The forest often seems like something eerie and mysterious. The world is full of stories about how unfortunate children and young girls were brought up and thrown into the wilderness, how robbers, predators, and various evil spirits were operating there. Today we will talk about forests that can instill fear due to anomalies, legends, historical facts, and dangerous inhabitants.
Forest of suicides
There is a sinister place in Japan – Aokigahara. It is a dense forest at the foot of Mount Fuji on the island of Honshu, which has been popular with local suicides for more than half a century. Since 1970, the police have carried out regular body searches in Aokigahara and find between 70 and 100 corpses each year. The most common ways of leaving life in the forest is by hanging or poisoning with medication. Of course, the authorities and social organizations are trying to interrupt the tradition and prevent new deaths. There is a sign at the entrance: “Your life is an invaluable gift from your parents” – and a helpline is indicated. However, suicide has not yet ceased. Aokigahara is the second most popular place in the world for goodbye to life after the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Books have been written about the forest of suicides, films have been made, songs are sung that romanticize and popularize this place. For example, in the book by Japanese writer Wataru Tsurumi, The Complete Guide to Suicide, Aokigahara is touted as the best place to die – and she is sometimes found next to bodies.

The Hoya-Bachu Romanian forest
The Hoya-Bachu Romanian forest is known as the paranormal zone. Local residents and some scientists, according to them, observed unidentified flying objects here, heard voices, saw obscure figures and outlines. People called the forest the Bermuda Triangle and try to avoid it, and those who do visit complain of headaches, dizziness, nausea, and other ailments. There are legends about the forest: as if a shepherd with two hundred sheep disappeared here, one woman lost her memory, and once a five-year-old girl disappeared and appeared five years later, without growing up at all. In the 1960s, biology teacher Alexander Sift settled here: he took a large number of photographs of possible UFOs, unidentified glows and silhouettes, and also studied the phenomenon of the “bald” meadow – an absolutely round, devoid of vegetation in the forest, which the locals consider a portal to another measurement. According to local residents, UFOs are more common in this area. Further research was continued by military engineer Emil Barney. He snapped what was later considered by some to be the clearest and most reliable image of a UFO in Europe. Anomalies of the forest were also described by the scientist Adrian Patrut in the book “Phenomena of the Hoya-Bachu Forest”.

Screaming Ghost Forest
Near the English village of Pluckley in Kent, there is the Screaming Forest, which is considered a habitat for ghosts. According to legend, in the 18th century, local residents killed a robber in this forest, and he still wanders and wants to take revenge. In addition to him, a poltergeist is allegedly found in these places and the spirits of other deceased wandering, including the colonel and teacher who hanged themselves from the trees. Local residents claim that screams are heard from the forest early in the morning. They are believed by numerous ghost hunters: tourists come to tickle their nerves and wander among the trees at night, trying to hear something unusual. For example, The Visual Paranormal Investigation team assures that they managed to speak with the spirits of the Screaming Forest.

Cursed forest
In the US, in the state of Vermont, there is a forest with a bad reputation: people disappeared without a trace. Unexplained sounds, unusual atmospheric phenomena and unseen animals in the forest were also reported. Writer and folklorist Joseph Sitrow called this place the Bennington Triangle – by analogy with Bermuda. In his books, he argued that this place is considered cursed since the time of the Indians: they tried to avoid it long before the arrival of the colonists. Stories about bad forests have been present in local folklore since the end of the 19th century. More than ten people are believed to have disappeared here, but only five cases have been documented: all of them occurred between 1945 and 1950. Among the missing are a 74-year-old hunter and fisherman who knew the area well, an 18-year-old student, an 8-year-old boy, an elderly veteran, and a 53-year-old hiker. The body of the latter was found seven months later, the rest were not found, despite a lengthy search.
Satanist sanctuary
Another anomalous forest in the United States is the Freetown Fall River Nature Reserve in southeastern Massachusetts, also called the Bridgewater Triangle: it is believed to be the territory of Satanists, bandits and suicides. According to legends, these lands have long served as a place of cult rites, including sacrifices and ritual killings of animals. There is evidence of ball lightning, giant snakes, mutilated animals, UFOs and other unusual phenomena seen here. According to legends, these places were cursed by the Indians who were angry with the colonists. Their graves remained in the forest. They say that the spirits of the buried aborigines roam the forest and yearn for revenge.

Also, read Reasons Why 3.am Is Considered As Suspicious Time


