Ghostbusters come to Southwest
Group hears inexplicable sound while in Old Town café
By Alma
Olaechea
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Media Credit: Matthew Dunn
/ Daily Lobo
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Ghost hunter Buck McCombs, seen
in a long exposure photograph, takes electromagnetic and temperature readings
Sunday night in the courtyard of the Church Street Cafe, an Old Town house
built in 1709.
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Media Credit: Metthew Dunn
/ Daily Lobo
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T-VI student Malli Tod checks
for electromagnetic pulses, indicators of a supernatural presence, in during
a ghost hunt Sunday night.
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UNM student Jessica Irwin spent much of her Sunday evening pacing through
the dark Church Street Café in Old Town in search of paranormal
activity and a ghost named Sarah.
Irwin, a psychology major applying for medical school, is a member of
the Southwest Ghost Hunter's Association, a group of about 30 people who
search for and investigate haunted areas throughout the Southwest.
After turning off the power in the old, pueblo style building, which
was built in 1709, about seven group members moved in and out of rooms
and past tables holding scientific gadgets such as electromagnetic field
detectors and temperature gauges in their search for the unexplained.
Sarah, the ghost believed to inhabit the café, likes to flush
the toilet while the janitor is cleaning the bathroom and enjoys hiding
keys and throwing pebbles, said Marie Coleman, who has owned the Church
Street Café for nine years.
"When I first bought it, I never believed in ghosts," she said of the
house, adding that she has had many unexplainable experiences since she
bought and remodeled it into a restaurant.
She said that one day, after she had just bought the building, she felt
one of the faucets was dripping and heard laughing even though the electricity
and water had not yet been turned on.
"She doesn't scare me; she's not mean," Coleman said of the ghost. "She's
more or less like a child playing games."
Sarah usually makes her presence known when few people are around, Coleman
said as members of the association took pictures and rushed from room to
room trying to make sense of questionable temperatures and electromagnetic
readings.
Irwin said seeing apparitions or ghosts is rare. She said the group
uses infrared film and camera flashes in an attempt to catch images that
cannot be seen by the naked eye.
Irwin scanned through pictures on her digital camera that she took in
the backyard and inside of the café. Some of the photos had spots
on them, which appeared to be dust spots that moved location from picture
to picture. Irwin said she thought the spots were orbs.
She said the theory of orbs rests on the theory that energy cannot be
destroyed and must instead change form.
Orbs might be leftover energy from people who have died, she said, adding
that recent research indicates that certain frequencies can interact with
brainwaves causing hallucinations that may explain ghostly experiences.
Irwin said she thought she saw an orb on Halloween night during a ghost
hunt.
A Daily Lobo reporter and photographer, as well as Irwin and another
ghost hunter, heard four knocks in the first room of the house followed
by another four knocks.
No one other than the witnesses could be found in or around the room
where the knocks came from.
Irwin said she thought that energy from an orb may have caused auditory
hallucinations among the witnesses. She said the group's infrared camera,
which was recording audio, did not pick up the sound of the knocking.
That evening, a member of the association called from a dark bathroom,
saying he received an extremely high reading on his electromagnetic detector.
After members piled in the small room and took pictures, they realized
a large appliance on the other side of the wall was the cause of the high
reading.
Cody Polston, founder of the association that began in 1985, smoked
a cigarette and drank soda outside of the café after the hunt.
He said the association branched off from an outdoor adventure group
that decided to go ghost hunting in an old, Spanish ruin in New Mexico.
When the association began, ghost hunters used 35-millimeter film for
their photos and had to wait until the film was developed to see if they
found anything, he said.
Digital cameras and other technology have made ghost hunting easier,
he said, because they produce immediate results.
Irwin said the association does not use psychics for its research.
"You have to prove the psychic before you can prove the ghost," she
said. "The organization tries to keep it as skeptical as possible."
She concluded Tuesday evening that she thinks the Church Street Café
is haunted.
"The knocking really intrigued me," she said.
For more information on the Southwest Ghost Hunter's Association, visit
www.sgha.net.
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