Showing posts with label ghost tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghost tours. Show all posts

Monday, May 1, 2017

Macabre Tourism: 10 Ways to Celebrate Death




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Macabre Tourism: 10 Ways to Celebrate Death

April 21, 2017 at 12:44:00 PM EDT | Post a Comment
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Life, the questions of why we’re on this planet, and of course death and all of the mysteries surrounding the great beyond, have captivated the imagination of humankind for as long as we’ve been around. And with such profound thoughts swirling around our brains for millennia on end, we’ve come up with a lot of interesting ways of dealing with and commemorating death. Here’s a somewhat macabre tourist guide of the most intriguing ways our inevitable corporeal demise is celebrated on planet Earth.—Carl Pettit
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Brooklyn's Death Café

Where: New York City
Fancy sitting around with like-minded individuals and discussing the big questions about life—especially those related to the morgue? If you happen to be in New York City, you’re in luck. Brooklyn's historic Green-Wood Cemetery has recently revised the age-old concept of “death cafés,” where folks can gather together and have a good ol’ chat about our mortality over some lovely coffee and snacks. It’s an exceedingly pleasant way to talk about a subject many of us don't find pleasant at all.
Insider Tip: Green-Wood’s death cafés are held once a month and are free to attend, although it’s recommended you RSVP

“Practice” Funerals for the Living

Where: South Korea
Ever wonder what it’d be like to be a corpse? People living in or visiting South Korea can now get a taste of cadaver life without going all in (i.e. actually dying). Special services, often called “death experience schools,” let the darkly curious act out their own funerals, which includes writing out their final testaments and spending some serious alone time in a funeral casket. While some participants might take this exercise lightly, for others it’s a great way to relieve stress and reaffirm their zeal for living. And for those with suicidal thoughts, the experience can help them realize that a continued existence is much better than the alternative.

Ghost Tours in New Orleans

Where: Louisiana
The dead love New Orleans. And why wouldn't they? It’s a great city. Fans of the afterlife keen on opening up a direct conduit to the phantom world have a wide array of tour operators to choose from. Agencies plying their ghoulish trade offer cemetery, ghost, séance, and voodoo tours through the French Quarter, famous graveyards, and other haunted hot spots scattered around The Big Easy. Spend part of your time in the city drinking and dancing with the living, and another part hanging out with the dead.

Pitru Paksha

Where: India
Pitru Paksha is a Hindu funeral rite that’s about nourishment and the afterlife. People offer their ancestors food and water during a 16-day timeframe, which usually rolls around in the autumn. By appeasing one’s ancestors with offerings, the burdens of existence can lessen some, and life can even begin to flourish. Pitru Paksha, which is intertwined with the story of King Karna, as told in the Hindu epic the Mahabharata, can also help ensure a peaceful transition when it comes time for folks to pass from this world on to the next.

The Hungry Ghost Festival

Hungry ghosts have got to chow down too, right? In China, come the seventh month (the “ghost” month) on the Chinese lunar calendar, tasty grub is left out for wandering ghosts in search of a meal. Incense is burned, fake paper money is burned, river lanterns are set afloat, and offerings of food are made to the dead—all with the aim of appeasing one’s ancestral kin. The Hungry Ghost Festival is an important time in China for families to come together and reflect on their collective past.
Insider Tip: The Chinese lunar calendar can be a little tricky for those unaccustomed to it to figure out. Just know that the Hungry Ghost Festival usually takes place mid-to-late summer, and plan your visit to China accordingly.

Anatomy Lab Live

Where: U.K.
Want a meal while taking in an autopsy? Well, if that’s your cup of tea and you’re in Great Britain, Anatomy Lab Live is the perfect dinner theater for you. This traveling spectacle (roaming across the U.K. and Ireland) lets dinner guests witness the dissection of a semi-synthetic human cadaver firsthand. The lifelike corpse employed is synthetic on the outside, but filled with real swine organs and brains on the inside. And while it's a dinner occasion not recommended for the squeamish, it’s definitely a great way to learn about anatomy for those who are curious—and have strong stomachs.
Insider Tip: Check the touring schedule and book in advance (tickets go quickly). If you have specific anatomy questions you want answered, submit those ahead of time as well.

Gai Jatra

Where: Nepal
Gai Jatra—roughly translated as the “festive march” (jatra) of the “sacred cow” (gai) from the Nepali—is a descriptive name that you should take to heart. Every summer during the month of Bhadra, Nepalese hold a procession of cows (or people dressed up as cows) parading down the streets. This colorful display commemorates the deaths of loved ones who have passed over the course of the last year. Cows, which are holy to many in Nepal, act as guides for the deceased during their journey to heaven.
Insider Tip: Katmandu is the best spot to enjoy the revelry of Gai Jatra, although nearby cities like Kirtipur and Patan (both located in the Katmandu Valley) put on a pretty good show too.

Día de Los Muertos

Where: Mexico
Everyone loves the Day of the Dead, or as it’s known in Spanish, el Día de los Muertos. This vibrant national holiday tumbles through Mexico ever year, starting at the beginning of November. Ghoulish yet playful costumes abound and parties take place in the streets and cemeteries, all in the name of celebrating the dead. And while many participants paint their faces up like human skulls, often adorning their grisly getups with flowers and other embellishments, these are the happiest bunch of pseudo-corpses (many possibly inebriated) you’ll likely ever come across. It’s a day that mixes indigenous traditions with Roman Catholicism, allowing people to explore ideas about community, family, and death—and sometimes even social change—in a festive atmosphere.
Insider Tip: While the Day of the Dead parade in the James Bond flick Spectre was a work of fiction (it wasn’t a real tradition) staged for the film, it proved so popular that Mexican officials have now set it up as annual event in Mexico City.

The Towers of Silence

Where: Iran
In the past, practitioners of the ancient religion of Zoroastrianism, living in what is now modern Iran, left their dead outside for extended periods of time as part of their funeral rites. The goal here was putrefaction: allowing carrion-eating vultures and Mother Nature to cleanse the body of impure spirits until all that was left were bleach-white bones. The practice is now banned, but some of the Towers of Silence still stand on barren hills in Yazd, Iran, where corpses were once laid out in circles to let the ravenous birds and the elements do their cleansing.
Insider Tip: The Towers of Silence are open to tourism, but as Iran’s complicated relationship with the West is often in flux, check with relevant officials from your own country about the current political situation before planning a visit.

Famadihana

Where: Madagascar
Sometimes it’s a good idea to dig up your ancestors’ bones and parade them around the village. At least that’s what some people in Madagascar believe. Famadihana, also known as the “turning of the bones,” is a Malagasy funeral tradition in which families crack open ancestral crypts, wrap the bones of the departed up in new cloth, and then dance with the bones held aloft in an attempt to commune with the dead.
Insider Tip: Famadihana only happens once every seven years, which means you might have to do a bit of sleuthing to see which villages in the country’s highlands still practice this rite, and when they plan on exhuming their dead.










Saturday, November 2, 2013

Ghostly Settings=Southern Discomfort(&Ghostly Portraits)


Ghostly settings make for Southern 

discomfort

The Central United Methodist Church in Asheville, N.C., has yielded many photographs with apparations in them, a local tour guide says.
The Central United Methodist Church in Asheville, N.C., has yielded many photographs with apparations in them, a local tour guide says. (MARILYN JONES)
POSTED: October 28, 2013























Live oak trees draped in Spanish moss, centuries-old plantations, and the cries of exotic birds all add to the mystery of the South and help set the scene for ghost tours available in many cities south of the Mason-Dixon Line.
It used to be if you believed in ghosts, you didn't really talk about it. Now, ghost hunting is big business. From shops selling all sorts of ghost-hunting devices to popular television shows, everyone, it seems, is talking about spirits, apparitions, and things that go bump in the night.
Whether you believe in the paranormal or not, good ghost tours can offer a lot more than terrifying stories and third-party experiences; they offer the history of a location, albeit the darker side.

Haunted Vicksburg Ghost Tours

Morgan Gates waits for the last of his charges - and for the sun to set - before beginning his tour. There are eight of us, and Gates begins the tour by reviewing what many already know: the Mississippi city was the center of one of the most significant campaigns during the Civil War, is home to the largest Civil War cemetery in the nation, and was a way station on the Trail of Tears. He adds that Vicksburg is considered one of the most haunted small towns in America.
The first stop is the Old Court House Museum, built between 1858 and 1860, and witness to the Civil War battles that took place all around the city as well as in its heart during May and June 1863.
Gates tells of a young intern working in the museum and her encounter with deceased museum founder Eva Whitaker Davis as she was locking up for the night. Gates is an excellent storyteller. Part historian, part thespian - he paints a picture so expressively that you can imagine the entire scene and the young woman's fear.
The 90-minute tour passes churches, houses, and abandoned buildings, many of which Gates uses as the backdrop for his tales of the paranormal.
In front of Anchuca, an antebellum mansion and bed-and-breakfast, he tells of an incident the current owner experienced.
A water leak in the ceiling of the dining room brought a plumber who couldn't find the source of the leak or any wet areas in the attic. What he did find were two portraits from the 1800s buried under insulation - beautifully framed and in perfect condition. As soon as the portraits were discovered, the leak stopped. Thought to be the husband and wife who once owned the house, the portraits now hang in the mansion's entry hall. Were the spirits of this couple bringing attention to their portraits, to their legacy?
The speculation, the dark streets, the mysteries of this historic city all add to the enjoyment of the ghost tour.

Joshua P. Warren Presents Haunted Asheville

In the world of the paranormal, Joshua P. Warren is a rock star. He's also an author, television and movie consultant, radio personality, and filmmaker - and tour guide when he's not out of town pursuing one of his other enterprises.
This evening, the tour is led by Tadd McDivitt, a lanky young man who talks about his son and pregnant wife as we walk toward our first stop. I feel fortunate that, as on the Vicksburg tour, I am in the hands of a historian who knows how to tell a story.
The tour is in the heart of this North Carolina city of tall office buildings, massive churches, and, even at 10 p.m., busy streets.
At the corner of Biltmore Avenue and Eagle Street, McDivitt tells the story of Will Harris, a madman who escaped from prison and, in a drunken rampage while looking for his girlfriend, shot and killed five men, including two police officers.
The tour includes Central United Methodist Church, where, according to McDivitt, many apparitions have been captured in photographs; and the Battery Park Hotel, where a young lady was murdered in a case that remains unsolved.
At the end of the tour, in the basement of the Masonic Lodge, is the Asheville Mystery Museum, with displays that help illustrate some of the stories McDivitt talked about during the tour.

Sloss Furnaces, Birmingham

Sloss Furnaces, which produced pig iron from 1882 to 1971, is a designated National Historic Landmark. It also has a reputation as one of the most haunted places in Alabama and is listed as one of the top 100 places in the world for paranormal activity.
On this tour, I am alone and it's the middle of the day. Before starting, I read on the self-guided map that to make iron, iron ore, coal, and limestone are dumped into the top of the furnace while superhot air is blasted up from the bottom.
The blast of air burns the coke (coal), releasing gases that react with the iron ore. The limestone acts as a cleaning agent, removing impurities from the ore. Free of impurities, the molten iron is collected in the bottom of the furnace, where it can be drawn off. This is dangerous work. During the operation's long history, thousands of workers lost their lives in accidents.
Following the map, I walk between buildings and down into the stock tunnel where raw materials were weighed and transported to the top of the furnace. I could certainly imagine a presence lurking there even though there were several other visitors touring the tunnel when I was there.
Back up the stairway, I walk past the boilers and around the end of the complex. All at once, it is quiet. I find that odd given the number of men, women, and children I had encountered moments before.
The only sounds are my footfalls on crushed gravel paths that weave around this labyrinth of brick buildings, massive pipes and valves, stack pipes and stairways.
Past the blower building and hot blast stoves, I find myself at the No. 1 furnace and cast shed, where the molten iron came out and flowed into floor castings with a long trench called the sow and smaller trenches off the sow called piglets, which is where the term "pig iron" originated.
With the exception of taking a few more photos, this is the end of my tour. And no, I didn't encounter any spirits and I haven't found any lurking in my photographs. What I found instead was a new appreciation for the men who worked in this grueling industry; maybe that's the true spirit of Sloss.

slossfurnaces.com 205-324-1911