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    Peeking Through the Lens…


    2009 - 03.24

    Those of you who know me well know that I love photography. I may not do it as often as I’d like, but I enjoy being behind a camera. I did fight the digital revolution (and still prefer 35mm), but digital is easier when you’re dealing with the internet. Scanning regular images, as well as all the expense involved, makes it something I save for what I deem most important. Some sightseeing and paranormal adventures require tangible photos worthy of frames. The rest, well, I’ll settle for a digital.

    I’ve been a member of Flickr for a few years now, I think. It was only recently that I actually bothered uploading any photos onto the site. It’s easy and a good way to get some exposure for any images you’ve captured… and, for some, a way of sharing other people’s photographic work. For me, it’s a way of sharing some of the things I’ve photographed (and bothered saving the images for) with new people, friends, and anyone else. I’m very picky about what I place on it.

    But today, I finally uploaded some new images from this past weekend. I had the great pleasure of going to a small family gathering (not my family) in Valley View at one of the “haunted” places in the Cuyahoga Valley: Edmund Gleeson House. I was invited by a Gleeson family descendant who still lives nearby, and took the chance to get a sneak peek inside the rehabilitated home. I met the owner, listened sheepishly as the Gleeson descendant went on and on about my book to everyone (she even gave they mayor of Valley View a copy… I shook his hand), and poked around the old farmhouse. It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, and I went for it.

    Everyone was pleasant. A few of the teenagers in the room immediately wanted to know more about the “ghost”. The other Gleeson house down the road (occupied by the descendant) is also haunted, apparently. I maintained my usual speculative distance from any firm answers about the hauntings. I’ve never experienced anything nor have I investigated anything, therefore it could just be legend. We had an interesting discussion of local legends, like “Hell Town“, as well.

    I didn’t overstay my welcome and had plans, so the visit was brief. But I did get to snap a few photos inside before leaving. I gave the owner a copy of the book as well, for curiosity’s sake. The National Park Service did an incredible job on the home. I would have taken more photos, but the place was packed with guests and family and I didn’t want to intrude too much.

    To see these and some of the other photos from the Cuyahoga Valley (as well as other random images from the past few years), just go to my Flickr photostream.

    A Spook-Filled British Invasion…


    2008 - 10.23

    While browsing various videos online for paranormal-related content, I made quite an interesting discovery. The UK’s own Chris Halton with Haunted Earth recently traveled across the pond to my own neck of the woods to film some haunted places.

    Two videos, concerning the Canal Visitor Center and Tinkers Creek Cemetery, were added to YouTube this month. There were a few errors I am aware of from my research on the locations, though it was still interesting to watch. The EVPs are difficult to discern, but I’ll leave that up to all of you to decide.

    So, take a little journey to hauntings down the street (literally) from my home!

    Canal Visitors Center:


    Tinkers Creek Cemetery:

    Twist My Arm…


    2008 - 10.22

    Of all ironies, no one said two words about my website, Haunted Cuyahoga, until after I removed it from cyberspace. Emails and casual questions popped up in the following weeks, even a few people voicing disappointment in its disappearance. I hadn’t bothered updating it in months and with the new shift in focus with my efforts, I had decided that operating two separate websites was too time consuming and tedious. I laid to rest that decade of my life.

    Well, seeing as this is the perfect time for the dead to come back to life, I’ve given in to public pressure. The old website is back, though not at a different address. I have split www.moonspenders.com down the middle and now, visitors who arrive at the main page have a choice: Haunted Cuyahoga or Queer Paranormal?

    So, the references of hauntings in the valley are still available online, but at their original address. It shouldn’t take long for it to begin appearing in search engines again so I won’t turn my back on the local tales. I wouldn’t count on any major updates to either site though, since I’m busily working on several other things. Even though Queer Paranormal is nowhere near completed, it will take some time before I finish all the pages and images to go along with it.

    Consider it my little Halloween present to Ohio.

    Happy now?