When I saw the craft I saw, I wondered how there were 'portholes' down the length of the craft, as this does not fit the normal stereo type of what
a 'ufo' looks like.
Does he know of other crafts that have been reported like this? I live in central Alabama and am under the impression it was a man made craft.
It was slighty curved in the same fashion on the top and bottom with the 'portholes' horizontally down the side with red light illuminating the
inside. From the side angle I saw it at, I would describe it as cigar shaped, but probably round from a top or bottom perspective.
I only got a look at it for 3 seconds and it darted away on the 3-4 second.
I am wondering if the red light was an exterior feature that I perceived as being portholes or actual windows, when the darting away occured it left a
streak of red light.
How can a craft that moves at that speed have any type of window that does not shatter or break and still do whatever it must do to achieve its
speed?
I am also wondering about the red light because I know that pilots (human) use red light to read maps and not loose their night vision.
The portholes looked similar to the windows of an airliner on a runway at dusk or dawn (interior light on but red instead of white), with a silhouette
of the craft and the red lights being the most noticeable feature.
I have made a thread describing the sighting
here.
This is a seperate question.
I would like to know what the 'iris' ufos are and are they an actual physical object. I have seen them several times locally, once with a friend
who did not want to admit he saw it, as well as other people I have spoken to in person.
The 'iris' ufo is a very white light that 'opens' and 'closes' concentrically from the center from total darkness to a not very large white
light. I thought it was a helicopter spot light at first but there are no other lights visible when the light goes dark.
All of these sighting occured around 2002. I still live in the same area and haven't seen activity of this frequency before or since then.
Thanks in advance for any insight you may have,
Spoodily