Writer Dannye Chase (Posts tagged bermuda triangle)

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A grayscale photo of five U.S. Navy Grumman TBF-1 Avengers (small fighter planes) flying in a line over Norfolk, Virginia (USA), on 1 September 1942. Public domain image.ALT

On this day in 1945, a group of five US Navy Planes known as Flight 19 vanished in the Bermuda Triangle. Such accidents unfortunately do happen. So why is Flight 19 so famous? Because after the disappearance, people made up a bunch of stuff about space aliens. No, really.

Flight 19 was led by US Navy Lieutenant Charles Carroll Taylor. The other aviators were his student pilots for the exercise, and their crews. They took off around 2 pm from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

In 1945, there was no GPS, so pilots found their way by various means, including dead reckoning using elapsed time, compasses, and simply looking out the window. Unfortunately for aviators in the Florida area, there are a lot of little islands down there that look alike.

Lt. Taylor was having a very confusing flight. The training exercise involved flying east to the Bahamas, then north for a while, then southwest to complete the triangle and return to Florida. But when Taylor reached the Bahamas by flying east, he somehow thought he was 200 miles to the southwest, over the Florida Keys. So then he tried to take the flight further east to where he expected the mainland to be. But of course, east from the Bahamas will lead you out to open ocean, and that’s where Flight 19 ended up.

No one knows how Taylor made the bizarre error and why he stuck to his strange belief of being over the Keys in the face of mounting contrary evidence. It’s possible his compass may have been broken, and he may not have had a watch to help with dead reckoning. But when the mainland of Florida did not appear below, he should have believed what his eyes were telling him. In fact, it’s such an inconceivable mistake that writers made up aliens to explain it.

The radio tower, who in 1945 also could not tell exactly where Flight 19 was, tried to guide him, but it didn’t help. Some of the student pilots were heard on the radio urging Taylor to fly west, showing they were not confused about where they were and presumably had working compasses. But no one deserted the group and saved themselves, possibly because that would be going against military discipline.

Check out the blog post for the whole story and writing prompts, such as:

“The ocean doesn’t look as it should.” This fake quote has a lot of possibilities. One way to go would be to have something Very Seriously Wrong with the ocean: for example, it’s red, it’s boiling, or it’s not the ocean anymore but some strange landscape. Or you could have things gradually get creepy, slowly building dread. For example, what if every once in a while, the waves run backwards, like you’re watching a video rewind? Or if the water looks normal, but it seems thicker, moving more like honey?

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ The Vampire Haven erotic romance series ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers

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vanishing disappearance flight 19 bermuda triangle scifi prompt blogging fantasy prompt writing community writeblogging horror prompt Weird Wednesday blog writers on tumblr writing Dannye writes writing inspiration writing prompts writeblr
A grayscale photo of five U.S. Navy Grumman TBF-1 Avengers (small fighter planes) flying in a line over Norfolk, Virginia (USA), on 1 September 1942. Public domain image.ALT

On this day in 1945, a group of five US Navy Planes known as Flight 19 vanished in the Bermuda Triangle. Such accidents unfortunately do happen. So why is Flight 19 so famous? Because after the disappearance, people made up a bunch of stuff about space aliens. No, really.

Flight 19 was led by US Navy Lieutenant Charles Carroll Taylor. The other aviators were his student pilots for the exercise, and their crews. They took off around 2 pm from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

In 1945, there was no GPS, so pilots found their way by various means, including dead reckoning using elapsed time, compasses, and simply looking out the window. Unfortunately for aviators in the Florida area, there are a lot of little islands down there that look alike.

Lt. Taylor was having a very confusing flight. The training exercise involved flying east to the Bahamas, then north for a while, then southwest to complete the triangle and return to Florida. But when Taylor reached the Bahamas by flying east, he somehow thought he was 200 miles to the southwest, over the Florida Keys. So then he tried to take the flight further east to where he expected the mainland to be. But of course, east from the Bahamas will lead you out to open ocean, and that’s where Flight 19 ended up.

No one knows how Taylor made the bizarre error and why he stuck to his strange belief of being over the Keys in the face of mounting contrary evidence. It’s possible his compass may have been broken, and he may not have had a watch to help with dead reckoning. But when the mainland of Florida did not appear below, he should have believed what his eyes were telling him. In fact, it’s such an inconceivable mistake that writers made up aliens to explain it.

The radio tower, who in 1945 also could not tell exactly where Flight 19 was, tried to guide him, but it didn’t help. Some of the student pilots were heard on the radio urging Taylor to fly west, showing they were not confused about where they were and presumably had working compasses. But no one deserted the group and saved themselves, possibly because that would be going against military discipline.

Check out the blog post for the whole story and writing prompts, such as:

“The ocean doesn’t look as it should.” This fake quote has a lot of possibilities. One way to go would be to have something Very Seriously Wrong with the ocean: for example, it’s red, it’s boiling, or it’s not the ocean anymore but some strange landscape. Or you could have things gradually get creepy, slowly building dread. For example, what if every once in a while, the waves run backwards, like you’re watching a video rewind? Or if the water looks normal, but it seems thicker, moving more like honey?

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ The Vampire Haven erotic romance series ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers

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Dannye writes writing inspiration writing prompts writing writers on tumblr writeblr writeblogging writing community Weird Wednesday blog blogging scifi prompt fantasy prompt horror prompt bermuda triangle flight 19 disappearance vanishing
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Want to write a mystery based on history? Check out my blog for posts about the unsolved past, with writing prompts!

Roopkund Lake Skeletons: unexplained remains of at least 300 people found at an isolated lake in the Indian Himalayas, from 800 and 1800 CE

The Beast of Gevaudan: History’s most well-documented werewolf, France, 1764

The Mystery of the Moving Coffins: tales of supposed unexplained movement of heavy coffins in burial vaults, most well-known in Barbados, 1808-19

The Female Stranger: unidentified decedent, Virginia (US), 1816

Spring-Heeled Jack: well-documented apparition or cryptid, England 1837-1904

The ghost ships Mary Celeste (1872) and Carroll A. Deering (1920)

Lizzie Borden: unsolved double murder, Massachusetts (US), 1892

The Flannan Isles Vanishing: disappearance of three lighthouse keepers, Scotland, 1900

Disappearance of Everett Ruess: missing person in the Utah (US) desert, 1934

Planes lost in the Bermuda Triangle: Flight 19 (1945) and The Star Tiger and Star Ariel, (1948-49)

Dyatlov Pass: mysterious deaths of 9 hikers, Ural Mountains, 1959

A werewolf prompt:

Escapist fiction. It’s possible the Beast of Gevaudan was not a wolf or dog, but another large creature, like a hyena or lion. Local zoos would have been private, so who knows what people were keeping? Obviously, once the killing started, the owner would have taken down the lost pet posters, so nobody owned up to owning the beast. People were not expecting to see anything other than local creatures in the woods, and they might not have had much familiarity with lions anyway, so it would probably make sense for them to call it a “wolf.” As for plots, there’s room for a sweeping historical novel starting in the place where the wild beast was captured, on the ship sending it to France, in the private zoo, and then out into the woods to become the Beast. Or what if it was not one lion that escaped, but a breeding pair? How would the locals cope with a growing population of big cats in the woods?

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers

ghost ship bermuda triangle vanishing unsolved mystery historical mysteries unsolved mysteries fantasy prompt scifi prompt writing community Weird Wednesday blog writers on tumblr writeblr writing writeblogging writing prompts Dannye writes writing inspiration blogging horror prompt

Want to write a mystery based on history? Check out my blog for posts about the unsolved past, with writing prompts!

Roopkund Lake Skeletons: unexplained remains of at least 300 people found at an isolated lake in the Indian Himalayas, from 800 and 1800 CE

The Beast of Gevaudan: History’s most well-documented werewolf, France, 1764

The Mystery of the Moving Coffins: tales of supposed unexplained movement of heavy coffins in burial vaults, most well-known in Barbados, 1808-19

The Female Stranger: unidentified decedent, Virginia (US), 1816

Spring-Heeled Jack: well-documented apparition or cryptid, England 1837-1904

The ghost ships Mary Celeste (1872) and Carroll A. Deering (1920)

Lizzie Borden: unsolved double murder, Massachusetts (US), 1892

The Flannan Isles Vanishing: disappearance of three lighthouse keepers, Scotland, 1900

Disappearance of Everett Ruess: missing person in the Utah (US) desert, 1934

Planes lost in the Bermuda Triangle: Flight 19 (1945) and The Star Tiger and Star Ariel, (1948-49)

Dyatlov Pass: mysterious deaths of 9 hikers, Ural Mountains, 1959

A werewolf prompt:

Escapist fiction. It’s possible the Beast of Gevaudan was not a wolf or dog, but another large creature, like a hyena or lion. Local zoos would have been private, so who knows what people were keeping? Obviously, once the killing started, the owner would have taken down the lost pet posters, so nobody owned up to owning the beast. People were not expecting to see anything other than local creatures in the woods, and they might not have had much familiarity with lions anyway, so it would probably make sense for them to call it a “wolf.” As for plots, there’s room for a sweeping historical novel starting in the place where the wild beast was captured, on the ship sending it to France, in the private zoo, and then out into the woods to become the Beast. Or what if it was not one lion that escaped, but a breeding pair? How would the locals cope with a growing population of big cats in the woods?

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers

Dannye writes writing inspiration writing prompts writing writers on tumblr writeblr writeblogging writing community Weird Wednesday blog blogging scifi prompt fantasy prompt horror prompt unsolved mysteries historical mysteries mystery unsolved vanishing bermuda triangle ghost ship
holycatsandrabbits
holycatsandrabbits

A grayscale photo of five U.S. Navy Grumman TBF-1 Avengers flying in a line over Norfolk, Virginia (USA), on 1 September 1942. Public domain image. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Grumman_TBF-1_Avengers_of_VGS-29_in_flight_over_Norfolk,_Virginia_(USA),_on_1_September_1942_(80-G-427475).jpgALT

Hey, y’all, it’s Weird Wednesday! Where on some Wednesdays, I blog about weird stuff and give writing prompts.

Today: The Disappearance of Flight 19: The Bermuda Triangle’s Most Bizarre Mystery (Even Without Aliens)

Welcome on this Weird Wednesday! Today we’re taking a flight into the Bermuda Triangle in search of what is probably its most famous “paranormal” disappearance: Flight 19.

Flight 19 was actually a group of five US Navy planes on a training exercise on December 5, 1945. They vanished somewhere off the coast of Florida with the loss of 14 men. Why is Flight 19 so famous? Because after the disappearance, people made up a bunch of stuff about space aliens. No, really.

“Everything looks wrong, strange, the ocean doesn’t look as it should. Don’t come after us. They look like they’re from outer space!”

Yeah, so nobody actually said that. Magazine and book writers made it up (as we writers tend to do, only it’s probably better if we admit it). But Flight 19 really did disappear. So what happened? Here's what we know:

Flight 19 was led by US Navy Lieutenant Charles Carroll Taylor. The other aviators were his student pilots for the exercise, and their crews. They took off around 2 pm from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Lt. Taylor was having a very confusing flight. The training exercise involved flying east to the Bahamas, then north for a while, then southwest to complete the triangle and return to Florida. But when Taylor reached the Bahamas by flying east, he somehow thought he was 200 miles to the southwest, over the Florida Keys. So then he tried to take the flight east to the mainland. But of course, east from the Bahamas will lead you out to open ocean, and that’s where Flight 19 ended up.

No one knows how Taylor made the bizarre error and why he stuck to his strange belief of being over the Keys in the face of mounting contrary evidence. It’s possible his compass may have been broken, and he may not have had a watch to help with dead reckoning. But when the mainland of Florida did not appear below, he should have believed what his eyes were telling him. In fact, it’s such an inconceivable mistake that writers made up aliens to explain it.

Check out the blog post for the whole story and some writing prompts, such as: 

“The ocean doesn’t look as it should.” This fake quote has a lot of possibilities. One way to go would be to have something Very Seriously Wrong with the ocean: for example, it’s red, it’s boiling, or it’s not the ocean anymore but some strange landscape. Or you could have things gradually get creepy, slowly building dread. For example, what if every once in a while, the waves run backwards, like you’re watching a video rewind? Or if the water looks normal, but it seems thicker, moving more like honey?

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers 

Image credit

aliens disappearance vanishing bermuda triangle flight 19 scifi horror blogging writeblr writeblogging writers on tumblr writing community writing scifi prompt writing prompts writing inspiration Dannye writes Weird Wednesday blog horror prompt fantasy prompt fantasy
A grayscale photo of five U.S. Navy Grumman TBF-1 Avengers flying in a line over Norfolk, Virginia (USA), on 1 September 1942. Public domain image. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Grumman_TBF-1_Avengers_of_VGS-29_in_flight_over_Norfolk,_Virginia_(USA),_on_1_September_1942_(80-G-427475).jpgALT

Hey, y’all, it’s Weird Wednesday! Where on some Wednesdays, I blog about weird stuff and give writing prompts.

Today: The Disappearance of Flight 19: The Bermuda Triangle’s Most Bizarre Mystery (Even Without Aliens)

Welcome on this Weird Wednesday! Today we’re taking a flight into the Bermuda Triangle in search of what is probably its most famous “paranormal” disappearance: Flight 19.

Flight 19 was actually a group of five US Navy planes on a training exercise on December 5, 1945. They vanished somewhere off the coast of Florida with the loss of 14 men. Why is Flight 19 so famous? Because after the disappearance, people made up a bunch of stuff about space aliens. No, really.

“Everything looks wrong, strange, the ocean doesn’t look as it should. Don’t come after us. They look like they’re from outer space!”

Yeah, so nobody actually said that. Magazine and book writers made it up (as we writers tend to do, only it’s probably better if we admit it). But Flight 19 really did disappear. So what happened? Here’s what we know:

Flight 19 was led by US Navy Lieutenant Charles Carroll Taylor. The other aviators were his student pilots for the exercise, and their crews. They took off around 2 pm from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Lt. Taylor was having a very confusing flight. The training exercise involved flying east to the Bahamas, then north for a while, then southwest to complete the triangle and return to Florida. But when Taylor reached the Bahamas by flying east, he somehow thought he was 200 miles to the southwest, over the Florida Keys. So then he tried to take the flight east to the mainland. But of course, east from the Bahamas will lead you out to open ocean, and that’s where Flight 19 ended up.

No one knows how Taylor made the bizarre error and why he stuck to his strange belief of being over the Keys in the face of mounting contrary evidence. It’s possible his compass may have been broken, and he may not have had a watch to help with dead reckoning. But when the mainland of Florida did not appear below, he should have believed what his eyes were telling him. In fact, it’s such an inconceivable mistake that writers made up aliens to explain it.

Check out the blog post for the whole story and some writing prompts, such as: 

“The ocean doesn’t look as it should.” This fake quote has a lot of possibilities. One way to go would be to have something Very Seriously Wrong with the ocean: for example, it’s red, it’s boiling, or it’s not the ocean anymore but some strange landscape. Or you could have things gradually get creepy, slowly building dread. For example, what if every once in a while, the waves run backwards, like you’re watching a video rewind? Or if the water looks normal, but it seems thicker, moving more like honey?

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers 

Image credit

Dannye writes Weird Wednesday blog writing prompts writing inspiration horror prompt scifi prompt fantasy prompt writing writers on tumblr writeblr writeblogging writing community blogging horror scifi fantasy flight 19 bermuda triangle vanishing disappearance aliens
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A public domain image titled “Mary Celeste as Amazon in 1861 (cropped)” of a painting of a sailing ship. Attribution:  Unconfirmed, possibly Honore Pellegrin (1800–c.1870).  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary_Celeste_as_Amazon_in_1861_(cropped).jpgALT

Want to write a missing person mystery? There are 4 posts about historical vanishings on my Weird Wednesday blog, with writing prompts!

The Mary Celeste, 1872 ghost ship

The Flannan Isles, 1900 vanishing of lighthouse keepers

The Carroll A. Deering, 1921 ghost ship

The Star Tiger and Star Ariel, 1940's planes lost in the Bermuda Triangle

A prompt:

They look like they’re from outer space! This is probably the most popular Bermuda Triangle theory out there (pun intended). The warning “Don’t come after me. They look like they’re from outer space!” was a later addition to the story of the disappearance of Flight 19, which was five US Navy planes on an exercise in the Bermuda Triangle in 1945. For aliens, the Triangle could be a hunting ground, a favorite galactical vacation destination, a flying saucer race course, or a science lab. Perhaps aliens are hiding an undersea factory (possibly in the sunken city/state of Atlantis) or concealing something else that no human can be allowed to see. Or it could be benevolent: if the planes were fated to crash, maybe aliens rescued the passengers and crew and took them off-world.

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers 

Image credit

flannan isles lighthouse bermuda triangle ghost ship mystery disappearance history's mysteries horror prompt vanishing blogging writing writing inspiration Dannye writes writing prompts writeblogging writeblr writing community scifi prompt fantasy prompt writers on tumblr Weird Wednesday blog
A public domain image titled “Mary Celeste as Amazon in 1861 (cropped)” of a painting of a sailing ship. Attribution:  Unconfirmed, possibly Honore Pellegrin (1800–c.1870).  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mary_Celeste_as_Amazon_in_1861_(cropped).jpgALT

Want to write a missing person mystery? There are 4 posts about historical vanishings on my Weird Wednesday blog, with writing prompts!

The Mary Celeste, 1872 ghost ship

The Flannan Isles, 1900 vanishing of lighthouse keepers

The Carroll A. Deering, 1921 ghost ship

The Star Tiger and Star Ariel, 1940’s planes lost in the Bermuda Triangle

A prompt:

They look like they’re from outer space! This is probably the most popular Bermuda Triangle theory out there (pun intended). The warning “Don’t come after me. They look like they’re from outer space!” was a later addition to the story of the disappearance of Flight 19, which was five US Navy planes on an exercise in the Bermuda Triangle in 1945. For aliens, the Triangle could be a hunting ground, a favorite galactical vacation destination, a flying saucer race course, or a science lab. Perhaps aliens are hiding an undersea factory (possibly in the sunken city/state of Atlantis) or concealing something else that no human can be allowed to see. Or it could be benevolent: if the planes were fated to crash, maybe aliens rescued the passengers and crew and took them off-world.

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers 

Image credit

Dannye writes writing inspiration writing prompts writing writers on tumblr writeblr writeblogging writing community Weird Wednesday blog blogging scifi prompt fantasy prompt horror prompt vanishing history's mysteries disappearance mystery ghost ship bermuda triangle flannan isles lighthouse
holycatsandrabbits
holycatsandrabbits

Carroll A. Deering as seen from the Cape Lookout lightship on January 28, 1921. (US Coast Guard) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Deering2.jpgALT

In the mood for some creepy tales of the sea? Want to write one of your own?

There are 4 ocean mysteries on my Weird Wednesday blog, with writing prompts!

The Flannan Isles Vanishing: The Mysterious Disappearance of Three Lighthouse Keepers

Phantom Islands: The Isle of Demons, Fata Morgana Land, and of course, Atlantis

Carroll A. Deering: 1920’s Ghost Ship (pictured above)

Megalodon: Monster Shark

Superstition and the Sea

The Mary Celeste: Famous Mystery of the Sea

Vanished Planes: The Loss of the Star Tiger and Star Ariel in the Bermuda Triangle

The Devil Whale: Island or Sea Monster?

Prompt for the Carroll A. Deering:

What is that thing? Possible paranormal explanations: sea monsters; the bad luck of a run-in with another ghost ship like the Flying Dutchman; or the ship secretly transporting something paranormally dangerous, like a piece of an alien craft, dead bodies, or dead bodies which unfortunately turn out not to be entirely dead (vampires, zombies, etc).

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers

Image credit

mystery flannan lighthouse flannan isles bermuda triangle megalodon ghost ship phantom islands sea superstition the sea fantasy prompt writing writing inspiration Dannye writes writers on tumblr writing community Weird Wednesday blog scifi prompt writeblr writing prompts writeblogging blogging horror prompt
Carroll A. Deering as seen from the Cape Lookout lightship on January 28, 1921. (US Coast Guard) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Deering2.jpgALT

In the mood for some creepy tales of the sea? Want to write one of your own?

There are 8 ocean mysteries on my Weird Wednesday blog, with writing prompts!

The Flannan Isles Vanishing: The Mysterious Disappearance of Three Lighthouse Keepers

Phantom Islands: The Isle of Demons, Fata Morgana Land, and of course, Atlantis

Carroll A. Deering: 1920’s Ghost Ship (pictured above)

Megalodon: Monster Shark

Superstition and the Sea

The Mary Celeste: Famous Mystery of the Sea

Vanished Planes: The Loss of the Star Tiger and Star Ariel in the Bermuda Triangle

The Devil Whale: Island or Sea Monster?

Prompt for the Carroll A. Deering:

What is that thing? Possible paranormal explanations: sea monsters; the bad luck of a run-in with another ghost ship like the Flying Dutchman; or the ship secretly transporting something paranormally dangerous, like a piece of an alien craft, dead bodies, or dead bodies which unfortunately turn out not to be entirely dead (vampires, zombies, etc).

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers

Image credit

Dannye writes writing inspiration writing prompts writing writers on tumblr writeblr writeblogging writing community Weird Wednesday blog blogging scifi prompt fantasy prompt horror prompt the sea sea superstition phantom islands ghost ship megalodon bermuda triangle flannan isles flannan lighthouse mystery