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UFO inspired metal boxes still vex experts while someone is taking the boxes away

Metal boxes still vex experts while someone is taking the boxes away

FLORENCE, Ore. – There are many theories about strange metal boxes that started appearing along Oregon and West Coast beaches last week; while Feb. 15 brings new but vague answers.

In a world where people see lots of strange things on the Internet every day, something as interesting and unusual as these strange metal boxes has produced both suspicion and an unruly feeling of disorientation in people who can’t figure out what the boxes are, or where they came from. In turn, those who both viewed and touched a grouping of the boxes at a Florence beach Feb. 15 gave the boxes a sort of suspicious sideways squint. The boxes first surfaced as a story on Huliq last week after local UFO fans relating recent sightings at nearby Stonefield Beach. These UFO fans then pointed to “strange metal boxes” that “were revealed” after a recent UFO sightings. They said the boxes appeared “out of the blue,” while other locals simply said the boxes have the makings for yet more UFO lore; with people either believing or not believing. However, the metal boxes by themselves are something that is very real. So real, in fact, that William Hanshumaker, a Ph.D in marine education, and a member of the “Oregon Sea Grant Faculty” at the nearby Hatfield Marine Science Center, in Newport, has been investigating the “boxes” for the past week.

Strange boxes investigated

As of Feb. 15, Doctor Hanshumaker still doesn’t have a clue what the boxes are. Meanwhile, this marine science expert has passed around photos of the boxes – that are reported up and down West Coast beaches – and he said there is no consensus as to “what” the boxes are.

Sure, there’s been speculation that these “strange metal boxes” are possible docking pieces from oyster farms over in Japan -- that broke apart after the March 2011 earthquake and Tsunami that also slammed West Coast beaches, but how could something as huge as these boxes travel almost 5,000 miles across the Pacific from Japan to Oregon coastal beaches?

Moreover, Doctor Hanshumaker noted that “the boxes would have barnacles underneath” if they were floating out in the Pacific.

However, seven boxes were examined at local beaches near Florence on Feb. 15, and they’re clean all around with no barnacles but a sort of “membrane” film that can’t be scraped off that covers each of the remaining boxes.

In turn, locals at nearby Stonefield Beach and Bray’s Point – who first noticed the boxes after a late evening UFO sighting Feb. 5 – “with boxes up and down the beach on the morning of Feb. 6,” said a Bray’s Point local named Errol.

Police not involved in box mystery

Due to a lot of local and even international interest in the nature of these strange boxes, the local Florence Police Department was contacted officially Feb. 15. In turn, a police department spokesperson named Sarah told Huliq in an interview that “we have not received any reports or complaints about these boxes.”

Moreover, Sarah stated that “the beaches,” or the “Oregon coast is considered a state highway, and state police have jurisdiction over what’s on the beach.” In turn, the Oregon, Washington and California state police were also contacted, and each department reported no actions being taken to investigate the boxes.

However, police officials did state that it’s illegal for people to take things from coastal beaches; even while it’s common for locals and visitors to take pieces of driftwood.

Someone is taking the boxes

At the same time, boxes were seen being moved by a number of “white trucks” with heavy chains and upwards of four to six people seen pushing and then loading these strange metal boxes into the white trucks.

One local Florence couple – who stopped to exam one metal box – said in a Feb. 15 Huliq interview that “it sure looks unusual.”

Also, the couple said they were "drawn to the box," and that "it felt warm, like nothing we've ever felt before."

People seeing and touching the boxes

“Feel me, touch me, see me,” seems like something these boxes “might be saying to us,” quipped local UFO “watcher” Errol when taking more than 100 images of a group of these metal boxes near his Bray’s Point beach home Feb. 15. “I want to document this before someone runs off with our three boxes down the beach there,” he added with a vividly inventive mind that seemed both self-confident and worried.

Errol then noted with the demeanor of a very capable head football coach that “what we have here is a failure to communicate. We shared our story about UFO sightings, and nobody ever believes that, and then we told you about these boxes appearing, and everybody seemed interested.”

Lilly Moll’s theory about the boxes

While local UFO watcher Errol has the temperament of an underfed grizzly when it comes to those who view him as nuts for his UFO theories, he points to another Bray’s Point local named Lilly Moll who Errol says “generates awe” when it comes to the telling of the strange metal boxes story.

“Something happened here a lot time ago. It was something that altered my view of who I was on this Earth,” explained Moll while sitting on one of these metal boxes near her beach home at Bray’s Point.

Moll, who has this striking exotic quality that Errol say people are attracted to since “she must be in her nineties, and not weigh more than 80 or 90 pounds but she radiates a kind of beauty that’s can’t be explained, but felt deep inside your heart and mind.”

In turn, Moll reveals in a quite enigmatic, cipher quality that “the boxes are not for us to understand. They’re here for now and maybe gone tomorrow. That’s all.”

Image source of a local Florence, Oregon, couple who examine one of many strange metal boxes that literally popped up along West Coast beaches last week. Photo by Dave Masko

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Comments

#1 Scooby-Doo and the gang got

Scooby-Doo and the gang got them boxes now!

#2 yes

I saw them loading the boxes in that van.
The mystery machine!

#3 The hotness that is Errol and his 90 y.o girlfriend

Please, please can we have a photo of cool hand luke quoting 'Errol' (never a last name) who has been the source of so many of Dave Masko's Ufo stories. While you're at it get one of the bewitching 90 year old beauty who was posing on one of the many boxes that no-one can find. Your part of Oregon sounds weird and not in an X files, type way.

#4 ZetaTalk

According to the Zetas the number of these boxes around the world range within the thousands. And they are placed here by aliens to abort sudden and jolting place movements. See poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/mystery-boxes-on-fault-lines-the-zetas-explain

#5 It's a hoax.....total hoax

This story has generated a lot of buzz among the pseudo-science / paranormal crowd (who are willing to believe anything as long as it does NOt have real science involved). But the story is firmly determined to have been a hoax. Lots of us in Yachats here have either looked or know someone who did, and nothing ever turned up. Whatever was there washed away again. Stuff washes up on the beaches here alot - it's winter for heaven's sake. Also....do a search on Masko and you'll see the dozens of publications and officials that have debunked or decried past mis-informative posts, like the one beach magazine that documented how he made up stuff about radiation from japan n stuff coming here. Not a pretty past.

#6 Boxes? We don' need no stinkin' boxes!

I love reading the comments to stories like this. I bet the truth lies somewhere in between stupid hoax and alien invasion. I am from Northern California and am very familiar with the west coast. Oregon beaches are quite similar to the California beaches from the Russian river outlet to the north.
Someone could tell you to meet them at a certain beach up the coast but the chances of finding them there if you are not a local or extremely familiar with the area, you would never find them. Its the needle in a haystack thing.
Boxes? You want to locate a box or boxes someone saw on the beach? Good luck with that. Unless one of the good people in the Huluq article, perhaps Lily Moll, gives us the GPS coordinates of the box she's sitting on, it would be really hard to find unless you were just lucky.
Any idea of how many linear miles of beach there are in Oregon? 363 miles!
I'll plant a few 4' X 4' boxes half buried in the sand somewhere in this 363 mile coastline and we'll see if you can find them. Oh I'll give you a hint by telling you the general area they are reported to have been seen.
My other comment is that it's a well known fact in the UFO disclosure community that when some sort of possible UFO smoking gun is reported, certain people working for certain govt agencies spend a lot of time sending out hoax stories about it; its called "disinformation," and its been very effective over the years in keeping folks laughing about this subject when in fact it's anything but funny~
Lets put out those GPS coordinates people!

#7 economy building boxes

its been a ruff couple of years for the coastal towns economically so if this gives people an excuse to flock towards our coastal community in search of aliens atlantis or the oso retarded notion of humming boxes on the beach. then i say um ya aliens have made contact come check it out stay a wile and dont forget to spend some money you gullible lemmings.

#8 no such boxes

PULLEASSSSE.... This is soooo much a hoax. This guy Dave Masko, who wrote the original story and now has 'updated it (above), is completely non- credible. He also writes baloney about bigfoot and anything else that will make a splash.

When you read the accounts of these boxes, you see some people (according to Dave Masko) claim they showed up around the 6th of Feb. but were all moved away by white trucks. That's supposedly why no one except Dave M. has seen the boxes. But then you see in this latest 'update' that Masko says there were 7 of the boxes on the beach in Florence Or on the 15th of feb.. So are they still there or not?
Masko makes this stuff up, then quotes a reputable scientist who has no comment other than "i have no idea what they might be'. That only proves the guy answered a question on the phone about what sort of boxes might have washed up on the beach. The scientist never even saw a box. Quoting him doesn't make the boxes real.
I live on the oregon coast . Ocean front, as a matter of fact. There are no boxes. Never were any boxes. No one here knows anything about any boxes. By the way ... the update on this page shows a third photo taken by Dave Masko. Not only is it a bad, long distance shot, but isn't it amusing that the ONLY photos of these alleged boxes are taken by this Dave Masko? If there were any boxes, surely someone else besides the guy who made up this fiction, would have taken a photo. What makes a guy start a hoax like this? One more thing. I dare anyone to actually get a hold of this Dave Masko. Google him and see that he lives near florence oregon and writes junk like this all the time. Then get him to post some videos or at least some serious photos of these 'mystery boxes'

#9 Metal Boxes

I can't believe that metal boxes not claimed by anyone were not quickly stolen by those metal recycling freaks that take copper, tin, aluminum, and any other kind of metal that is not tied down...

#10 Consult a dictionary

One more request, how did Ufos ''inspire' the boxes? Are the boxes sentient
now and going to take part in the local art show where they will exhibit paintings they did of Ufo's? See it's not just Dave Masko that can come up with crazy stuff.....

#11 marine science experts and

marine science experts and others have determined that they are - drum roll, please - wood-framed, fiberglass-covered dock floats.

#12 That Warmth

The warmth could be emanating from radio waves or micro waves possible radiation due to the unknown metal. Kinda like our barrels of radiation, this could possibly be theirs dump there garbage before leaving.

#13 Dave Masko

Dave Masko is an idiot that can not be believed. His BIO says he was a reporter for the Defense Department at one time, that is probably a lie but if its true you know THEY lie to us all the time.
No matter how you look at this, Masko's writings were fabricated, cost real people money to investigate and added to the misinformation that permeates the internet.
Dave Masko also gave Florence, OR a black eye and I guess that pisses me off more than anything. If I see you in town Dave, you better believe I will publicly embarrass you which is the least you deserve. Hopefully you sell that old house on Spruce St and move on!