Look up into the night sky and there are more than just stars and planets. Writer and night sky watcher Jeff Woolwine says that’s not all there is. If people would only open their minds and have some patience they too would see what he sees when he looks up.
“When you see this red light in the sky, it just catches your eye,” he said. “You’re like, ‘Hey, what’s that?’”
Good question.
It’s not a plane that he sees. It’s not drones, satellites or any other manmade craft. What Woolwine is looking for and has seen is something from inside this world.
“This is another ‘animal,’ another being, another living entity, in my opinion, that has always been here,” he said. “They have the capability of going inside the earth. It’s something totally different. … It’s not the Area 51 kind of stuff.”
Now he wants to share that information with others who might be interested. To that end he’s written about his discoveries in a book, “How I Tracked UFO’s Around Tucson, the Tucson Lights.”
Woolwine isn’t some nut. He has done his research, he said, which mostly consists of looking up but he’s also studied old texts. He believes that the Hohokam peoples were the first to record the “visitors” to earth. Anyone can read about their accounts and encounters in the pictographs chiseled into the rocks hereabouts, he said.
Woolwine believes that the extraterrestrials come for the energy which escapes the earth in seismic “cracks” or fault lines. He said he has often observed the crafts hovering around these “energy fields.”
“In Phoenix these lights were showing up and then moving ever so slowly so they’re not noticed,” he said. “They’re coming in far west of South Mountain and they’re moving east toward the east side of South Mountain, and they stopped in a certain place.”
When he researched that certain place, he found it was the location of a power plant that “had been drilled down into the fault line,” he said. After logging in some library time, Woolwine discovered that it was also the heart of the “Hohokam era,” he said “That was the city. That’s where all the canal systems were coming right into that area, where the power plant sits.”
That is somewhere on Ray Road
in Tempe.
Sometimes people look up and don’t see the lights. It turns out there is a pattern to the visits.
“What time did you go? What month did you go?” Woolwine asked. “I inadvertently discovered the pattern simply by sitting by South Mountain for many, many years, constantly watching the skies, taking notes and monitoring what was going on. That’s how I discovered the pattern of the equinox and the solstice and the changing of the sun and the fault lines.”
In fact, Woolwine said, the optimum viewing time is coming up.
“I really believe it has a lot to do with the sun’s position,” he said. “When the sun gets in the right position during the changing of the season, it acts like a key, and it opens up these doorways.”
Woolwine wasn’t a kid who was interested in astronomy though he said he has always seen the red lights. He began looking up in earnest when the unexplained lights over Phoenix appeared. That began a kind of pilgrimage for him. He said he spent hours and hours on South Mountain in Phoenix looking for the lights. They didn’t disappoint.
He has continued to see them in Tucson where he now lives.
Woolwine considers his book, which has maps, photos and a QR code to take readers to his YouTube page, a tool to see for yourself what is out there.
“Whether you believe in UFOs or not, there is something here and their record of what’s happening today was carved on the mountains over a thousand years ago,” Woolwine said.
Find his book online at bit.ly/4aOhF7q. Anyone interested, including skeptics, in joining Woolwine on a night expedition may contact him at facebook.com/jeff.woolwine or email petroglyphsinthesky@yahoo.com.
