Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I have got some ghost stories for you.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
I'm hearing these voices, but there's nobody else around.
Speaker 3 (00:06):
I don't like the skeleton man. He's so mean to me,
and he bites.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Me at night. And suddenly this stool, completely of his
own volition, slid good to maybe three feet out into
the center of the bar. He walks towards the ocean
and he gets through the water.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
He just disappeared.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
I feel someone run their hand under my but cheek,
just sliding under my butt.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
So that is my ghost story. Hi, and welcome to Honidas,
a podcast of real ghost stories told by real people.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
We are your hosts. I'm Julie Fuss and I'm Rebecca
Black and coming up, we have so many haunted houses. Yay,
so many. Also the story of Miss Boo is Boo
and will introduce you to the Alma night Walker of
Nebraska who apparently makes a lovely tea.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
How nice. This episode of hontid af is brought to
you by night of a living pood that will never
get old. It will to us, to us, and welcome
to everybody else. Do we apologize because you got another
month of it coming. Sorry. That is at Texas Live
October first, we're gonna launch into the Halloween season with
a live episode, So put on your costume or not
(01:18):
and get ready to have some scary fun.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
And you can get tickets at hontidaf dot com or
at Texas Live dot com. That's Texas Hyphenlive dot com.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
And if you want to share a story with us
while we're taping out there, please let us know in advance. Also,
this is a twenty one.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
And up party, so important information.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Yeah, you can't bring your kids, sorry, because we do
have a lot of littles who listen with you guys,
and we'd love to plan a party with them sometime,
just not this one. Yeah. That's the Night of the
Living podcast October first with Haunted AF and Texas Live.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
Before we get to the stories, we do need to
thank Princess Gwendolen Love you lady. Should it be a bow? Hello?
Thank you for We're so nerdy. Thank you for becoming
an annual patron. She now has access to five years
over five years of exclusive content, plus she gets the
(02:09):
episodes early and Adfrey, one of our hunted houses this week,
has so many stories that we had to share some
of them in the pregame. Which is only available to patrons.
You can become one just five dollars a month. That's
patreon dot com slash haunted af.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
Okay, damn it. Okay, y'all, you're just gonna be hearing
my cat. She wants to say something now, so JoJo's
gonna get on the microphone. She's gonna come stomping all
through here.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
Okay, she presses a button on the roadcast.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
I hope she does it. Okay. Jumping into the stories,
this one comes from Pete, who says, hey, ladies, I
discovered your podcast pretty recently and it been binging on
it while doing the dishes. Great stuff, I love it.
I have two stories for you. First of all, my
mom died back in twenty eighteen. My brother and I
lived hundreds of miles away from her, and while we
were able to visit just before she passed, we couldn't
(02:56):
be there for her final night. My stepdad, however, told
us about it a few days late. Mom was a
religious at all, and she scoffed at the idea of
an afterlife, but sitting up in her hospital bed, she
asked my stepdad to move his jacket, which he had
tossed into a chair nearby. He thought that was an
odd request, but moved it. Then she asked the nurse
to bring her a wheelchair, and my stepdad half jokingly
(03:16):
asked where she was planning on going. She pointed to
the corner of the room and said, it's for them.
There was, of course, nobody there. A little later, after
visiting hours were ending and my dad was getting ready
to leave, he told her good night and said he
would see her first thing in the morning. But she
very matter of factly said, oh, I won't be here
in the morning.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Again half jokingly he asked where she was planning on going,
and again she pointed to the same empty corner and
said with them. She passed later that night.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
Ah, I know, mom.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
My second story is a little more uplifting. When my
wife became pregnant, I would go downstairs in the morning
to make her breakfast.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
You're a key, what a nice hub.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
It's really nice. One morning, early on I noticed two
blue scrub jays perched on our back fence. We had
a few regular birds in our yard, but I had
never seen these two before. Throughout my wife's entire pregnancy,
every single day, one or both of these little blue
scrub jays were in our yard. They would be there
in the morning watching me make breakfast, and throughout the
day they would be hanging out on our fence or
(04:14):
hopping around in the bushes. Finally, after thirty six weeks,
my wife gave birth to two beautiful twin boys. Since
that day, we've had all the usual birds in our yard,
but the two blue scrub jays never appeared again, and
I've never seen another one. I still jokingly asked my
boys if they remember when they were birds, and they
just roll their eyes. Keep up the awesome podcast, Pete.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
They were checking out the scene to see if that's
where they wanted to end up.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Yeah, They're like, I don't know, I'm not sure.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
I remember when I was pregnant.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
With Lucy, we had a Bob White that would walk
around our neighborhood literally just walking around by himself, and
they do that really cool little like call yeah you know.
In fact, all the neighbors would walk around the neighborhood
and call it because then he'd come out to you,
which is really sad because he probably thought he was
gonna get late, right, I know, But I remember I
was pregnant with Lucy and I one day I saw
him walking into the woods and I was like.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
Bob, don't go in there, You're gonna get eaten.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
Yeah, Bob, it's bad.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
And I didn't see him again after that, but then
Lucy was born. Maybe maybe Lucy's Bomb. Maybe Lucy's Bob.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
I love that. I actually have a bird story too.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
Tell us.
Speaker 3 (05:15):
I have been seeing cardinals all over the place.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
And you know what that means.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
They say it's either a pass on loved one or
relative and or something good is supposed to happen to you. Oh,
I've seen so many cardinals and they come in twos.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
That's one.
Speaker 3 (05:28):
Isn't that crazy? I took a lot. I'll show you
my pictures later, I can. Yeah, wait, too many pictures
of the cardinals.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Okay, see when you see them, do you talk to them?
Speaker 3 (05:35):
Oh? Yeah all the time. Okay, good, I'll talk to
any animal we need it, whirls, they're all my friends.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Okay, we'll post some of the cardinal photos too.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
All right. Our next story comes from Aaron. It's always
a joy to see your podcast episodes pop up in
my playlist. In honor of the upcoming Spooky season. I'm
drinking some local tea while listening to you girls.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
Thank you.
Speaker 3 (05:53):
The tea is called the Alma night Walker. It's named
after a specter scene tormenting men in Alma, Nebrass So
in honor of Aaron, we looked up the Alma night
Walker so that we could share the story. The first
report start in March of nineteen oh two, when the
people of Alma, Nebraska, along the banks of the Republican River,
reported that an unusual specter was seen flitting about the streets.
(06:16):
I love flitting slitter far from the lady in white
we usually hear about. This woman was clad head to
toe in black garments, spooky with a veil concealing her face.
She was silent and quick as well, seeming to disappear
into thin air. She made her presence known to several
of Alma's most upstanding citizens, which gave the stories a
(06:38):
weight they might not otherwise have. One of the first
to see it was the local newspaper editor, perfect Horace
Stanley Weatherall, okay, weatherell.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
All of these names just sound like old guys, perfection.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
Are we in a film noir movie? Maybe?
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Yeah, it feels like an episode of drunk history.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
Yes, like so. Working late one night at the new
newspaper office, he looked up to see the figure glide
past his window. Then State Congressman Ashton Shallenberger listen to
the names, saw her while in town for business, and
the founder of the Bank of Almah claims she breathed
past him on the street, then disappeared right in front.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
Of him night.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
Then Frank Griggsby, the local carriage dealer, and his son Bruce,
chased the ghost through the streets one night and watched
as she floated through the body of a horse. That's
pretty freaking creepy. One of the early scoffers of the
night walker tail was Wiley Schwartz, the deacon of the
Methodist Church. Of course, it's a churchman. That's like, now,
(07:38):
we don't believe in this. He ran into her while
leaving a prayer meeting one night. Local thought it could
be two things. One was that a local man was
being haunted by the ghost of his late first wife
because he promised not to remarry but he did anyway.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
Yeah, that's tipical man, that's probably it.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
Another story was that she was the ghost of a
local woman who died after a long, painful illness. Oh
but March gave way to April and reported the Almah
night Walker came to an end.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Oh wow, so it only lasted like a month. Yeah,
I think it was just a person. I think it was.
Speaker 3 (08:08):
A woman like I'm bored, yes, I need something to
do right. Or maybe it was like the new wife
of that guy. Yeah, yeah, just kind of messing with
him and running and we probably knew the story. And
I was like, I got you.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Love it, thanks for sending that in eron, Oh get ready, Rebecca.
Speaker 4 (08:26):
So awake in the morning in a seema cat and
I realized he dad a few months back, and I
turned to my dead ghost dog and say, what the fuck?
Speaker 1 (08:39):
And Nasi, Hey a damn pedal the wee.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
It's a classic.
Speaker 3 (08:54):
We need fighters for this, Yeah, we really do.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
We haven't heard that one in a while.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
That was a good one.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
Just a reminder. We still love getting your dead pet songs,
your weird shit, any of those. And they do not
need to be highly produced. No, we love all back.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
The lower quality sometimes is the better.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Yeah, we let not say that one's lower quality. Yes,
I'm just saying all right. So this is from Susan.
In nineteen eighty five, our family moved into an old
farmhouse about a half mile off the road. There was
a pasture in hills and a pond right outside the
back door. On our first day, a cat showed up,
pretty little Calico. She was just there in the house
we moved in. She would come in and go out
(09:30):
of the house as she pleased, and we never figured
out how she did it. In twenty three years, I
never found her entry points, so we called her Miss Boo.
She was a sweetheart, a mouse and a snake killer,
and she had her own cushion to sleep on. In fact,
Miss Boo was the first cat my mom ever allowed
in the house. It sounds like she didn't really have
a choice. One day in the summer of nineteen ninety seven,
she didn't come to eat. We didn't see her for
(09:52):
three more days, and when she appeared at the back
door she was yowling. Her front Paul was massively swollen
a snake bite probably, and Miss Boo was gone before
we could get her.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
To the ball.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Oh so sad, we missed her so much. But not
long after we began to see a shadow, small and
low in the kitchen near the spot where her bowl
had been. We would feel fur against our legs, and
something the weight of a cat would jump onto our laps.
We could feel it jump into bed and then turn
around before needing the blanket.
Speaker 3 (10:21):
Love.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
Sometimes you could even feel her per I guess she
just wasn't ready to leave us.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
No.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
After I got married, my parents moved out. That was
about thirty years ago. I feel sad thinking that she
might still be there alone and wondering why her people left.
I will send you some other things that happened at
that farmhouse. It was very active, as were the woods.
And again that is from Susan. We need a picture
of miss Buso because that is so so precious. And
(10:47):
you know, I like to think if Miss Boo was
able to get in and out, she's probably out in
the woods too. And if the woods are haunted, she's
got plenty of buddy.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Absolutely she does, all right. This next one comes from Darryl,
longtime listener, second time emailer. We will share his old
email in just a minute. In May of twenty twenty four,
I had a good friend of over thirty five years die.
She passed in hospice in her home where she had
lived since the early eighties. I'm the personal representative of
her estate, so for several months I'd spend about half
(11:15):
a day once a week at her home cleaning out.
I'd been doing that for a number of weeks, always alone,
without feeling any presence or having anything weird happen. Then
one day I was coming down the stairs and glimpsed
movement nearby on the main floor. No distinctive shape, more
of a shadow moving swiftly. On a later visit, I
needed to move a clothes rack upstairs. When I started
(11:38):
up the stairs with it, the rack was too tall
and hitting the ceiling, so I had to disassemble it.
I removed the top half and started up the stairs
again with the bottom half. I was looking up at
the stairs and hadn't gone more than a few steps
when I felt the back end being pulled backwards. To
be clear, I was alone in the house and it
was not hitting anything. Ever been moving something and had
(11:58):
a wise ass friend start pulling it on the in
the opposite direction. Yep, yeah, I feel like I've done
that to you.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
I feel like you had yet.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Yeah, definitely done that in a scary place. That's what
immediately came to my mind. My friend believed that death
was not the end and that something came next. I
figured this was her way of letting me know she
was right, I said out loud, message received, then thanked
you for letting me know, and that she should go
on to whatever's next. Nothing has happened since. There is
(12:27):
an interesting PostScript to this. This week, I had dinner
with some of my high school friends. One of them
is a social worker who spent most of his career
counseling the terminally ill and currently works as a grief counselor.
He was sitting next to me when I recounted my story,
and I could see a smile growing on his face.
One of my classmates asked if he'd heard stories like
mine in his work, and he said sure. Then he
(12:48):
said that in group sessions he'll ask everyone to raise
their hands if they've experienced anything unusual in the days
after their relatives passing. He said, the hands come up slowly,
but most of the attendees do raise anyway, that's my story,
darryl Okay.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Daryl said that he had written to us before and
it was this story. He said. This happened in early
March of two thousand and five, when the University of
Illinois men's basketball team was undefeated with one regular season
game to play. I have no connection to UI, not
an alumni, not a fan of UI or even college basketball.
(13:22):
But I woke up on Sunday, March fifth after a
dream about the Illinois team losing. I had heard stories
of dreams coming true, and this one was so vivid
and specific that I felt the need to document it
just in case. So that morning, I logged into my
work email and sent the attached to email to a
coworker who I knew was following the team. That very night,
the Illinois team lost after a three point shot, exactly
(13:46):
how I had dreamed. The only other time I remember
having a dream that came true was the OJ verdict
coming back Yeah as not guilty the first day at deliberations.
That one wasn't as vivid, and it may have just
been a good guess, but clearly nothing as details as
the Illinois loss. And again that is from Darryl. I
love that story.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
I'd totally forgotten about it, Spreen. I'll tell you what
it needs to be in the world dream for you know,
all the sea grass.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Line beyond the pillow.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
You don't hear Scott anymore?
Speaker 3 (14:24):
Right, all right, we actually have two dreams and they
come from Audra. Hey, ladies love the podcast, So happy
you two are, Bay you thank you very much. So
I have a couple beyond the Pillows stories for you.
I'll start with the longer one. I'm on a beach
with my husband at sunset. He has his arms around me,
staring out at the water. I'm thinking, Wow, what a
perfect way to end the day. When my husband suddenly says, well,
(14:47):
gotta go, I have to catch my train and takes
off running.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
Dude.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
I run after him and make it to the station
just in time to see him on the train, which
weirdly looks like the Mickey and Minnies Runaway wre away
righte at Disneyland. That's hilarious. Yeah, I yell at him,
what the hell are you doing? He looks at me
like he just noticed that I'm not beside him in
trucks like oops, and the train leaves. Then I realize
I'm in a dream, and I wake myself up. I
(15:14):
know you woke up pissed off at him. I know
had to have the whole day you were mad. Yeah,
that would be a.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Tough one to shake, So dreamy Bod says, this dream
speaks volumes about your relationship expectations and a potential fear
of emotional detachment. Your subconscious might be sounding the alarm
and telling you something feels fundamentally off kilter. It's a
message about boundaries, unmet needs, and the potential for feeling
emotionally abandoned. It's possible you're feeling unseen or that your
(15:42):
emotional needs aren't being met with the same level of
consideration as his own commitments or desires.
Speaker 3 (15:48):
You know what I am hearing from this What put
on your like trench coat and hat and follow this
man around all day?
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Well, it could just be he's like, maybe being self
centered ours.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
They could absolutely be that. But I don't like what
dream Abot had to say. I think he is implying
there are other things a play.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Yeah, wait until you get into the second dream.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
Awesome, Okay, the second dream is short. In this dream,
I'm laying in my bed looking at the ceiling, trying
to go.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
To sleep, and this is Audre again.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
Yes. Then a version of me leans over the real
me and yells, wake up. Someone is in the house.
I jolted awake with my heart beating a mile a minute,
then checked the house just in case, but everything was normal.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
Okay, Audre, don't get mad at I don't like that
one either. I know now I'm like worried that you're
gonna get mad because Audre, this isn't us AI. It's
Ai dreaming. We're not just saying this not us so,
Dreamybot says, this other you is a classic manifestation of
the shadow self, the part of your psyche containing repressed desires, fears,
and instincts. The act of yelling is crucial. It suggests
(16:50):
that whatever this shadow self is trying to alert you
to is something you've been actively trying to suppress. Someone
is in the house isn't necessarily about a literal intruder.
It's symbolic of an unwelcome element infiltrating your sense of
safety and boundaries. The fact that it's you delivering the
warning is significant because your subconscious is attempting to bypass
(17:11):
your conscious defenses.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
It's not good.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
This dream is a direct call to attention, urging you
to investigate what feels unsafe or compromised in your life.
Sorry about that, Audrey, I told you, Yeah, I know,
sorry about that.
Speaker 3 (17:28):
Do you really you really think it's that bad? Though?
I don't know, I do think that, yes, your subconscious
will tell you, like if there's some sort of red
flag brewing, that doesn't mean anything's happened yet.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
Necessarily, I'm going to choose to believe that you've got
like an ant problem in your house and you keep
bugging your husband about it and he's ignoring you.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
That could very well be it. So let you think that.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
Let's go with that.
Speaker 3 (17:50):
But all right, So this next one comes from Alexia. Hello, ladies,
I have two Glitch of the Matrix stories for you
from a long time ago when I was living in
Marin County, California. First one, a former boyfriend and I
would take a drive every Sunday evening along the back
roads of Marin and Sonoma Counties. We called this our
Frog's Day Drive. It was a joke that there was
(18:11):
this hole in time between Sunday and Monday, and if
you found Frog's Day, you wouldn't have to work anymore.
I like it. Where do we find Frog's Day?
Speaker 2 (18:19):
I need Frog's Day.
Speaker 3 (18:20):
Same. So about forty five minutes into the drive, we
saw a sign that said seventeen miles to Petaluma. We
decided we should head back home and took the next rite.
After a couple of miles, we came upon another sign
that said seventeen miles to Petaluma. Thinking the road must
have veered north, we turned right again another sign seventeen
miles to Pedaloma. We stayed on this one, figuring we
(18:43):
must be lost, so we'd head to Petaluma and get
on the one oh one South from there to go home.
This road did not go to Petaluma. It took us
to the one on one South about two exits from home,
which was about seventeen miles from Petaluma. What the actual
hell that would have driven me crazy? Yeah. Second story,
(19:05):
we were driving north along the west side of San
Pablo Bay around sunset. I was in the passenger seat
and looking out at the water. I noticed the sun
setting in the east and asked my former boyfriend if
he saw it too. He said, yeah, the sun is setting.
Then I asked what direction we were driving and he said, oh,
the sun shouldn't be there. Hope you enjoyed these. I'll
send my dead pet of the Week story soon. Much love,
(19:28):
Alexia so.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
I guess if it rises in the east and sets
in the west. Right, But it looked like.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
They were headed east and it was setting in the east.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
So what happened to Alexia.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
Like the glitch and the matrix happened, it was setting
on the wrong side.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
That's really okay, that's wild. That is wild, all right.
So this story is from Candy, and she had so
many experiences that we had to put most of them
in the pregame. Candy says, I have a very old
house from eighteen eighty in the Old Highland's part of Denver, Colorado.
My grandpa came to stay with us for a while while,
and when he arrived, he looked all over the house.
(20:03):
Then he walked outside and looked across the street where
there used to be a fun part cool. Then he
told us that he had stayed.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
Here when he came back from the war, along with
several other veterans. It's a pretty big coincidence that we
know the house had been many things in the past,
including a tuberculosis hospital. So we have a ghost that
we always thought was one of the TB patients. But
Grandpa said he knew of at least one soldier who
had died in the house as well, so maybe it's him.
(20:29):
We named the ghost Owl, and we all saw him.
My brother Sam drew a picture of him once and
it was exactly who I had seen. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
So my brother lived with us one summer and would
find his things thrown all over his room every morning.
One day, my husband was working in our basement and
had a big door in the floor open so he
could go underground. I'm assuming she means like a root seller,
or maybe like a storm shelter. Well, my daughter was
about two years old by then and was standing with me.
I was trying to keep her away from the hole
when I lost my balance and fell backwards into it.
(21:00):
Something literally caught me and threw me back out. I
was so shocked. I started crying, and my little girl,
who barely spoke at all at that point, said, Mama,
your angel did that.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
I have no idea if it was an angel or
a ghost, but it was an incredible experience. I finally
saged in salted and asked out, please just be quiet,
and he has, but sometimes I'll still ask him to
do a little something to show me that he's still there,
and he will like there's a chord that hangs from
the ceiling light in our back room and the chain
will start going in circles on its own. I suppose
(21:32):
that would be a good thing to try to get
on video. Yes that's from Candy. Yes, Candy, absolutely.
Speaker 3 (21:37):
Get that on video. I just love that She's like
every now and then just say hi, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:42):
I just want to check in, make sure you're cool
as she eat you helping me in the hole? All right.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
One more time, we got to say thanks to our sponsor,
Texas Live, who is hosting our Nights of the Living
podcast that is in Arlington on October first. Costumes aren't required,
but it would be a really good chance to test
drive the one you're planning on or maybe reuse the
one from last year. And we're going to table live
episode while we're out there so you can see how
we make this sousage, so to speak. Get those tickets
(22:09):
now at Haunted af dot com.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
Before we go, we had to say thanks to Kit
and Rory from This Paranormal They are wonderful. Yeah, they
met up with us in Dallas during their North American
tour and they're just the cutest things. But I really
think there were probably a couple of times during our
outing that they thought we were going to kill them.
Speaker 3 (22:28):
Yeah, and I there's one in particular where you drove
into like an abandoned place. Yeah. I was trying to
I don't We're trying to get on a highway somewhere
and ended up nowhere.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
I literally exited into a construction zone.
Speaker 3 (22:42):
Yeah, like nothing.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
I mean, driving in Dallas is kind of bonkers anyhow.
But when you're like talking and you got a carloa
to people and we're all just like and I got
to stay with those guys, it was exactly like you'd
hope it would be, like they're just that nice and
when you're with them, you're like, we know each other forever, right,
But I did. I drove straight off the highway to
a construction zone, and I was like, I don't know
what's happening. But then a little bit later, we were
(23:05):
driving up seventy five. We went to so many places. Guys,
We're driving up seventy five, and a pigeon flew directly
into an eighteen wheeler.
Speaker 3 (23:12):
About that, Yeah, and it literally offed itself in front
of us, right in front of us, flew into the
eighteen wheelers smashed in its own like it was very bad,
but then starts flying towards our car and there's like
feathers going everywhere, and fortunately it didn't hit the car,
but it landed right in front of us, and I
think you and Kit were like screaming in.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
The backseat, and you and Rory were screaming in the
backseat like what the he oh was that?
Speaker 3 (23:35):
Because it was just feather we couldn't see anything, but
the aftermath you all got to see the entire show.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
Yes, kid and I were like what And I told him,
I'm like, I feel like you're a bad Omen or
we're the.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
Bad Omen totally because I.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Had cut my eyeball before I even met. It was
just a crazy day, but we had so so much
fun with them. I think they're done with their tour,
but again, go check them out. That's this paranoid don't forget.
We need all of your stories. Go spitfoot, UFOs, glitches
and the Matrix, dead pets, all the freaky dreams that
you want help with. Send them to Haunteday podcast at
(24:10):
gmail dot com so we can use it on the
next hondaf.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
And don't forget to subscribe to honted aff on Apple podcasts,
spotify' s Digter, wherever you listen to podcasts. Please follow
us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and of course TikTok.
You can even contact us directly through our website, hauntdaf
dot com.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Got to say thanks to Andrew Mamaliga and Travis Vance
for the Hontidaef theme song, and to on Air Media
for titles and technical support. Also big thanks to all
of the Hontiday Patreon supporters.
Speaker 3 (24:37):
Most of all, we have to thank you for listening
and for sharing your stories with us. By the way, Julie,
if I die first, I'm coming back to haunt you.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
All, come back to haunt you. To Rebecca