travel
Haunted locales and houses of horror from the Amityville home to the Tower of London; travel tips for those seeking a trip filled with fun and evil.
Hinterkaifeck Murders
The farmstead of Hinterkaifeck sat isolated in the Bavarian countryside about forty-three miles north of Munich, and in the cold early days of April 1922 the six people living there were brutally murdered with a mattock, a pickaxe-like farming tool, and their killer or killers remained in the house for several days after the murders, feeding the livestock, eating food from the kitchen, and sleeping in the beds while the bodies of the victims lay undiscovered in the barn and house, creating one of the most disturbing and puzzling unsolved murder cases in German criminal history. The victims were the farmer Andreas Gruber aged sixty-three, his wife Cäzilia aged seventy-two, their widowed daughter Viktoria Gabriel aged thirty-five, Viktoria's children Cäzilia aged seven and Josef aged two, and the family's new maid Maria Baumgartner aged forty-four who had only arrived at the farm on the day of the murders and whose terrible luck in accepting this position would cost her life within hours of her arrival, and the previous maid had quit six months earlier claiming the house was haunted, hearing strange noises in the attic and experiencing events she could not explain, details that would take on sinister significance after the murders were discovered.
By The Curious Writerabout 14 hours ago in Horror
The Dyatlov Pass Incident
The frozen slopes of the Ural Mountains in Russia hold one of the most disturbing and inexplicable mysteries of the twentieth century, a case so strange that sixty-five years after it occurred, investigators, scientists, and amateur sleuths still cannot agree on what happened to nine experienced hikers who died under circumstances so bizarre and violent that the lead investigator officially closed the case by attributing their deaths to "an unknown compelling force," a conclusion that raised more questions than it answered and that has spawned countless theories ranging from rational explanations involving avalanches and hypothermia to wild speculation about secret military tests, radioactive contamination, indigenous attackers, and even paranormal or extraterrestrial involvement. The tragedy began on January 23, 1959, when a group of ten students and recent graduates from the Ural Polytechnical Institute in Yekaterinburg set out on a skiing expedition to reach Otorten Mountain, a challenging winter trek that the group leader Igor Dyatlov had planned meticulously, and all the members were experienced hikers and skiers who had undertaken similar expeditions before, making the disaster that befell them all the more incomprehensible because these were not novices who made foolish mistakes but competent outdoorspeople who understood winter survival.
By The Curious Writerabout 14 hours ago in Horror
The Pilot Who Vanished Into the Pacific and the Clues He Left Behind...
On November 14, 2019, Captain Richard Ashford took off from Los Angeles International Airport piloting a private Gulfstream jet carrying three passengers to Tokyo, and somewhere over the vast emptiness of the Pacific Ocean, the plane simply disappeared from radar without a distress call, without wreckage, without a trace, and the only clue to what happened was a handwritten note discovered in his apartment three days later that read "By the time you find this, I'll be somewhere they can't follow" followed by a series of numbers that investigators still haven't been able to decode....
By The Curious Writera day ago in Horror
The Dyatlov Pass Incident
In late January 1959, a group of ten experienced hikers led by Igor Dyatlov, a twenty-three-year-old engineering student at the Ural Polytechnic Institute, set out on an expedition to reach Otorten, a mountain in the northern Ural range of the Soviet Union, undertaking a trek that was classified as Category III, the most difficult level of hiking expedition, but one that all members of the group were qualified to attempt based on their previous experience and physical fitness, and the group consisted of students and recent graduates who were skilled in winter hiking and outdoor survival, people who understood the dangers of the terrain and weather they would encounter and who had prepared accordingly with appropriate equipment and supplies. The expedition began normally with the group traveling by train and then truck to the last inhabited settlement before beginning their hike on January 27, and one member of the group, Yuri Yudin, turned back early due to illness, a decision that would save his life, while the remaining nine hikers continued northward toward their destination, making good progress through challenging terrain and camping each night in the snow, following their planned route and maintaining the schedule they had established before departure.
By The Curious Writer2 days ago in Horror
The Last Journey of Daniel Reeves
In the early spring of 2021, a thirty-two-year-old travel photographer named Daniel Reeves decided to take a solo road trip through the remote mountain regions of the Pacific Northwest, a journey he had been planning for months as a way to escape the pressure of city life and focus on his passion for photographing landscapes that most people would never see. Daniel had built a small but loyal online following because of his ability to capture hauntingly beautiful scenes from places that felt untouched by time, and he often preferred traveling alone because solitude allowed him to explore deeper into forests, abandoned roads, and hidden trails without distractions.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Horror
The 10 Most Haunted Schools in the United States: Ghosts on Campus You Won’t Believe
Ghost stories are more than just bedtime tales; they’re part of the cultural fabric of every civilization. From vampires lurking in European castles to flying, dismembered ghouls in Asia, humans have always been fascinated, and terrified, by the unknown. But what ties these stories together is the setting: old buildings and places with long histories often harbor the most spirits.
By Areeba Umair3 days ago in Horror
The Disappearance at Blackridge Forest
In the autumn of 2018, the quiet town of Blackridge, located near a vast and rarely explored forest region in the northern countryside, became the center of a chilling mystery that continues to disturb both investigators and residents even years after the event occurred. Blackridge was the type of town where everyone knew each other, where doors were often left unlocked and evening walks through quiet streets felt perfectly safe, yet the massive forest stretching beyond the town had always carried an unsettling reputation among locals who grew up hearing strange stories about people hearing voices deep in the woods and occasionally seeing lights flickering between the trees late at night.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Horror
The Night Everyone in the Town Heard the Same Whisper
The town of Blackridge was the kind of place people forgot about. It was small, quiet, and surrounded by thick forests that seemed to stretch forever. The road leading into town curved through miles of tall pine trees before finally opening to a handful of streets, a small school, a diner, and an old town square with a clock tower that had stood there for nearly a century.
By imtiazalam7 days ago in Horror
The Haunted Pen Factory at Kasem Bundit University: Bangkok’s Most Terrifying Abandoned Building
The Pen Factory of Kasem Bundit University: A Haunted History Located in the Kasem Bundit University campus, along Pattanakarn Road in Bangkok, Thailand, is one of the city’s most haunted yet abandoned structures: an old pen factory covering 80 acres of land. Presently, the ruins of this industrial giant are seen standing silently, decaying under the scorching sun. However, the silence is more than just peaceful. Rumors of ghosts, mishaps, and other haunted experiences are associated with this ruined industrial giant, making it an urban legend of the city of Bangkok.
By Kyrol Mojikal17 days ago in Horror





