Ghost hunters told: ‘Just go…’

Friday 26th November 2010, 10:00AM GMT.

the White House HotelIS HERM the Bailiwick’s most haunted island?Many visitors would say it is the spirit of the island that brings them back year after year and for those of us who live in Herm, its long and rich history is certainly part of what keeps us here.

Members of the Spirit paranormal group last weekend held the first White House Hotel Ghost Hunt to try to answer the question. The two-night event was centred on the hotel, which is closed for winter, although guests stay in hotel cottage rooms on a bed and breakfast basis, with breakfast being taken at the Mermaid.

Spirit members came to the island a couple of times in the autumn to look for signs of the otherworldly in various locations and what they found made them eager to return.

In one of the cottages, they witnessed several moving orbs and streaks of light showing up on photographs of dark rooms. They also clearly recorded a female-sounding voice telling them to ‘go’, while a ghost box provided the words ‘just go’ and ‘get out’.

The White House was no disappointment. Guests were able to spend time with the paranormal team, learning how to use the various pieces of equipment. They were then able to gain hands-on experience as they explored various locations in the hotel.

Spirit co-founder Tim organised the event and was pleased with the results, all of which will be analysed over the next few weeks.

‘There was a lot of activity on one particular vigil,’ he said. ‘We were in a bedroom when we heard what sounded like footsteps of my team coming up the stairs to join us. After a few seconds of wondering why the door hadn’t opened, I went to see if they were coming in, to find nobody there. Checking via our mobile radios, they were on their way up from reception at the time. We recreated this and no footsteps were heard until the stairs outside the room were reached.’

In another part of the hotel, Kevin, one of the guests, saw on camera a dark figure walking through the lounge towards the Monk’s Bar. At the same time, team investigator Kathy was listening to footsteps in the same place.

Jenny Wood mentions this area in her book as the exact place where friends of hers experienced much the same thing many years ago.

There is much more to be discovered and Spirit would like to make the ghost hunts a regular event. Anyone interested in joining them can contact Tim and the team at www.facebook.com/spiritgsy. They are also always on the lookout for new locations – public or private – in Guernsey.

There will always be cynics when it comes to anything paranormal, despite the fact that the island’s past involves such diverse characters as monks, pirates and royalty. But if you’ve ever been caught on the drive or on the common alone at dusk, it can leave you wondering if the ghosts of the thousands of people who have set foot on our little patch of land may not still resonate in the winds and the storms of winter.


  1. 1
    Bill Yeager

    “There will always be cynics when it comes to anything paranormal, despite the fact that the island’s past involves such diverse characters as monks, pirates and royalty”

    What ridiculously dishonest use of the English language. The second half of the statement doesn’t even have any relevance to the first, so the use of the word ‘despite’, which is meant to be followed by a related fact which calls into question the basis of the cynicism, is entirely false. The prevalence of ‘characters’ in the island’s history does not, in any way, provide for a rebuttal of a skeptic’s cynicism about paranormal claims.

    Scepticism, especially in relation to nonsense such as ‘The Paranormal’ is demonstrative of a healthy mind. What worries me most is that these idiots spread their delusion, like a contagion, to the confused and vulnerable, through the ‘normalisation’ of their bizarre and entirely irrational beliefs. We shouldn’t be seeking to promote these practices, instead we should be ridiculing them.

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  2. 2
    S.P.I.R.I.T Gsy

    Re: “What worries me most is that these idiots spread their delusion, like a contagion, to the confused and vulnerable, through the ‘normalisation’ of their bizarre and entirely irrational beliefs.”

    Our investigations are only based upon peoples eye witness accounts, No member of our team promotes any false claims or misleads anybody and members of the public are made aware of this from the very start, we encourage any guest to tell us straight away if they suspect any fakery.

    Our “beliefs” (that you obviously have no idea) would be classed as true open minded skeptics. We investigate other peoples witness accounts using a variety of methods, in an aim to find the truth and gather evidence along the way, not everything that happens is always paranormal and we debunk everything we can before considering the paranormal

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  3. 3
    Bill Yeager

    “not everything that happens is always paranormal”

    Nice try at attempting to sound objective but, actually, nothing that happens is paranormal, ever, unless you have valid evidence to the contrary.

    Now, before you go spouting off about your EVP, or ‘ghost’ boxes, and other assorted, subjective nonsense, please be mindful that the word ‘valid’ comes before the word ‘evidence’. Cobbling together old radio parts and then suffering a bout of apophenia (finding significance in insignificant phenomena), is not good science.

    Skepticism is an approach to accepting, rejecting, or suspending judgment on new information that requires the new information to be well supported by evidence.

    You cannot make a claim to be ‘true open minded skeptics’ if the methodology you are using to reach your conclusions is, at best, suspect.

    You have no real evidence that even supports the existence of the supernatural or paranormal, so I was perfectly correct to describe your perspective on such as a ‘belief’. In that you believe in the, never proven, notion to start with, your subsequent ‘analysis’ of paranormal claims is grossly flawed.

    Sure, you may try and sex-up your credibility by highlighting the fact that you dismiss some claims to the paranormal, but this doesn’t mean that those events you cannot disprove are evidence of the supernatural, it just means that you have insufficient information to explain their cause. Why assert the supernatural as explanation? I’m sure you’ve heard of Occam’s razor!

    Failing that, I’ve got a special stone that stops the sky from falling down if you’re interested. You can’t prove that it doesn’t work and the sky hasn’t fallen in yet, so it must be true, right?

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  4. 4
    Ed

    S.P.I.R.I.T Gsy – you told me in the pub the other day that the big fella, with the red coat, white beard was not coming to my house this year.

    Guernsey Association of Psychics Next meeting – you know where, you know when.

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