Anonymous wrote:There is a scientific reason why some places feel creepy.
https://higgs.ph.ed.ac.uk/outreach/higgshalloween-2021/haunted-frequency
Anonymous wrote:Jerome, AZ. I went by myself during a slow time and it happened to be overcast and gloomy. It didn't help that I was staying in a hotel supposedly haunted by the ghosts of those killed in the mines.
Anonymous wrote:Border between Arizona and Utah - Colorado City and other nearby desert towns. You can visibly see the polygamist homes with their multiple porches and families out & about. It’s weird AF. FLDS still has a strong hold of that area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else feel like the orange and yellow signs in Adirondack Park contribute to the weird feeling there? It's a weird combo of colors. Elsewhere in NY the signs are green and white like in most other states.
The Adirondacks are so odd. I LOVE the nature and terrain there. But 90% of the towns are sad and spooky. And in a state that is one of the wealthiest places on the planet.
I think I posted way back in this thread about being creeped out by Lake Placid but I don’t want to scroll back to confirm. Anyway, 100% agree about the adirondacks. I know they’re supposed to be beautiful but just visualizing the area gives me a weird shivery feeling. I feel similarly about a part of northern New Hampshire.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else feel like the orange and yellow signs in Adirondack Park contribute to the weird feeling there? It's a weird combo of colors. Elsewhere in NY the signs are green and white like in most other states.
The Adirondacks are so odd. I LOVE the nature and terrain there. But 90% of the towns are sad and spooky. And in a state that is one of the wealthiest places on the planet.
Anonymous wrote:A whole section of Baltimore is so run down and decrepit that it looks like a war zone. Drove through it once and couldn't get out of there fast enough.