There can be very few people with an interest in UFOs who have not heard of the so-called alien abduction phenomenon. The flying saucer phenomenon exploded in spectacular style in the summer of 1947 – when a pilot name Kenneth Arnold encountered a number of strange, delta-shaped object flying in formation over the Cascade Mountains, Washington State. In mere hours, UFO hysteria had begun. It reached even higher levels just one month later when the still-unresolved incident at Roswell, New Mexico occurred. It was not until 1961, however, that the concept of alien abductions caught the attention of UFO investigators. In September of that month, Betty and Barney Hill, who lived in New Hampshire, encountered something very strange on a dark, quiet stretch of road. It was an experience that saw the Hills taken aboard a UFO and treated like definitive lab rats by emotionless, humanoid entities that seemed to have a specific interest in human reproduction. It wasn’t long at all before the U.S. Air Force, the UFO research community, and the media were looking for the truth of the strange affair. Such was the fascination with the story, writer John Fuller was commissioned to write a book on the incident, from which the brief summary above is taken. Published in 1966, it was titled The Interrupted Journey - most apt wording.

Since that fateful night in 1961, literally thousands of people have come forward with near-identical reports. And how many more exist - buried by the witnesses, who fear scorn, ridicule and invasions of their privacy - is unknown. While the alien abduction phenomenon is multifaceted and is typified by layer upon layer of mystery, there is one specific aspect of the puzzle that has a bearing on the matter of shapeshifters – a significant bearing, too. Let us take a look at this often-overlooked angle. In far more than a few cases of alien abduction, witnesses – or victims; take your pick – report something very strange, but which can be found all across the planet. Whether lying in their beds, or driving a long, shadowy road in the woods, they have seen what they so often describe as a giant-sized owl standing at the side of the road and staring at them. There then follows a typically weird and mysterious event, one in which the witness suddenly finds themselves aboard a UFO, and subjected to the kinds of intrusive procedures reported by Betty and Barney Hill. On other occasions, however, the witness only has a vague memory of what happened to them, beyond an eerie image in his or her mind of an owl with deeply penetrating eyes staring at them. The matter of owls and alien abductions has been circulating for a long time.

One such encounter that falls solidly into the "owl category" involves a Scottish woman who we shall refer to as “Maxine,” who I met in 2004. She lives in the Scottish town of Inverness, which is located only a very short distance from the site of yet another famous mystery: Loch Ness, the home, of course, to the long-necked Nessies. On a clear summer day in 2007, Maxine was walking her dog along the hills that overlook Loch Ness when she saw what, from her description, can only be described as an alien Grey. When she first saw it, at a distance of a couple of hundred feet, she assumed it was a young child – chiefly because of its short height. As she got closer, and as her dog froze to the spot, she could see that not only was it not a young boy: it wasn’t even human. Maxine and the Grey stared at each other for just a few seconds, after which is stretched its arms out and, in an instant, transformed into what Maxine described as an impossibly large owl: it was practically man-sized. It immediately took to the skies and headed across the loch at a fast rate. Maxine continue to watch, with astonishment, as the alien-owl thing vanished into the trees on the opposite side of the loch.

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