Here is a questionable but enjoyable Russian UFO encounter from the 1970s. I'm a fan of classic UFO lore and history, but I'm not going to get into a
bunch of theories or debunking of this event at this time. For fun, I wanted to share this underrated and little-known classic. If nothing else, it's
an interesting example of how a UFO encounter can become terribly convoluted with numerous iterations (while somehow maintaining its integral
elements).
Here at this link is a summary of the event and many other iterations of it including write-ups from FSR (Flying Saucer Review) and other sources:
ufologie.patrickgross.org... There is a handy table of information towards the bottom.
According to the above source,
The first version came under the signature of the sensationalist Russian ufologist Valimir Azhazha in FST in May 1979. It said:
In the summer of 1975, First Lieutenant Pal'tsov, stationed in the Borisoglebsk Region, was returning in the morning to his unit when he saw a
cupola shaped "something" in the bushes beside the road. He walked towards it, and when he was some 30 metres from it, it took off and flew across the
road and landed again. Pal'tsov ran towards it, but when he was only a few metres from it, he felt himself running into a resilient wall, and lost
consciousness. The last thing that he could remember was seeing two humanlike figures in a transparent cupola. One of them was seated at what looked
like a desk, and the other was standing and looking out through the cupola.
Then, the June 25, 1980, issue of Weekend magazine apparently reported that they found details of three UFO and entity cases, sent in by their Moscow
correspondent Alan Henderson. One of these was said to come from an undated Pravda newspaper
The event according to I Tsarev in
Planet of Specters was described as an encounter on May 15, 1975 near Voronezh, Russia. "Senior Lieutenant"
Vladimir Paltsev was on a highway near the city early in the morning when he saw a peculiar object in a clearing off the side of the road. He got out
of his car to investigate. As he neared the object he could see that it was a transparent ellipsoid. He continued approaching the object and noticed
two human-like figures inside a transparent cupola. One of the figures places its palm on the internal dome of the object. Paltsev said the hand
appeared human. A "dense wall of air" stopped Paltsev from getting any closer to the object shortly before he lost consciousness. When he came to, he
again attempted to approach the object but was still unable to penetrate the invisible barrier, so he decided to sit at the edge of the road and watch
as the object lifted off the ground and flew low over the road. A motorcyclist who was driving by also appeared to notice the craft which soon
disappeared from sight.
I Tsarev describes the same event as though it were a second event the same area one month later in June of 1975. This time, the witness (described as
an officer in the Soviet Army), saw a nearly identical object at about 0100A. The craft was disc-shaped with a semi-translucent cupola on top. He
observed two human-like silhouettes inside the cupola. Like the "first" witness in May, this man also encountered an invisible "barrier" and lost
consciousness. When he came to, the object was already flying away at a high speed. He thought the entire event took about five minutes and was
shocked to realize he had been missing for two hours. Following the incident, he suffered from frequent nightmares of flying onboard a similar UFO.
A similar craft was described in a different story. The co-founder of the first officially approved Soviet UFO research
group,
Felix Y Zigel (a Doctor of Science and a docent of Cosmology at the Moscow Aviation
Institute), published a similar story in
UFO landings in the USSR And other Countries. In April 1978, a witness in Beskudnikovo Russia looked
out the window of his second floor apartment at 0530A and saw four hovering disc-shaped objects at the same level of his apartment. Each of the four
UFOs had a transparent dome with a humanoid inside. The humanoids all wore transparent helmets and resembled normal "earthmen" who appeared to be in
their mid thirties. They wore dark "motorcyclist" jackets and appeared restful and content. The objects emitted blue-green beams towards the ground;
each beam appeared to be composed of dotted "particles" of light which slowly descended towards the ground. The witness lost consciousness and did not
see the objects leave.
Strangely, in
Fortean Times #33, Zigel detailed another version of the first case (with the invisible barrier etc) from an area near
Borisoglebsk Russia which, this time, was said to have occurred on June 16, 1978. Some time after midnight, the witness was hitchhiking home when he
saw a soft glowing object on a field nearby. He approached the object and saw that it had a transparent dome on top with three short humanoid figures
inside of it. The beings appeared to have large "egg-like" heads (helmets?) and long fingers. They seemed to be working around a central console. When
the witness got within about 20-25 yards of the object, he hit some type of invisible barrier and lose consciousness (much like the first two
witnesses in Voronezh). When he came to, he found his brief case frayed and damaged. The invisible barrier went away and he walked up to the object,
only to be knocked down by a blast of wind. The craft began to glow and lifted off the ground before darting away at a high speed. He later realized
he had lost about 45 minutes of time. Later under hypnosis he was able to remember being led into the craft for examination, but hypnotic regression,
although occasionally successful, can be questionable due to factors such as leading and over-active imagination.
The spring of 1978 was active in the UFO department, some of you may remember N F Kusov's encounter with infrasound and a cigar shaped object:
Infrasound and a Cigar-Shaped UFO, Russia, 1978
The original story with the "air barrier" and transparent UFO is so convoluted it's difficult to say if any of it was real or a hoax (and, if you want
my personal opinion, I am
very skeptical of this case) but it's hard to argue with the fact that the Soviet 1970s were swimming in UFO reports
and high-strangeness incidents. On a serious note, I was busy compiling RF (radiofrequency) related incidents by decade and location last month and
took a break due to time constraints and travel, but I've added a few more cases, several of which took place in Soviet areas in, you guessed it, the
1970s. I will discuss those at another time.
Meanwhile, I hope you enjoyed this quirky story from a fascinating era of UFO history.
"See" you next time. WL
edit on 3/9/2023 by wavelength because: typo