I would like to let you know I'm dyslexia, so I'll do my best to tell the story as how it happened.
I planned to take my son to see his father's side of the family one evening. Before setting of with my son, I checked my car to make sure it could do the journey safely without any blips. Although my first instinct was it may not be wise to travel at such a late time with my son, I decided it was good as there would be less traffic and I am a night owl anyway. With my son securely strapped in the car and myself, we left Bendigo Vic (Where I live) for Port Pirie.
My son was sleeping whilst I enjoyed the drive. At about 3am I was about 200km from Port Pirie SA when I got a really uneasy feeling. I looked out of my window and my eyes immediately locked onto a shadow of something flying up in one of the rocky hillsides. It looked like a man with wings. It did not look to be from this world!
I have seen and heard of a lot of unexplainable things in my time and this was definitely unexplainable. I have seen and heard of a lot of unexplainable things in my time and this was definitely unexplainable. The sighting perturbed me so much that I vowed never to drive at night again unless it was my hometown.
After this encounter there have been times were things have happened whilst I have been driving but I have shrugged these of as lost souls sadly.
Please help me to work out what this may have been or if you have seen anything like this before?
Thank you for reading my story I hope we can put are heads together and work this one out as I know I did not feel safe around this thing!
I read an account of a living pterodactyl found incased in rock in Africa, sometime in the early to mid 1900's. Apparently, it just flew out startling everyone. Of course, scientests would not accept these accounts, even though a scientest or scientests were witnesses to it and had no doubt of what they'd seen. "Extinct for millions of years" ha ha and blah blah blah, a closed mouth gathers no feet. The scientific community suffers from a seriously sad case of know-it-allism.