to Post Traumatic Stress),
and I suffered several nosebleeds over a period of days. I felt
startled all the time like a frightened rabbit but apart from feeling
tired, my husband did not seem to suffer these effects. Early the
next morning, I recalled the bright light in the valley and tried to talk
to my husband about what he thought it could have been. He was apprehensive
and did not want to discuss it at all, putting the incident in the ‘too-hard-basket’.
This attitude
actually left me feeling very alone in my need for an explanation.
For a long time after the incident, I replayed the drive from Gisborne
and the strange event over and over in my mind. I could recall the
spot where we were panicking one minute with the light in front of us,
and then the light had gone and we were calmly driving away. There
was clearly ‘something’ missing, the only indication being
the somewhat incongruous and disjointed flow of events. To make
matters worse, I had experienced something very similar on a rural road
near Hastings in 1975.
The more I thought
about all this, the more apprehensive I became. I stopped going
out fishing at night for quite some time. Car lights shining on
the windows of our house at night would send me running for cover, peering
fearfully through a chink in the curtains to see what it was, even though
my rational mind was telling me that it was only local farmers on their
way to the pub after a hard days work!
There are a
number of factors about this experience that stand out as being incongruous:
- We had several boxes of
groceries in the car with us. I can recall our brief conversation
in the car, and wiping the inside of the windscreen, yet I cannot remember
ever putting the groceries away!
- I have never been able to
remember many details of the journey home from that spot, or our arrival
at home, other than our brief conversation in the car and the fact that
we drove away calmly and in silence.
- I had no memory of the ‘light’
actually either going out, or leaving the area if it was in fact a landed
UFO (craft).
- I have no memory of any
other traffic - unusual for a main rural highway.
- The conversation that I
recall – “The light’s gone”, “Shall we
go now?”, “Okay,” seems very brief and understated
for 2 people who have just witnessed such an unusual and frightening
spectacle, and following this, we traveled the rest of the way home
in silence! There was no discussion, no peering down the valley
as we passed, no scanning of the sky. This was in stark contrast
to the pandemonium that broke loose in the car when we first saw the
light and the car stalled on the side of the road. Even the frightened
whispering to follow, was in stark contrast to a calm and peaceful journey
home.
- I could recall hearing the
strange, deep buzzing sound, and from this time on, I became very jittery
if I heard a sound that even vaguely resembled it.
- I could also recall having
felt dizzy and faint, with tingling, immovable limbs just prior to losing
memory/consciousness – not a normal occurrence on your way home
from shopping!
I thought about
this incident frequently for years and, along with other incidents, it
had a huge impact on my life. Searching for a possible, rational
explanation became important to me.
More
lights.
UFOCUS NZ
has other reports from people living in the Gisborne/East Coast at the time,
who experienced similar sightings of whole areas of land lit up by intense
bright light, such as the two described below:
- January 1978, two Waimata
Valley families watched a bright object that gave out a beam of light
that lit up an entire valley during a UFO sighting that lasted over
an hour from 9.30 pm. The UFO repeated the manoeuvre several times.
The witnesses had never seen light like it in their lives.
- April 1978, a teacher described
how she had got up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom.
Looking out her living room windows, she saw what she thought was the
most beautiful moonlight she had ever seen, shining down along the entire
line of hills behind the house; very bright, white light, illuminating
and defining every tree and rocky outcrop clearly. There was some
‘movement’ or swirling of the light, which she thought was
caused by wisps of cloud passing. She woke her husband to see this amazing
moonlit sight, but he told her there was no moon that night. She
returned to the living room, noticing that all was now very dark and
there was no moon. She could think of no explanation for what
she had witnessed.

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The
‘Sheep Truck’ Incident
East
Coast, North Island, New Zealand, August 1978.
By
Suzanne Hansen
Copyright © Suzanne Hansen 2007
In 1978, we
were living on the East Coast north of Gisborne. Our house was situated
on a road a couple of hundred meters back from the sea. Between
our house and the small settlement there were several large paddocks,
with hills beyond. On this occasion, following a normal evening
at home, we went to bed and fell asleep.
At some time
during the night, I suddenly awoke. When I say ‘suddenly’,
I mean instantly and completely awake and alert. There was no slow
drowsy awakening or half awake / half asleep state. All was quiet.
For a moment I stared into the darkness (there was no moon) and wondered
what had woken me up. I turned the lamp on briefly to see what the
time was – it was 1.25 am. I noticed a sudden slight vibration
of the objects on my dressing table next to the bed and the lid of my
china jewelry box began to tinkle and annoy me. I reached out and
straightened it. These familiar signs immediately explained to me
why I had woken up (or so I thought at that moment). Earthquakes
ranging from small shudders to prolonged and pronounced quakes were a
reasonably common occurrence in the East Coast area, and I expected that
one was about to occur.
Within seconds,
I noticed that objects right throughout the house were rattling, and I
was surprised that my husband was still sleeping through it. I waited,
half expecting to hear the rumbling noise that sometimes preceded a big,
rolling quake, and sure enough, there was a faint humming sound coming
from an easterly direction beyond the township. The vibrating noises
in the house increased in intensity, but I couldn’t understand why
objects were not actually falling off the shelves. It was creepy
and I tried to wake my husband, but without success. He continued
sleeping like a log despite the fact that I shook him and spoke to him
as well. This alone was very unusual and unsettled me.
I think that
the next few seconds will be imprinted on my mind forever. With
a rising sense of panic and confusion, I realized that this was not the
usual rumbling noise accompanying some earthquakes. The humming
sound had increased, or been over-ridden by an electronic-type, fast frequency,
penetrating buzz. The vibrations seemed to be running through everything
- the bed, the walls, the sheets and blankets, my arms, legs, my entire
body. It was as if every atom was dancing and humming in every object.
This was not an earthquake. Listening intently, I realized that
the buzzing noise was actually airborne and approaching our house
over the paddocks. I was very frightened and terrible thoughts of
an aircraft crashing into our house flashed through my mind as I searched
for an explanation.
The impulse
to leap out of bed and look out the window vanished with the shocking
realization that I could no longer move. Try as I may, I could not
move any part of my body except my eyes and my head. Nor could I
utter a sound. I wanted desperately to call out to my husband, but
was incapable of doing so. The ‘buzzing’ noise had increased
so much in intensity that it was unbearable and I thought my head would
burst.
Whatever ‘it’
was, it was now directly over the house, and making a noise now resembling
a metallic grinding sound. With it came the light – the brightest light imaginable glaring through the edges of the
curtains, and shining through every fibre of the fabric. I managed
to turn my head away from the window in the direction of the hall.
Great shafts of light were shining in all directions from the uncovered
windows in the laundry and kitchen. I was terrified at the thought
that there was a UFO out there (the only explanation that seemed feasible
in those seconds of time), but then, quite suddenly from that point, I
have absolutely no memory of what happened next.
At some stage
I recall lying in bed feeling a bit confused. I thought that I must
have just woken up. Slowly it dawned on me that there was light
outside and the chilling memory of that blinding light and the overpowering
noise came flooding back and I was immediately thrown into terror again.
I tried to turn over to wake my husband, who seemed to be in a deep sleep,
and (re)discovered that I could not move! The unusual thought sprang
into my mind that I ‘must not move or make any sound’. If I moved then ‘they’
would know (who were ‘they’?). ‘Their’ instruments would sense the movement (where did this knowledge originate
from?). I could see light (nowhere near as bright as before, and
there was now no noise) filtering through the curtains, so ‘they’ must still be there!
I do not know
how long I lay there in absolute anguish, waiting and fearing that ‘something’
might happen, but not really knowing what. The thought never crossed
my mind that ‘something’ may have already happened.
Finally I regained movement in my limbs. However, it was still several
minutes before I could summon enough courage to override the absolute
fear of moving my whole body. At last I threw myself at my husband,
shaking him and sobbing, until much to my relief, he finally woke up.
What must have sounded like a very garbled explanation poured out of me.
I was frightened by the light outside and I insisted he look out of all
the windows and go out onto the porch to scan above the house as well.
I was sure that there was a UFO (craft) either above our house, or landed
in the paddock next door. My husband commented later, that had he
not seen my face, he might have just laughed and thought it was all a
joke. However, when he saw my absolute terror, he thought he had
better sit up and take notice. I was shocked when he told me that
it was after daybreak (6.30-7.00 am), and that the sun was coming up.
I couldn’t believe it! Where had the hours of night gone since
I looked at my clock at 1.25 am?
Following my
first awakening at 1.25 am and the arrival of a blinding light and unbearable
buzzing noise, there was a huge blank in my memory, preceding a second
‘awakening’ with the same paralysis and fear, what must have
been some hours later. After these traumatic incidents I felt jittery
and shaken. I suffered extraordinary fatigue for several days, with
super sensitive hearing, and a severe nose bleed. My mouth dried
up and my hands perspired every time I thought about the experience (Post
Traumatic Stress?).
We discussed
what might have caused the incidents. My husband felt it must have
been an earthquake, but he could not account for the accompanying bright
light and noise. I was afraid it was a UFO (‘craft’),
but could not imagine why one would hover over our house!
My husband just didn’t want to even entertain that idea. After
talking to friends and locals throughout the day, and after listening
to radio and TV and not hearing any reference to an earthquake anywhere
around New Zealand, it became obvious that this was an incident for the
‘too hard box’. Possible logical explanations, ranging
from thunder over the hills to bad dreams, just simply did not match
up with the full details of what I had experienced.
In the end,
my husband came up with the idea I had heard a sheep truck rumble its way along the airstrip road near our house in the early hours
of the morning, and that was what had woken me. I pointed out that
sheep trucks are not airborne; do not shine brilliant lights through windows
on all sides of a house at once; do not make unbearably loud buzzing noises above houses; do not paralyze people etc. But he was adamant
and wanted an explanation that he could ‘deal with’.
There was little point in pursuing the discussion and I was left feeling
alone, afraid and helpless.
This experience
had a dramatic effect on my life. I felt sure that something had
happened to me during a time span that I could not recall. After
all, why would anyone just go back to sleep in the middle of a strange
and frightening experience? Some years later I read about ‘missing
time’ as applied by author/researcher Budd Hopkins to alien
abduction or close encounter contact experiences, and ‘the
Oz factor’, an apparent altered state of consciousness
sometimes accompanied by bodily paralysis and other symptoms often experienced
prior to an abduction or alien encounter, as described by author/researcher
Jenny Randle. These were the first explanations I had come across
that matched perfectly, what I had experienced.
Some researchers
and psychologists attempt to explain incidents of paralysis associated
with alien abduction experiences as a phenomenon called ‘sleep paralysis’.
This condition is characterized by temporary paralysis of the body shortly
after waking up, or less often, before falling asleep. Sleep paralysis
occurs when the brain awakes from an REM state into a normal awake state,
but the bodily paralysis is still occurring. The person is unable
to speak or move, and may experience auditory, tactile or visual hallucinations.
However, sleep
paralysis fails to account for the many abduction cases involving the
‘Oz factor’ and associated paralysis, which occur in cars,
out on the farm, in the daytime, etc. In the case of my experience,
sleep paralysis does not apply. I was fully awake within a split
second, but at that time, I was able to move – put on the lamp,
attempt to wake my husband etc. I was not initially afraid, so the
onset of paralysis was not caused by shock from a trauma. The paralysis
began as the penetrating buzzing noise increased in intensity, and I believe
that this was an EM frequency of some kind emitted by technology on a
craft, that affects the subject physiologically and serves to render the
intended subject incapable of resistance; unconscious or in an altered
state of consciousness that does not allow recall of following events.
It may involve technology specific to intended ‘targets’.
Other people in close proximity to the intended subject are often ‘switched
off’ by similar technology or effects. Abductees/experiencers
often report that people accompanying them either do not wake, or are
rendered immobile and unaware just prior to the abduction occurring.
The sound or frequency may not be audible to others at a distance from
the ‘target’.
In 1978, this
kind of technology would have been unheard of other than in sci-fi movies.
However in 2001/02, researchers developed technology that can project
a beam of sound so narrow that only one person can hear it. Nicknamed
‘ventriloquist’ technology, inventors say it could add a new
dimension to music and entertainment, with endless applications.
The military is investigating using it to confuse opponents or even to
incapacitate by inflicting pain (audibly). Such ‘specific
target technology’ with music applications called ‘Audio
Spotlight’ was developed by Joseph Pompei, a PhD student at
the MIT Media Lab, while working at the audio company Bose, USA.
Over the years,
my research has led me to interview a number of witnesses who also experienced
sightings and/or abduction incidents in the Gisborne area at the time
of the UFO ‘flap’. Two witnesses described an occasion
when they were in the Waimata Valley (where a number of unusual UFO and
humanoid sightings took place) at night. The end of this valley
is only a few kilometres as the crow flies, from where I was living at
the time. They described hearing a humming sound approaching.
At first they thought it was a sheep truck making its way up
the winding valley road, but they wondered why they were not hearing the
familiar and distinct sound of the many gear changes that a sheep truck
would normally make as it rounded the corners. They could see a
glow of light approaching behind the low hillocks which they assumed to
be the headlights (but all the while thinking that the light was unusually
bright and widespread). To their shock, a metallic cylindrical-shaped
craft surrounded by an intense glow, emerged slowly from behind a hill
and continued down the valley until out of sight behind hill ridges.
The light emitted around the craft lit up a considerable area. It
passed them by low and in close proximity (several hundred metres), causing
the hair on their bodies to stand on end (electro-magnetic field?).
This sighting was corroborated by a member of a farming family, who I
have also interviewed, who lived on the opposite side of the valley.
He saw the craft from his bedroom window on the same night, same time.
Given this corroborative
evidence of similar details, it is entirely possible that the same or
similar craft in that area caused my frightening experience. It
also stands to reason that my husband, although in a ‘switched off’
state, subconsciously remembered the sound of a craft approaching, and
the accompanying buzzing sounds, and therefore his insistence that it
was a ‘sheep truck’ is understandable.
I cannot offer
any logical explanation for my experience other than that it was caused
by an airborne craft of unknown origin and technology – a UFO.
Reference:
1. Garner, John, ‘Point-‘n’-shoot Sound Makes
Waves’, Feb 21, 2002.
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