Are you having a special event
that you want to record for posterity?
Hand out DVD as a keepsake to
family, and friends.
Publish video on you tub that
helps promote your business.
If so
Contact Matt Capps for details
618-535-6914
or e-mail matt@avalonn.com
Video:
Smart Strand carpet challenge.
Ghost
hunting
Featured Video Presentation
SmartStrand Carpet has been under six elephants,
three camels and a a rhinoceros. How's it holding up? TV personality
Chip Wade shows off the carpet after its been in the enclosures
for a week. These Dallas Zoo animals have really put the carpet
through its paces. Check it out and look for the results of the
SmartStrand Zoo Challenge soon!
In recent years there has been an up tick in the phenomena of
paranormal investigations or what is more commonly called ghost
hunting. Ghost hunting is when a group of investigators goes to
a location that is reported to be haunted by ghosts.
Typically a ghost hunting team will attempt to collect evidence
using special equipment such as EMF meters, digital thermometer,
hand held digital cameras, and digital audio equipment.
While many groups claim to utilize scientific methods in their
search for the paranormal, science cannot confirm the existence
of ghosts.
The popularity of ghost hunting can be contributed to the Internet,
motion pictures, and popular cable TV shows. These along with
the increasing availability of high-tech equipment are thought
to be responsible for the boom in ghost hunting. Despite its lack
of acceptance in academic circles, the popularity of ghost hunting
reality shows have a number of individuals to take up the pursuit.
However it should be noted that 35 % of the population of the
United States does believe in ghosts.
Jerseyville Carpet, Furniture, Bedding,
Appliance, & TV Galleries
1672 S. State street
Jerseyville il 62052
618-639-9858
Call 618-639-9858
Ask for Matt
For the best price on flat screen
TV's
Calhoun County Paranormal
Water on the moon
The ladys from Calhoun County Paranormal
Avalonn.com will be publishing 2 original video
productions in the next few weeks. Both shows have a Halloween
theme to them and will take place in Kampsville and Jerseyville
Illinois.
The first of the two Internet broadcasts is a show about ghost
hunting. We will be ghost hunting with Calhoun
County Paranormal. The video shoot for this has already been
completed and it is currently in postproduction. Matt Capps, Al
Mozier, and Terry McBride from full flight productions traveled
to Kampsville on October the 15th to tape a actual ghost hunt
at a haunted café in down town Kampsville.
The production team arrived on location about an hour before sunset
to video the CCP investigators as they used their ghost hunting
equipment to detect and capture evidence of paranormal activity.
Co founders Shana Wankel, and Rita Doe along with CCP investigator
Theresa Moore conducted the investigation on camera. This video
will be published in early November.
The second Halloween themed video will be taped on October the
29th at the old Jerseyville Hospital located next to Alexander
Gubser Funeral home in Jerseyville. There we will be conducting
a séance in an attempt to communicate with the spirit world.
This video should be out before Thanksgiving.
Stay tuned to www.avalonn.com for more information.
LOS ANGELES -- When NASA blasted a hole in the moon
last year in search of water, scientists figured there would be
a splash. They just didn't know how big. Now new results from
the Hollywood-esque moonshot reveal lots of water in a crater
where the sun never shines - 41 gallons of ice and vapor.
That may not sound like much - it's what a typical
washing machine uses for a load - but it's almost twice as much
as researchers had initially measured and more than they ever
expected to find.
The estimate represents only what scientists can
see from the debris plume that was kicked up from the high-speed
crash near the south pole by a NASA spacecraft on Oct. 9, 2009.
Mission chief scientist Anthony Colaprete of the
NASA Ames Research Center calculates there could be 1 billion
gallons of water in the crater that was hit - enough to fill 1,500
Olympic-sized swimming pools.
"Where we impacted was quite wet," Colaprete
said, adding there could be more such craters at both the moon's
poles.
Proof that the moon is dynamic and not a dry, desolate
world offers hope for a possible future astronaut outpost where
water on site could be used for drinking or making rocket fuel.