Friday, June 5, 2026
The Fascinating Story of The Tilma of Guadalupe
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
The Mysterious Sounds that Echo through Goshen Pass
Friday, May 29, 2026
Circles in the Fields: Hoax, Phenomenon, or Something Else?
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| Crop Circles appear in all shapes and sizes, some more intricate than others. Ufologist Nick Pope suggested that the messages could be interpreted through mathematics. |
By the late 20th century, the phenomenon had transformed into something far more elaborate. The quiet countryside around Wiltshire became ground zero for increasingly complex formations. Not just circles anymore, but massive geometric symbols stretching hundreds of feet across fields near ancient landmarks like Stonehenge and Avebury. Some resembled mathematical equations. Others looked like spirals, insects, solar systems, or symbols no one could fully interpret.
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| Crop Circles appear in all shapes and sizes, some more intricate than others This crop circle from near Chilbolton Observatory was created in binary data which was eventually decoded. . |
What made the formation especially eerie was that the circular “disc” was eventually interpreted as a coded message. Researchers discovered the design contained binary data arranged in a spiral sequence of 1s and 0s, structured in a way remarkably similar to how information is stored on a compact disc. When the binary code was converted into ASCII text, it revealed a chilling statement:
“Beware the bearers of FALSE gifts and their BROKEN PROMISES. Much PAIN but still time. BELIEVE. There is GOOD out there. We oppose DECEPTION. Conduit CLOSING.”
Whether it was an elaborate human creation or something far stranger, the Crabwood formation remains one of the most mysterious and technically sophisticated crop circles ever discovered.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
The Horrifying Lore of the Wendigo of North America
Friday, May 22, 2026
300,000 Years Got Us Here - by Guest Writer Zane Worley
By Zane Worley and Ronny Nixon
The Celestial Orbs, Sentient Abominations, and P.U.R.S.U.E Details
| Still from a 1 minute, 46 second video, captured by a U.S military infrared sensor of an unexplained, star-shaped entity flying in the Middle East. (File Name DOW-UAP-PR38) |
It was a good week for the ghost hunters, drum circle gurus, whack-jobs, tinfoil hat wearing, and mushroom-tripping conspirators that have timely proved the rest of us wrong once again.
Perhaps there isn't always a conscientious reason behind the fallacies strung by waves of anti-believers in regard to realms of nature and space that we don't quite understand yet. (And maybe we never will.) Nothing is impossible, and only God knows what is sitting in a box at some undisclosed government warehouse.
Some say the Loch Ness monster is in there, or maybe an inter-dimensional, time traveling Bigfoot. Hell, maybe their bodies lie cryogenically frozen, among the 3-fingered sentient green men.
Yes... those green men have always been important, especially on this planet we call home.
The kicker is: what if they aren't verdant, or tiny mainstream monsters?
And why here anyway?
As far back as 1561 in Nuremberg, an aerial battle supposedly emerged at dawn between orbs, crosses, and cylinder shaped space vehicles that appeared to spawn out of the sun. Whatever these machines may have been, the stories of their existence hunting and observing us from afar (and up close), have been circulating long before Spielberg made movies about them.
Then, just five years later in Basel, Switzerland a similar event happened as people observed "sky miracles" - divine red and black balls battling against each other, intensely shooting smaller orbs above the city.
Maybe these galactic visitors serve as protectors - a part of a galactic civilization watch program. But who knows?
On a global scale, we may not be much different from the Sentinelese - a primitive, pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherer society observed from afar, isolated not by geography alone, but by a universally respected no-contact boundary.
Still, any hard evidence for the existence of these celestial beings is often dismissed - either lost beneath hoaxes or explained away through scientific realism. It’s a recurring pattern, one shaped by decades of campfire stories and the constant spotlight of folklore surrounding the phenomenon.
In 2023, Jaime Maussan presented two corpses to the Mexican Chamber of Deputies that convincingly resembled an unearthed species. However scientists swooped in and quickly debunked these abnormalities, revealing them as skinned monkeys.
In 2011, also in Mexico, L.A. Marzulli made similar claims - that he had discovered an evil-energy carrying, "biblically-demonic" fairy. When investigated, it was determined that Marzulli's subject was actually just manipulated bat remains.
These faulty, unserious attempts at unleashing a governmental entity on public UAP investigations are surprisingly successful. At least after the newspapers print stories about them.
As long as people believe and buy merchandise, the sleazy circus that is the U.S government is willing to entertain us with their presence. All of course, while keeping the actual truth out of arm's reach.
This isn't the grandiose display of servitude and transparency that Locke/Platos argued for, but at least it's something, damn it. The 443,000 concurrent daily viewers of Ancient Aliens can finally breathe, but now must read PDF files before digging deeper into the popcorn bowl.
Because of P.U.R.S.U.E., 162 previously classified files in relation to 'Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena,' are now public and downloadable, dating back to the 1940s.
It seems we still stand far away from seeing any real bodies (dead or alive), or recovered aircrafts of the alleged evangelical space agents. But in 1947 an Air Force Major claimed on a phone call with the FBI an "object purporting to be a flying disc was recovered near Roswell, New Mexico," so there are likely many files still being withheld, hopefully to be released later.
Paul Peyerl (a former Luftwaffe officer) also told the FBI, that Nazis have built a disc-shaped aircraft in 1944 somewhere in the Black Forest, 3 years prior; interpolating that some of these may be man-made weapons of war.
Many of the reports discussed oval/football, metallic blimp shaped aircraft - sometimes up to 195 feet long - capable of materializing out of the sun. These aircraft are most likely not made by man, and appear strikingly similar to reports of the aerial assault above Nuremberg 500 years prior.
There were recorded instances in the files that take place in other countries that seemingly targeted U.S military - places like Syria, Dagestan, and Iraq. Also included was an incident with a "star-shaped" entity above the ocean, that feels eerily less like a machine, and more like a living entity.
That tracks, because some theories within Panpsychism suggest that a UAP could itself be a sentient, non-biological entity - either operating autonomously through advanced technology or existing as a naturally occurring energy-based organism. Some researchers have compared these hypothetical entities to plasmoids, non-Newtonian orbs, or even the rumored “space jellyfish” reported in certain anomalous encounters.
Advanced technology capable of consciousness and cognition is not out of human reach. Therefore it can be inferred that any species capable of galactic travel has developed something much more powerful than what we are aware of. In our own world, AI similarly serves as a non-biological life, capable of reason, interacting with its environment, and reproducing.
There has been countless recorded civilian sightings of the classified/rumored U.S military aircraft TR-3B (also known as Black Manta), allegedly capable of anti-gravitational propulsion, made out of reverse engineered alien technology.
Yet what is most interesting (specifically to media outlets), is the overwhelming abundance of incidents involving these bright lights or some sort of ball/orb in the files. NASA's Apollo 11, 12, and 17 (1969-1972), all reported experiencing flashing lights - both in space and on the moon's craters - with Apollo 17 reporting triangular-positioned UAPs far away in distant space.
In late 2025 a U.S helicopter conducting a search (again with infrared sensors) noticed an "extremely hot orb" flying at speeds the Blackhawk helicopter could not match. It gained elevation and almost hit the U.S helicopter, missing by less than 10 feet. Seven U.S federal agents across independent teams have also reported seeing large orbs shooting smaller red orbs out of them, as well as orbs appearing and dissipating into a "firework" like state.
Because of the currently known lack of physical or biological form, it is suggestible these anomalies aim to directly interact with consciousness, through glimpses of humanity, as manifestations of spiritual organisms. This is favored to many - that sentience and self-awareness transcends on an intricate nature of universal scale.
The need to emphasize and be aware of another intellectual species may not run only deep in homo sapiens, but in the lonely unknown that has always been interested in us. The Sumerians wrote about and worshipped the "Anunnaki" - extraterrestrial deities that served as personifications of time, and deciders of humanity. A different but similar sectarian belief: the indigenous tribe Blackfoot Nation said the beings of sky, were the first creations by God.
Aliens have only turned green and started being presented as vigorously meaner, in the last 100 years or so. Maybe they are, and for great unknown reasons, we upset them.
Recent UAP behavior displays reactionary defense mechanisms and gang stalking, a great contrast to hundreds of thousands of years of alleged cooperation.
A celestial entity that once defended us in an aerial battle, presenting gifts of knowledge to Mesopotamians, and possibly dropped off (the still encrypted book), The Voynich Manuscript; now attack us, and hide themselves.
(The Voynich, carbon dated to at least the 1400's, contains text written in an unearthly language, displays images of plants that do not exist, shows what looks like recipes, and features extremely complicated astral charts.)
If space invaders that live 2,000 light years away look at us through a magnifying glass, they would still see the Roman Empire (due to time dilation). Just as if we look back in the sky, we may observe planets and stars that no longer exist. One day another species may do the same to us, and recover our satellites, the Voyager Golden Record, and find remnants of our miraculous culture that will by then, be gone.
Hopefully before that day, they get the courage to talk to us again. If they see the future, hopefully we overcome our significant obstacles. Without proof, we still have humanity, and our desire to not be alone. No matter if man-made, biological, technological, or a physical state of consciousness, we only wish to be peaceful again.
It might not matter if they are real.
"A time will come when men will stretch out their eyes. They should see planets like our Earth." - Cristopher Wren (1750)
Non-Planetary Entities: Jellyfish Floating in Space
Kenneth Arnold and the Flying Saucer Flap of 1947
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Blue Banana Interview with Author and Musician Forrest Lonefight
From the underground worlds of horror fiction, Native storytelling, heavy music, and working-class Americana comes author Forrest Lonefight - a writer whose voice feels as raw and unfiltered as the Iowa backroads and construction sites that shape his stories. Known for his latest novel The Pipelayer, Lonefight blends blue-collar realism with dread, addiction, identity, and the strange shadows that linger beneath everyday life. His work doesn’t feel manufactured or polished for mainstream audiences; it feels lived in. Weathered. Real.
What makes Lonefight especially compelling is the way he merges Indigenous perspectives, Midwestern grit, underground music culture, and psychological horror into something uniquely his own. There’s a heaviness to his writing that recalls late-night highway drives, rusted machinery, dive bars, isolation, and the feeling that something ancient might still be buried beneath the surface of America. Beyond literature, Lonefight is also a musician and artist, bringing the same intensity and atmosphere into his creative work.
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| Forrest Lonefight is so much more than a musician and an author. |
As the guitar player for the Des Moines band The Maw, Forrest opened my eyes to a hungry and vibrant music scene in Central Iowa. He was a huge inspiration for my previous blog, Bigfoot Diaries (BFD), a project that predominately covered music. I have told friends that Forrest is the greatest guitar player that I've ever seen live. I meant it 100%. I still do.
Blue Banana was honored to speak with Forrest about his books, Iowa, horror, Native identity, music, creative inspiration, and the darker corners of storytelling that continue to pull readers deeper into his world.
Growing up Meskwaki in lowa, were there stories, beliefs, or legends you heard as a kid that stayed with you long after childhood?
My grandma was a great storyteller. She had a way of telling stories. One story she told was of a gambler who would gamble with a dead man. That zombie creature would rise in the middle of the night to gamble with him, lose one of his valuable burial adornments for two nights in a row, then on the third night, the whole cemetery of zombies were waiting for the gambler. They chased him back to his village and tore his family to shreds. That was a cautionary tale. Respect the dead, which was always a customary thing growing up on the Meskwaki Settlement.
How does Meskwaki tradition shape the way you think about creativity, inspiration, or artistic responsibility?
There was a lot of room to play on the Settlement. I was living the real life Zelda. Exploring, finding secret grottos in the woods and pretend-fighting with Octorocks and Leevers in the woods. That’s probably were my imagination bloomed, before anything else. Meskwaki tradition had nothing to do with my inspiration per se. It was a patriarchal society full of rules. I was excluded for the most part and got bullied a lot. My family was ostracized for my grandparent’s Christian beliefs; that’s something I would find out later in life. I’ve always wondered why most Meskwakis never liked me! (Haha!)
I did admire the way that the Meskwaki were a hidden society away from mainstream Iowa. So, that fact opened my eyes to how our country was being run. I was able to see and navigate the complexities of America’s problems and saw the gray areas in the middle of the Reagan’s “Moral Majority” regime days.
Are there certain landscapes in Iowa that still feel spiritually charged to you - places that seem to carry stories?
The hills. The bluffs. Along the river valley. I included a story in my book that takes place along a beaver dam that runs along the Iowa River. I heard stories that a lot of people were buried down there. You would hear different things about that area over the years. But who knows? It is a legitimately dangerous place and I do recall a death of a man in the 2000’s. The legends grow over time.
Is there a difference between the stories told in your books and the stories you tell through guitar?
Well, my last book, Life Belongs to the Loud, was a direct correlated work. I melded those two things together to make a pretty good story. Epic. If I die tomorrow, that’s my testament to music. They are both different modes of expression. Most times they are better left to their own designs, but one can be ambitious and promiscuous just as long as it’s killer in the end!
What do books allow you to express that music can’t - and vice versa?
I was a writer first. At 7 years old, it came to me first. You can make the most mundane situation in the world and make it into something like a Kafka and Dostoevsky novel. Music is much more ethereal. Or I’ll say it like this; Writing is corporeal, music is spiritual. In my Libra mind, one needs a balance of both in order to achieve the great work of life.
Do you think modern audiences misunderstand Indigenous folklore by treating it like fantasy rather than lived belief?
Every culture has their own stories. What’s cool is that many tribes share the same ones. The more Natives I meet, the more I see the things we have in common. Ojibwe, Potawatomi, Meskwaki, even Lakota (our supposed mortal enemies haha) have the same words and culture. Every culture has merit in the human experience, no matter who has the biggest gun.
The show "Reservation Dogs" opened a lot of eyes in the mainstream. It showed that Natives weren’t all just downtrodden tragic apparitions of society. Natives love to laugh and yes, make fun of each other too.
Are there myths or spirits from Meskwaki lore that deserve wider recognition outside Indigenous communities?
Meskwaki got bigfoot! Haha!
The Deer Lady was one we heard growing up. There’s a lot of representation of that now. Stephen Graham Jones did the most brutal Deer Lady in his book, "The Only Good Indians". Reservation Dogs did, probably the sexiest, Deer Lady on their show. So those stories are getting their run in the mainstream now, I would urge you to check those out.
There’s a scourge of right wing videos on YouTube trying to justify their points of view using Native Americans, which isn’t cool; saying that there were prophetic Hopi paintings in caves showing trump and musk wearing red hats as saviors. That BS is something we always gotta be cognizant of and filter out.
There is also a segment of Natives who would rather not have those stories told to the outside world. I’ve already gotten flack for sharing my stories by that segment, but what can a writer do but write his truth?
What does “home” mean to you now: Iowa, Minneapolis, the Meskwaki Nation, or something less physical?
I feel at home wherever I lay my head down. Attending the Des Moines Book Festival was like coming home.
Not so much the Meskwaki Settlement. They’ve been cracking down on us "Descendants / Unenrolled Members" out there. Remember when I told you I wasn’t welcome out there and got bullied growing up? It has really come to a head now. Greed has a lot to do with that, they gotta dis-enroll us and kick us out of the Settlement so they can have all that casino, cigarette, and THC money all to themselves.
There’s a movement brewing now that’s tackling that very issue of tribes dis-enrolling and banishing descendants. The documentary film, "You’re No Indian" is shining a much-needed light on that problem. [The problem] It’s basically another form of genocide.
What do you listen to when you write?
I can't do music when I write, though I do listen to ambient soundscapes to create atmosphere. Ossa Coronata was my go-to band for my latest project; their soundscapes really capture the eerie ghostly church-in-the-woods vibe. I love them!
One time you told me about a gal that you knew who was a strong believer in Shadow People. One night at your house "something" knocked over a fan. Can you tell me about that? What do you associate that to?
There's a new Testament song called, "Shadow People" that totally whisked me back to that time. I believe some people can see things that most people aren't conditioned to see; much like children who can see things that adults can't. Perhaps it may have been a past trauma she experienced, but she claimed that she was cursed. I have no explanation, that incident was an anomaly. She is no longer a part of my life so I don't know if she still sees the Shadow People. She's definitely not alone in seeing them. I included a bit of that in my last novel in a brief, disturbing scene.
Actually, I think my guitar playing buddy Jas Spargur can see them - or ghosts, one of the two.
Do characters in your books sometimes reflect real people you've met in your life?
Oh god yes! Haha! My last book was 90% Autofiction with my life in my band Inhale the Ellipses. I just had a dream last night about the "Rick" character and myself beginning to write songs again for a new project. The old feelings came back and I wasn't so sure it was a good idea! Haha!
The newest book, The Pipelayer has a lot of characters that came from real life, since it spawned from my time working in that field. Inspiration comes from the people you know.
Tell us what The Pipelayer is about and what inspired you to write it.
Ah well, it is about Gaston Johnson, a Native American Pipelayer from Des Moines who is a descendant of the Fox Tribe in Te Ma, Iowa. The company he works for, Price Plumbing, has a job on the Fox Tribal Settlement: a place he never felt accepted. Circumstances and tragedies lead to him to discovering something truly f-ed up while digging underground.
The story switches back-and-forth between the present and 1989. So there some flashbacks that have some of my earliest memories in life. 1989 was a pivotal year for me and I wanted to pay tribute to that time. I had a great time writing it. Also, I should point out that the Fox Tribe is a pseudonym for Meskwaki. It worked for the story, I have some Meskwaki and Sauk words in there and I thought it be classier to protect the names of the innocent and not-so-innocent. Haha!
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