Channel Islands UFO

Channel Islands UFO
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Date: April 23, 2007

Location: South coast of England

The case of Captain Ray Bowyer has to be one more the most talked about cases of a UFO sighting in recent years.

This UFO video is a very detailed investigation of the Ray Bowyer case and includes very detailed discussions with both Ray Bowyer himself and UFO experts.

Ray Bowyer was flying a passenger plane from the South coast of England to the Channel Islands.

The 45 minute flight was one that Ray Bowyer had done every working day for nearly 10 years. So, he wasn’t expecting to see anything out of the ordinary, but things turned out very differently.

About 10 miles South of the Isle Of Wight. It was a clear spring afternoon with a low layer of haze.

He was at about 4,000' when he spotted a bright yellow object below.

At first he thought it might be a greenhouse he was familiar with, but then realized that with the haze, he should not be able to see the greenhouse.

He grabbed his binoculars and noticed that it was actually a large shiny cigar shaped object with a dark band to the right of the middle.

At first he estimated the size of the object to be as large as a 737 fuselage, 140', and estimated the object to be at about 2,000' away.

As he got closer to the object he noticed there was a second identical one just beyond the first.

They didn’t appear to move, although later he learned they were moving slowly apart. He called the radar controller on the island of Jersey, to inquire about the objects, but they said they were not picking anything up.

However, after Bowyer asked them to check again a few minutes later they were able to pick up 2 objects South of the island of Alderny.

Seeing the object get larger as he flew closer, he felt relieved with this information as Alderney was his destination. Bowyer was not enthusiastic about flying close to these unknown objects with a cabin full of passengers.

As they approached Alderney the objects were visible to the naked eye. The Trislander aircraft does not have a separate cabin for the pilots, so Bowyer could hear passengers asking about what the objects were.

He decided not to address their concerns in fear of frightening them.

At this distance he could now see that the dark band on the objects was actually an area of sparkling blues and greens.

While descending into Alderney, they lost site of the objects once they dropped below the haze.

Bowyer figured that no one from the ground must have been able to see them due to the layer of haze. Once on the ground he asked the passengers what they had seen and they confirmed seeing the same objects he saw.

One of the passengers onboard, who had seen the object along with his wife, later told the press.

I saw an orange light. It was like an elongated oval.

Bowyer reported his sighting, as required, and took a break before his next flight. He was a little worried that the objects were still up there.

However, once he broke the haze on his next flight, the objects were gone.

Looking back in reference to the distances, Bowyer felt that the objects must have been a lot larger than he first estimated. In fact he feels they must have been a mile long. He is still at a loss to what it was that he saw.

He told the press soon after the sighting, I’m certainly not saying that it was something of another world. All I’m saying is that I have never seen anything like it before in all my years of flying.

Later Bowyer found out that there had been another pilot who had sighted the objects.

At the time Bower was discussing his sighting with the tower in Jersey, Captain Patrick Patterson, was flying from the Isle of Man into Jersey. He had heard the tower report that they had a radar hit of an unknown, so he took a look to see if he could see something himself.

In a report in the UK files, it states that Patterson reported seeing a cigar shaped craft yellow in color. He also estimated it at 2,000'. However, because of the haze he was only able to see one object for about a minute.

The official statements of the Royal Air Force are also in the files, they questioned the radar contacts.

They stated:

We believe the ATC radar at Jersey is secondary only and therefore unable to achieve primary radar contact, if the object was producing one.

The contact was reported stationary again making radar detection unlikely… They went on to wrap up their investigation with this final statement, …no further reports indicated that the object had a heading towards the UK.

Therefore, we concluded that there was no threat to the UK from this observation and will not be taking the investigation further.

In other words, they disregard the radar evidence, and since the objects didn’t seem to be in British airspace, it is not their problem.

Not everyone agrees that such a credible sighting of 2 very large objects near British airspace should not be of concern to their military.

Soon after the incident, Nick Pope, who once worked for the British Ministry of Defense UFO desk, had this to say:

While no witnesses are infallible, pilots are trained observers and less likely than most people to misidentify something mundane.

The MoD’s UFO case files contain several reports from civil and military pilots, some of which were correlated by radar. This is the sort of sighting that is taken seriously and should be investigated thoroughly.

While most UFOs can be explained as misidentifications of aircraft, weather balloons, satellites and suchlike, a small percentage are more difficult to explain.

This is one of the most intriguing sightings I’ve heard about in recent years.

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