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By
Heather Tews
Ross
Allison sounds surprisingly normal for someone who hunts
ghosts in his spare time. Allison is the president and
founder of A.G.H.O.S.T., Amateur Ghost Hunters of Seattle
Tacoma, an organization whose mission is to prove there
is life after death by exploring the existence of ghosts.
A.G.H.O.S.T. is slated to be the largest ghost hunting
organization in the Pacific Northwest with a sister chapter
recently founded in Spokane, and another forming over
the Canadian border. Speaking with Allison it's easy to
see why people would be attracted to his brand of ghost
hunting. A.G.H.O.S.T. does not portend to be an exorcising
or ghost-busting group, in fact they explicitly say as
much on their extensive Web site.
Allison,
and, by extension, the members of this growing organization,
seem devoted to exploring the possibility of ghosts, rather
than touting every little shadowy photo as proof of the
supernatural. Still, it is a spooky hobby, going off to
supposedly haunted spots in search of the very thing most
people would rather avoid. A.G.H.O.S.T. identifies most
of the places it hunts for ghosts through people contacting
the organization believing their house or property is
haunted. These hunts usually result in no findings, according
to Allison; perhaps one in ten exhibits supernatural phenomena.
Also, it often takes multiple visits to a prospective
haunted area to determine the residence of a ghost or
not. The evidence of this one in ten haunting is displayed
on the A.G.H.O.S.T. Web site and although this evidence
is prodigious, it's honestly not very impressive. Most
photos show glowing orbs of light or a misty wisp of fog,
which don't offer much to a hopeful skeptic or a Web surfer
seeking to get a little creeped out on a dark night.
What's
perhaps more impressive is the access A.G.H.O.S.T. has
been given to such rumored haunted places as the Kalakala,
the Bush House and Manresa Castle. Perhaps this is because
A.G.H.O.S.T. takes its mission statement very seriously,
and that certainly brings an air of respect to their work.
They offer Ghostology classes, Sunday evenings from 8-9:30pm,
charging five dollars for non-A.G.H.O.S.T. members. A.G.H.O.S.T.
is an open group, encouraging interested persons to join
their organization. Their ghost hunting services are available
to the general public.
Currently
they are working on a project called the "A.G.H.O.ST.
Challenge" in which they look for three self-proclaimed
ghost skeptics to spend a weekend trip in a haunted place.
Any lucky (unlucky) takers, monitored by A.G.H.O.S.T.
and provided training and ghost hunting equipment, spend
this weekend alone. The idea is that ghosts tend to show
themselves more readily to the nonbeliever than a wily
ghost hunter. While this sounds like the beginning to
countless horror movies, any adventurous skeptics should
contact A.G.H.O.S.T at looking4aghost@yahoo.com. For the
rest of us too chicken shit to spend two nights alone
in some haunted house, A.G.H.O.S.T. is throwing its one-year
anniversary this Halloween at the Timberline in Seattle
from 7pm to midnight, and the evening will culminate with
a sance.
Now That's Some Spooky Shit!
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