Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-23 Thread Joe Martin D'Souza

Wouldn’t it be awesome to have this creature still inhabiting the earth!

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/upshot/monster-titanoboa-snake-invades-york-224358461.html

Joe

From: Joe Martin D'Souza 
Sent: Sunday, March 18, 2012 2:07 PM
To: ARS List 
Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

Funny.. :-)

Another popular myth about snakes is about snake charmers. The whole flute and 
a cobra dancing to its tune routine is quite really easily explainable.. Snakes 
are tone deaf and can’t hear sounds in quite the same way like most other 
creatures or humans. They sense sounds through vibrations on a bone in their 
jaws. The kind of vibrations those bones can sense is usually low frequency 
(bass). They cannot distinguish between tones hence they cannot appreciate 
music. Snakes use whatever sounds they can sense as another form of protection 
– they consider bass sounds to be a possible sign of danger.

They can’t hear music from a flute quite the way we can. The reason they seem 
like they dance to it, is they think that they might be attacked by it so they 
just stay prepared in case the flute gets any closer.. They move along with the 
movement of a flute..

If a drummer or a bass guitar could make a snake dance, they may not be as fake 
as a snake charmers :-).. Drums and bass guitars being low frequency 
instruments, might be within the audible range of a snakes hearing perception, 
but even that being said, they are probably too tone deaf to recognize it as 
music.. It would probably just scare them.. I wonder if you could actually use 
drum beats to scare them away..

From: arslist 
Sent: Sunday, March 18, 2012 7:55 AM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

** 
“As long as you stop dead in your tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they 
do not attack. Their attack is mainly in self defense”

I think this applies to some project managers I’ve met J.

 

 

From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList) 
[mailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG] On Behalf Of Joe Martin D'Souza
Sent: March 17, 2012 11:26 PM
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

Snakes are actually the most misunderstood creatures among our human race.. 
They are not as scary as they are made out to be and usually stay out of the 
way of humans or for that matter anything that is larger than them for one 
simple reason – or so I was told by a Catholic priest in India who was an 
Australian missionary and considered himself to be a subject matter expert on 
snakes.. He had a python for a pet named Gwen, which apparently was a baby but 
looked like a full grown python.. Most snakes have a very delicate vertebra 
that can snap even if a small child steps on it. Hence most of them stay away 
from anything that’s bigger than them. – which is practically everything..Most 
of them feed on smaller weaker creatures or attack the bigger ones when they 
are asleep. They ‘attack’ or bite humans and creatures as large as us, only 
when their existence is threatened.. I was also told that it’s a natural 
mechanism that the poisonous variety release venom when they bite when they are 
afraid..

 

Snakes are common in my native land – Goa, a little beach community on the west 
coast of India, which is about a few hundred miles south of Bombay.. We were 
never afraid of snakes and taught to co-exist. I’ve literally seen them crawl 
past me no more than 2 or 3 feet from me.. As long as you stop dead in your 
tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they do not attack. Their attack is 
mainly in self defense.. An exception to the rule may be a hungry python, who 
actually may view humans as a source of protein..

 

Joe

 

From: Shellman, David 

Sent: Saturday, March 17, 2012 4:54 PM

Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general

To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 

Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

I spent some time in the Pine Barrens for a wetlands class field trip.  The 
area has more deer than humans.  The soil is poor so there is little 
agriculture.  The terrain is fairly flat and the brush is thick.  It would be 
easy for individuals to walk in circles and not know it.  There are a number of 
streams, bogs and wetlands.  It's the kind of place that one would think of it 
being home to a eastern black panther or some other seemingly unearthly 
creature.  It would be easy for one's imagination to come up with wild 
explanations to unusual sights and sounds.

 

We found it to be a beautiful place with rare and endangered plants growing in 
the wet habitats.  A place of beautiful butterflies, song birds, snowy egrets, 
hawks, and owls.  Also throw in the occasional snake.

 

Dave


On Mar 16, 2012, at 10:23 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net wrote:

  ** 

   

  Define lonely and creepy :-).. If you mean deathly quiet, its actually 
inviting.. I have been to a few places around

Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-18 Thread arslist
“As long as you stop dead in your tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they 
do not attack. Their attack is mainly in self defense”

I think this applies to some project managers I’ve met J 

 

 

From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList) 
[mailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG] On Behalf Of Joe Martin D'Souza
Sent: March 17, 2012 11:26 PM
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

Snakes are actually the most misunderstood creatures among our human race.. 
They are not as scary as they are made out to be and usually stay out of the 
way of humans or for that matter anything that is larger than them for one 
simple reason – or so I was told by a Catholic priest in India who was an 
Australian missionary and considered himself to be a subject matter expert on 
snakes.. He had a python for a pet named Gwen, which apparently was a baby but 
looked like a full grown python.. Most snakes have a very delicate vertebra 
that can snap even if a small child steps on it. Hence most of them stay away 
from anything that’s bigger than them. – which is practically everything..Most 
of them feed on smaller weaker creatures or attack the bigger ones when they 
are asleep. They ‘attack’ or bite humans and creatures as large as us, only 
when their existence is threatened.. I was also told that it’s a natural 
mechanism that the poisonous variety release venom when they bite when they are 
afraid..

 

Snakes are common in my native land – Goa, a little beach community on the west 
coast of India, which is about a few hundred miles south of Bombay.. We were 
never afraid of snakes and taught to co-exist. I’ve literally seen them crawl 
past me no more than 2 or 3 feet from me.. As long as you stop dead in your 
tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they do not attack. Their attack is 
mainly in self defense.. An exception to the rule may be a hungry python, who 
actually may view humans as a source of protein..

 

Joe

 

From: Shellman, David mailto:dave.shell...@te.com  

Sent: Saturday, March 17, 2012 4:54 PM

Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general

To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 

Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

I spent some time in the Pine Barrens for a wetlands class field trip.  The 
area has more deer than humans.  The soil is poor so there is little 
agriculture.  The terrain is fairly flat and the brush is thick.  It would be 
easy for individuals to walk in circles and not know it.  There are a number of 
streams, bogs and wetlands.  It's the kind of place that one would think of it 
being home to a eastern black panther or some other seemingly unearthly 
creature.  It would be easy for one's imagination to come up with wild 
explanations to unusual sights and sounds.

 

We found it to be a beautiful place with rare and endangered plants growing in 
the wet habitats.  A place of beautiful butterflies, song birds, snowy egrets, 
hawks, and owls.  Also throw in the occasional snake.

 

Dave


On Mar 16, 2012, at 10:23 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net wrote:

** 

 

Define lonely and creepy :-).. If you mean deathly quiet, its actually 
inviting.. I have been to a few places around South Jersey, and from that site, 
they make Cape May to be the most haunted town in Jersey.. I actually liked 
that town for its natural – almost untouched landscape.. Those little streams 
and small waterfalls (I think its called Childs Fall) were pretty places..

 

Sinking sand is not as treacherous as it is made out to be. if you can swim in 
water which is a whole lot less denser than sinking sand , you can ‘swim’ on 
sinking sand.. The key here is swim – and not try to walk or run away.. you 
literally lay down and crawl out of it as if you were swimming.. So unless 
there is some deadly creature like an alligator or a crocodile around, there is 
not much to worry about.. I had seen a show once on Discovery channel where 
some expert said it’s the fear and myth around how dangerous sinking sand can 
be, that makes most people panic and become victims of it..

 

Joe

 

 

From: Boyd, Rebecca mailto:boy...@wfu.edu  

Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 5:40 PM

Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general

To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 

Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

I grew in South Jersey. I can’t vouch for any of these tales, but I can tell 
you there’s over a million acres of pines trees  sand called the “Pine 
Barrens” in NJ.

 

The Pine Barrens are as beautiful, lonely  creepy as it gets. Miles  miles of 
two lane roads with scrubby pine trees on either side. Every so often there’s a 
sandy one lane trail off to one side or the other. Turn off onto one of these 
roads. It just gets lonelier  creepier. You might find a quarry but don’t get 
too close – you could be up to your knees in sand  still sinking before you 
know it. You might see an old wreck of an abandoned car with bullet holes in 
every square

Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-18 Thread Joe Martin D'Souza
Funny.. :-)

Another popular myth about snakes is about snake charmers. The whole flute and 
a cobra dancing to its tune routine is quite really easily explainable.. Snakes 
are tone deaf and can’t hear sounds in quite the same way like most other 
creatures or humans. They sense sounds through vibrations on a bone in their 
jaws. The kind of vibrations those bones can sense is usually low frequency 
(bass). They cannot distinguish between tones hence they cannot appreciate 
music. Snakes use whatever sounds they can sense as another form of protection 
– they consider bass sounds to be a possible sign of danger.

They can’t hear music from a flute quite the way we can. The reason they seem 
like they dance to it, is they think that they might be attacked by it so they 
just stay prepared in case the flute gets any closer.. They move along with the 
movement of a flute..

If a drummer or a bass guitar could make a snake dance, they may not be as fake 
as a snake charmers :-).. Drums and bass guitars being low frequency 
instruments, might be within the audible range of a snakes hearing perception, 
but even that being said, they are probably too tone deaf to recognize it as 
music.. It would probably just scare them.. I wonder if you could actually use 
drum beats to scare them away..

From: arslist 
Sent: Sunday, March 18, 2012 7:55 AM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

** 
“As long as you stop dead in your tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they 
do not attack. Their attack is mainly in self defense”

I think this applies to some project managers I’ve met J.

 

 

From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList) 
[mailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG] On Behalf Of Joe Martin D'Souza
Sent: March 17, 2012 11:26 PM
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

Snakes are actually the most misunderstood creatures among our human race.. 
They are not as scary as they are made out to be and usually stay out of the 
way of humans or for that matter anything that is larger than them for one 
simple reason – or so I was told by a Catholic priest in India who was an 
Australian missionary and considered himself to be a subject matter expert on 
snakes.. He had a python for a pet named Gwen, which apparently was a baby but 
looked like a full grown python.. Most snakes have a very delicate vertebra 
that can snap even if a small child steps on it. Hence most of them stay away 
from anything that’s bigger than them. – which is practically everything..Most 
of them feed on smaller weaker creatures or attack the bigger ones when they 
are asleep. They ‘attack’ or bite humans and creatures as large as us, only 
when their existence is threatened.. I was also told that it’s a natural 
mechanism that the poisonous variety release venom when they bite when they are 
afraid..

 

Snakes are common in my native land – Goa, a little beach community on the west 
coast of India, which is about a few hundred miles south of Bombay.. We were 
never afraid of snakes and taught to co-exist. I’ve literally seen them crawl 
past me no more than 2 or 3 feet from me.. As long as you stop dead in your 
tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they do not attack. Their attack is 
mainly in self defense.. An exception to the rule may be a hungry python, who 
actually may view humans as a source of protein..

 

Joe

 

From: Shellman, David 

Sent: Saturday, March 17, 2012 4:54 PM

Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general

To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 

Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 

** 

I spent some time in the Pine Barrens for a wetlands class field trip.  The 
area has more deer than humans.  The soil is poor so there is little 
agriculture.  The terrain is fairly flat and the brush is thick.  It would be 
easy for individuals to walk in circles and not know it.  There are a number of 
streams, bogs and wetlands.  It's the kind of place that one would think of it 
being home to a eastern black panther or some other seemingly unearthly 
creature.  It would be easy for one's imagination to come up with wild 
explanations to unusual sights and sounds.

 

We found it to be a beautiful place with rare and endangered plants growing in 
the wet habitats.  A place of beautiful butterflies, song birds, snowy egrets, 
hawks, and owls.  Also throw in the occasional snake.

 

Dave


On Mar 16, 2012, at 10:23 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net wrote:

  ** 

   

  Define lonely and creepy :-).. If you mean deathly quiet, its actually 
inviting.. I have been to a few places around South Jersey, and from that site, 
they make Cape May to be the most haunted town in Jersey.. I actually liked 
that town for its natural – almost untouched landscape.. Those little streams 
and small waterfalls (I think its called Childs Fall) were pretty places..

   

  Sinking sand

Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-17 Thread Shellman, David
I spent some time in the Pine Barrens for a wetlands class field trip.  The 
area has more deer than humans.  The soil is poor so there is little 
agriculture.  The terrain is fairly flat and the brush is thick.  It would be 
easy for individuals to walk in circles and not know it.  There are a number of 
streams, bogs and wetlands.  It's the kind of place that one would think of it 
being home to a eastern black panther or some other seemingly unearthly 
creature.  It would be easy for one's imagination to come up with wild 
explanations to unusual sights and sounds.

We found it to be a beautiful place with rare and endangered plants growing in 
the wet habitats.  A place of beautiful butterflies, song birds, snowy egrets, 
hawks, and owls.  Also throw in the occasional snake.

Dave

On Mar 16, 2012, at 10:23 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza 
jdso...@shyle.netmailto:jdso...@shyle.net wrote:

**

Define lonely and creepy :-).. If you mean deathly quiet, its actually 
inviting.. I have been to a few places around South Jersey, and from that site, 
they make Cape May to be the most haunted town in Jersey.. I actually liked 
that town for its natural – almost untouched landscape.. Those little streams 
and small waterfalls (I think its called Childs Fall) were pretty places..

Sinking sand is not as treacherous as it is made out to be. if you can swim in 
water which is a whole lot less denser than sinking sand , you can ‘swim’ on 
sinking sand.. The key here is swim – and not try to walk or run away.. you 
literally lay down and crawl out of it as if you were swimming.. So unless 
there is some deadly creature like an alligator or a crocodile around, there is 
not much to worry about.. I had seen a show once on Discovery channel where 
some expert said it’s the fear and myth around how dangerous sinking sand can 
be, that makes most people panic and become victims of it..

Joe


From: Boyd, Rebeccamailto:boy...@wfu.edu
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 5:40 PM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORGmailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

**
I grew in South Jersey. I can’t vouch for any of these tales, but I can tell 
you there’s over a million acres of pines trees  sand called the “Pine 
Barrens” in NJ.

The Pine Barrens are as beautiful, lonely  creepy as it gets. Miles  miles of 
two lane roads with scrubby pine trees on either side. Every so often there’s a 
sandy one lane trail off to one side or the other. Turn off onto one of these 
roads. It just gets lonelier  creepier. You might find a quarry but don’t get 
too close – you could be up to your knees in sand  still sinking before you 
know it. You might see an old wreck of an abandoned car with bullet holes in 
every square inch.
And then there are the remains of what looks like an animal carcass. Now try to 
find your way back out to the main road.

The Pine Barrens is where the Jersey Devil is said to live. It was also an 
episode of The Sopranos, the one where Paulie  Christopher take a Russian 
mobster into the woods (the Pine Barrens), end up getting lost  have to spend 
the night in an abandoned vehicle.

No wonder many of the places listed on the web page are in or around the Pine 
Barrens.




On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 4:51 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza 
jdso...@shyle.netmailto:jdso...@shyle.net wrote:
**

Is there any truth to it??? Was it ever investigated? Or is it just a 
widespread rumor?


From: Jim Manaramailto:jim.man...@thecambiaregroup.com
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 4:31 PM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORGmailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: Re: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

**
I grew up in Raritan, NJ and the old librarian is the mother of 4 boys.  No 
wonder she is still moving around checking that things are the way they are 
supposed to be.  Like we do when we send test transactions through our systems. 
 Thanks for the memories.

Jim Manara
480-273-0934tel:480-273-0934




 Original Message 
Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true
From: Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.netmailto:jdso...@shyle.net
Date: Fri, March 16, 2012 1:20 pm
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORGmailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG

**

I tend to have an interest in ‘supernatural’ phenomenon's, and a random search 
for haunted places in New Jersey yielded this result.. I really wonder how many 
of these are really authentic claims.. My guess leans towards none..

Anybody living in any of these listed cities that may have heard or know 
anything first hand about any of these listed sites???

http://www.theshadowlands.net/places/newjersey.htm

Joe
_attend WWRUG12 www.wwrug.comhttp://www.wwrug.com ARSlist: Where the Answers 
Are_



--
Rebecca Boyd
Application Administrator
Wake Forest University

_attend WWRUG12 www.wwrug.comhttp://www.wwrug.com ARSlist: Where the Answers 
Are_
_attend WWRUG12 www.wwrug.comhttp://www.wwrug.com ARSlist: Where

OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-17 Thread Joe Martin D'Souza
Snakes are actually the most misunderstood creatures among our human race.. 
They are not as scary as they are made out to be and usually stay out of the 
way of humans or for that matter anything that is larger than them for one 
simple reason – or so I was told by a Catholic priest in India who was an 
Australian missionary and considered himself to be a subject matter expert on 
snakes.. He had a python for a pet named Gwen, which apparently was a baby but 
looked like a full grown python.. Most snakes have a very delicate vertebra 
that can snap even if a small child steps on it. Hence most of them stay away 
from anything that’s bigger than them. – which is practically everything..Most 
of them feed on smaller weaker creatures or attack the bigger ones when they 
are asleep. They ‘attack’ or bite humans and creatures as large as us, only 
when their existence is threatened.. I was also told that it’s a natural 
mechanism that the poisonous variety release venom when they bite when they are 
afraid..

Snakes are common in my native land – Goa, a little beach community on the west 
coast of India, which is about a few hundred miles south of Bombay.. We were 
never afraid of snakes and taught to co-exist. I’ve literally seen them crawl 
past me no more than 2 or 3 feet from me.. As long as you stop dead in your 
tracks, and show no signs of aggression, they do not attack. Their attack is 
mainly in self defense.. An exception to the rule may be a hungry python, who 
actually may view humans as a source of protein..

Joe

From: Shellman, David 
Sent: Saturday, March 17, 2012 4:54 PM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

** 
I spent some time in the Pine Barrens for a wetlands class field trip.  The 
area has more deer than humans.  The soil is poor so there is little 
agriculture.  The terrain is fairly flat and the brush is thick.  It would be 
easy for individuals to walk in circles and not know it.  There are a number of 
streams, bogs and wetlands.  It's the kind of place that one would think of it 
being home to a eastern black panther or some other seemingly unearthly 
creature.  It would be easy for one's imagination to come up with wild 
explanations to unusual sights and sounds.

We found it to be a beautiful place with rare and endangered plants growing in 
the wet habitats.  A place of beautiful butterflies, song birds, snowy egrets, 
hawks, and owls.  Also throw in the occasional snake.

Dave

On Mar 16, 2012, at 10:23 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net wrote:


  ** 

  Define lonely and creepy :-).. If you mean deathly quiet, its actually 
inviting.. I have been to a few places around South Jersey, and from that site, 
they make Cape May to be the most haunted town in Jersey.. I actually liked 
that town for its natural – almost untouched landscape.. Those little streams 
and small waterfalls (I think its called Childs Fall) were pretty places..

  Sinking sand is not as treacherous as it is made out to be. if you can swim 
in water which is a whole lot less denser than sinking sand , you can ‘swim’ on 
sinking sand.. The key here is swim – and not try to walk or run away.. you 
literally lay down and crawl out of it as if you were swimming.. So unless 
there is some deadly creature like an alligator or a crocodile around, there is 
not much to worry about.. I had seen a show once on Discovery channel where 
some expert said it’s the fear and myth around how dangerous sinking sand can 
be, that makes most people panic and become victims of it..

  Joe


  From: Boyd, Rebecca 
  Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 5:40 PM
  Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
  To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
  Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

  ** 
  I grew in South Jersey. I can’t vouch for any of these tales, but I can tell 
you there’s over a million acres of pines trees  sand called the “Pine 
Barrens” in NJ.



  The Pine Barrens are as beautiful, lonely  creepy as it gets. Miles  miles 
of two lane roads with scrubby pine trees on either side. Every so often 
there’s a sandy one lane trail off to one side or the other. Turn off onto one 
of these roads. It just gets lonelier  creepier. You might find a quarry but 
don’t get too close – you could be up to your knees in sand  still sinking 
before you know it. You might see an old wreck of an abandoned car with bullet 
holes in every square inch. 


  And then there are the remains of what looks like an animal carcass. Now try 
to find your way back out to the main road.




  The Pine Barrens is where the Jersey Devil is said to live. It was also an 
episode of The Sopranos, the one where Paulie  Christopher take a Russian 
mobster into the woods (the Pine Barrens), end up getting lost  have to spend 
the night in an abandoned vehicle.



  No wonder many of the places listed on the web page are in or around the Pine 
Barrens

OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-16 Thread Joe Martin D'Souza

I tend to have an interest in ‘supernatural’ phenomenon's, and a random search 
for haunted places in New Jersey yielded this result.. I really wonder how many 
of these are really authentic claims.. My guess leans towards none..

Anybody living in any of these listed cities that may have heard or know 
anything first hand about any of these listed sites???

http://www.theshadowlands.net/places/newjersey.htm

Joe

___
UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org
attend wwrug12 www.wwrug12.com ARSList: Where the Answers Are

Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-16 Thread Joe Martin D'Souza

Is there any truth to it??? Was it ever investigated? Or is it just a 
widespread rumor?


From: Jim Manara 
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 4:31 PM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
Subject: Re: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

** 
I grew up in Raritan, NJ and the old librarian is the mother of 4 boys.  No 
wonder she is still moving around checking that things are the way they are 
supposed to be.  Like we do when we send test transactions through our systems. 
 Thanks for the memories.


Jim Manara
480-273-0934





   Original Message 
  Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true
  From: Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net
  Date: Fri, March 16, 2012 1:20 pm
  To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG

  ** 

  I tend to have an interest in ‘supernatural’ phenomenon's, and a random 
search for haunted places in New Jersey yielded this result.. I really wonder 
how many of these are really authentic claims.. My guess leans towards none..

  Anybody living in any of these listed cities that may have heard or know 
anything first hand about any of these listed sites???

  http://www.theshadowlands.net/places/newjersey.htm

  Joe

___
UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org
attend wwrug12 www.wwrug12.com ARSList: Where the Answers Are

Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-16 Thread Boyd, Rebecca
I grew in South Jersey. I can’t vouch for any of these tales, but I can
tell you there’s over a million acres of pines trees  sand called the
“Pine Barrens” in NJ.


The Pine Barrens are as beautiful, lonely  creepy as it gets. Miles 
miles of two lane roads with scrubby pine trees on either side. Every so
often there’s a sandy one lane trail off to one side or the other. Turn off
onto one of these roads. It just gets lonelier  creepier. You might find a
quarry but don’t get too close – you could be up to your knees in sand 
still sinking before you know it. You might see an old wreck of an
abandoned car with bullet holes in every square inch.

And then there are the remains of what looks like an animal carcass. Now
try to find your way back out to the main road.


The Pine Barrens is where the Jersey Devil is said to live. It was also an
episode of The Sopranos, the one where Paulie  Christopher take a Russian
mobster into the woods (the Pine Barrens), end up getting lost  have to
spend the night in an abandoned vehicle.


No wonder many of the places listed on the web page are in or around the
Pine Barrens.





On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 4:51 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.netwrote:

 **

 Is there any truth to it??? Was it ever investigated? Or is it just a
 widespread rumor?


  *From:* Jim Manara jim.man...@thecambiaregroup.com
 *Sent:* Friday, March 16, 2012 4:31 PM
 *Newsgroups:* public.remedy.arsystem.general
 *To:* arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
 *Subject:* Re: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

 **
 I grew up in Raritan, NJ and the old librarian is the mother of 4 boys.
 No wonder she is still moving around checking that things are the way they
 are supposed to be.  Like we do when we send test transactions through our
 systems.  Thanks for the memories.

 Jim Manara
 480-273-0934




   Original Message 
 Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true
 From: Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net
 Date: Fri, March 16, 2012 1:20 pm
 To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG

 **

 I tend to have an interest in ‘supernatural’ phenomenon's, and a random
 search for haunted places in New Jersey yielded this result.. I really
 wonder how many of these are really authentic claims.. My guess leans
 towards none..

 Anybody living in any of these listed cities that may have heard or know
 anything first hand about any of these listed sites???

 http://www.theshadowlands.net/places/newjersey.htm

 Joe

 _attend WWRUG12 www.wwrug.com ARSlist: Where the Answers Are_




-- 
Rebecca Boyd
Application Administrator
Wake Forest University

___
UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org
attend wwrug12 www.wwrug12.com ARSList: Where the Answers Are


Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true....

2012-03-16 Thread Joe Martin D'Souza

Define lonely and creepy :-).. If you mean deathly quiet, its actually 
inviting.. I have been to a few places around South Jersey, and from that site, 
they make Cape May to be the most haunted town in Jersey.. I actually liked 
that town for its natural – almost untouched landscape.. Those little streams 
and small waterfalls (I think its called Childs Fall) were pretty places..

Sinking sand is not as treacherous as it is made out to be. if you can swim in 
water which is a whole lot less denser than sinking sand , you can ‘swim’ on 
sinking sand.. The key here is swim – and not try to walk or run away.. you 
literally lay down and crawl out of it as if you were swimming.. So unless 
there is some deadly creature like an alligator or a crocodile around, there is 
not much to worry about.. I had seen a show once on Discovery channel where 
some expert said it’s the fear and myth around how dangerous sinking sand can 
be, that makes most people panic and become victims of it..

Joe


From: Boyd, Rebecca 
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 5:40 PM
Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
Subject: Re: Wonder how many of these tales are true

** 
I grew in South Jersey. I can’t vouch for any of these tales, but I can tell 
you there’s over a million acres of pines trees  sand called the “Pine 
Barrens” in NJ.



The Pine Barrens are as beautiful, lonely  creepy as it gets. Miles  miles of 
two lane roads with scrubby pine trees on either side. Every so often there’s a 
sandy one lane trail off to one side or the other. Turn off onto one of these 
roads. It just gets lonelier  creepier. You might find a quarry but don’t get 
too close – you could be up to your knees in sand  still sinking before you 
know it. You might see an old wreck of an abandoned car with bullet holes in 
every square inch. 


And then there are the remains of what looks like an animal carcass. Now try to 
find your way back out to the main road.




The Pine Barrens is where the Jersey Devil is said to live. It was also an 
episode of The Sopranos, the one where Paulie  Christopher take a Russian 
mobster into the woods (the Pine Barrens), end up getting lost  have to spend 
the night in an abandoned vehicle.



No wonder many of the places listed on the web page are in or around the Pine 
Barrens.








On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 4:51 PM, Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net wrote:

  ** 

  Is there any truth to it??? Was it ever investigated? Or is it just a 
widespread rumor?


  From: Jim Manara 
  Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 4:31 PM
  Newsgroups: public.remedy.arsystem.general
  To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG 
  Subject: Re: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true

  ** 
  I grew up in Raritan, NJ and the old librarian is the mother of 4 boys.  No 
wonder she is still moving around checking that things are the way they are 
supposed to be.  Like we do when we send test transactions through our systems. 
 Thanks for the memories.


  Jim Manara
  480-273-0934





 Original Message 
Subject: OT: Wonder how many of these tales are true
From: Joe Martin D'Souza jdso...@shyle.net
Date: Fri, March 16, 2012 1:20 pm
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG

** 

I tend to have an interest in ‘supernatural’ phenomenon's, and a random 
search for haunted places in New Jersey yielded this result.. I really wonder 
how many of these are really authentic claims.. My guess leans towards none..

Anybody living in any of these listed cities that may have heard or know 
anything first hand about any of these listed sites???

http://www.theshadowlands.net/places/newjersey.htm

Joe
  _attend WWRUG12 www.wwrug.com ARSlist: Where the Answers Are_ 



-- 
Rebecca Boyd
Application Administrator
Wake Forest University

_attend WWRUG12 www.wwrug.com ARSlist: Where the Answers Are_

___
UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org
attend wwrug12 www.wwrug12.com ARSList: Where the Answers Are