
More Sightings Over Surrey, British Columbia
Date: July 16, 2010
Time: 9:00 p.m. to about 11:30 p.m.
Hi Brian, five minutes ago I just saw another, I don't know what,
just like before looks like a star moving across the horizon. It was
moving very fast from the southern horizon straight across the sky
headed towards the northern, but it got out to the top of the globe,
then within a second vanished. Since the first one I saw, which was
the footage and the other two which pretty much looked the same and
did the same thing as the one I just saw.
I have seen three others since last reporting to you and four which
was tonight. Now you have a time estimate, they range between 9:00pm
to about 11.30pm. The real scary part about all of this is, after
I reported the first three to you, three nights later I was out side
around 10:30pm telling my neighbour all about my sightings and within
five minutes of explaining, she looked up and said "look at that"
(this was my fourth sighting) it was much brighter than the other
three and faster and it too vanished after about 30 seconds.
In my opinion these must not be satellites because they range from
smaller to bigger and travel from north to south, east to west and
all over the place across the sky. So the sighting time tonight was
approx 11:05 pm. please let me know if you can do some research and
maybe find out what I'm seeing.
P.S. - Also as soon as I looked up at the sky I saw the object and
this has happened almost every time I have seen them it kind of scares
me to be honest.
I live in Surrey B.C. and there is alot of air traffic because Richmond
airport is to the west . The plains fly very low and these are no
plains that I'm seeing, the objects that I'm seeing are either way
to high like the distance of a star or way to low, so yes let me know
and thanks again.
Thank you so much.
If you have seen anything like this in the same area please be kind
enough to contact Brian Vike at: sighting@telus.net
with the details of your sighting. All personal information is kept
confidential.
Credit: Sightings.com