JMartJr
Senior Member.
Would it not be preferable not to have them out and about at all?Of course I get suspicious that the police were called to create a distraction to a different area.
Would it not be preferable not to have them out and about at all?Of course I get suspicious that the police were called to create a distraction to a different area.
It's not a laser beam! The beam has enough width for ships to actually see it blink.Well, no, one has to really be stretching things to argue that a lighthouse beam rotating every 10 seconds ( two beams..so one flash every 5 seconds ) whose beam at Halt's distance would actually be travelling at 12,000 mph ( I base this on there being two opposing beams ) could possibly constitute a beam coming down to the ground long enough for Halt to even say those words. Plus it was a totally clear night. There was no haze or mist for the beam to have reflected off.
whose beam at Halt's distance would actually be travelling at 12,000 mph
Agreed.It's not a laser beam! The beam has enough width for ships to actually see it blink.
Of course I get suspicious that the police were called to create a distraction to a different area.
It's not a laser beam! The beam has enough width for ships to actually see it blink.
If anyone finds footage of a clearly delineated lighthouse beam illuminating a spot on the sea or ground several miles/km from a lighthouse, and that illuminated spot moving at several thousand miles per hour due to the light's (or reflector's) rotation, I will be surprised.
Would it not be preferable not to have them out and about at all?
Don't confuse a light being "visible" with actually being in the beam - typically taken as the half-power beam width. The beams themselves are pretty narrow, but, as the following photos show, the light is visible no matter what direction the beam's pointing in (and we're far more off-centre in this example than you would be at a distance, as the lobes are shaped for elevation too).You can't have it both ways. If the beam is wide then at Halt's distance of 6 miles every degree is 550 feet. Google AI says 'visible over an arc of 25 degrees'. It seems there were actually 3 mirrors ( or rather 3 'panels' ). This fits in nicely with the light appearing every 5 seconds....so basically the entire assembly rotates every 15 seconds during which each of the 3 panels is visible.
That also means we can say that the light is visible for at most 1 second, and at Halt's distance the arc subtended is 13,750 feet.....two and a half miles !
I don't think anyone who thinks the Orford Ness lighthouse played a part is claiming it was responsible for all lights seen (and misidentified), we know Penniston/ Cabansag/ Burroughs followed lights and ended up at the Boast farmhouse- which was much closer to the airbase than the lighthouse, and had (I'm guessing) been there for several years.But that is precisely what this so-called 'explanation' entails if one is saying that Halt's 'beam' is the lighthouse beam.
(post #407).External Quote:...radiating points of light from all angles
I'm pretty sure Jenny Randles book Sky Crash ( which I actually bought when it came out...1983 I think it was ) says locals saw odd lights on the same night....and such claim has been re-iterated numerous times elsewhere.
Wikipedia, Jenny Randles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny_Randles, my emphasis.External Quote:Randles investigated the Rendlesham Forest UFO case and was one of the first to do so, coauthoring the book Sky Crash: A Cosmic Conspiracy shortly after it happened. She subsequently became skeptical of that case's veracity and that it had anything to due with aliens, but her earlier claims contributed to some of the conspiracy that grew around it. She later stated of Rendlesham that "While some puzzles remain, we can probably say that no unearthly craft were seen in Rendlesham Forest. We can also argue with confidence that the main focus of the events was a series of misperceptions of everyday things encountered in less than everyday circumstances".
Jenny Randles, "Getting It Right at East Gate", Magonia 61, November 1992 https://magoniamagazine.blogspot.com/2013/12/getting-it-right-at-east-gate.html#mor.External Quote:
Whilst I must judge the conflicting claims of Warren and the others without knowing who is right and who is wrong, that is not the case with some other aspects of Left at East Gate. For there are things in there which I can definitely refute from my first-hand perspective. For example, he makes the fantastic allegation (p. 128) that "two of the Sky Crash authors were affiliated with Britain's anti-nuclear movement". This ties in with his disbelief at our idea that the story about aliens might be disinformation to hide an accident with a nuclear weapon. Later the authors add (p.217) "Randles chooses to state and reiterate this theory and I could only speculate as to why".
The clear impression gained from passages such as these is that I was in league with CND to use the Rendlesham case for some obscure purpose. That is outright rubbish. I can state assuredly that I am not – and have never been – associated with the anti-nuclear movement in even the most minor of ways. I cannot say whether this is true of Brenda or Dot, but in all the years I have known them it has never once come up in conversation and certainly had no role to play in the writing of Sky Crash
... ...
Besides which, as Warren notes in his second quote above, the nuclear mishap theory was mine – nobody else's – and was referenced by me on several occasions between 1981 and 1984 (e.g. a comment in OMNI magazine which is also discussed in Left at East Gate). This is firmly attributed to me personally.
I don't think it's unreasonable that this theory might have been considered at the time (or in 1983 when the story was publicized) and it might be likely that people other than Randles et al. would independently have had the same concern. But again, there is absolutely no evidence for any event requiring a cover-up.External Quote:This amply demonstrates my feeling at the time that – with the huge public outcry over bringing Cruise missiles into Europe – it might have seemed appropriate to cover up an accident by creating a diversionary story so ludicrous nobody would believe it.
...and in post #222, 26 May 2024External Quote:There is no evidence that Halt ever alerted the USAF's 67th Air Rescue and Recovery Squadron (ARRS) at RAF Woodbridge (closer to the "landing site" than RAF Bentwaters), which would arguably be the best unit in Europe at that time to assist with a downed modest-sized aircraft /UFO, assuming there aren't secret UFO retrieval teams...
67th ARRS personnel (and an HH-53) might have been ideal for this task.
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But they're never mentioned in relation to "the incident".
The speed of the lighted patch across the ground is not relevant unless you know how wise it is. It's period does not change as distance and thus speed across ground increase, as the speed and width scale.One is essentially arguing that the light arc travelling at 12,500 mph at Halt's distance somehow magically becomes a 'beam...coming down to the ground' for long enough for Halt to even say those words.
Could not disagree more (though you may have intended that as a bit of dramatic hyperbole! If so, apologies for treating it as a literality!) We know that lighthouses exist, and we know that people who think they are seeing weird UFOs often give wildly inaccurate accounts of what they believe they have seen. Those known phenomena are hugely more likely to account for parts or even (at a somewhat less likelihood) all of this case than is relying on aliens, which we do not know exist, and then, if they DO exist, that they are space faring and able to traverse between stars, and if the CAN do that, that they have ever come here, and if the DO ever come here that there was one flying around GB at the right time and place -- while further not knowing ANY properties of the ship they'd be in, for example, whether it would have blinking lights or lights at all, nor anything else about it!This is where the lighthouse theory strains credulity and aliens are easier to explain.
It's always going to be an issue with these data-poor UFO reports. Even with a claimed photograph in the Calvine case, there are huge numbers of ways it might have been produced, some of them seeming farfetched but all more possible then aliens. (And of course all but one of them are wrong, the one picture was produced one way, whatever it was!) The situation is going to be at least as bad with cases like this one, where there is no data beyond "the witness said," given how poor witness testimony can be, how changeable it is, and how difficult it is to tell a true bit from an incorrect bit.It reminds me of just how utterly contorted some of the Calvine UFO explanations became.
(1) Bear in mind that a lighthouse beam seen through the trees is not the same as when seen from an unobstructed view, such as from a ship at sea, and might well have been seen as a shorter blink. Your description of the length of the light path is off the mark.But that is precisely what this so-called 'explanation' entails if one is saying that Halt's 'beam' is the lighthouse beam. One is essentially arguing that the light arc travelling at 12,500 mph at Halt's distance somehow magically becomes a 'beam...coming down to the ground' for long enough for Halt to even say those words. This is where the lighthouse theory strains credulity and aliens are easier to explain. It reminds me of just how utterly contorted some of the Calvine UFO explanations became.
But there is equally no evidence for anything else about the incident. The only thing we know with certainty is that 'reports' were filed and that includes a police file as the police were called out.
Of course I get suspicious that the police were called to create a distraction to a different area.
He's said numerous times he went out to debunk the UFO. Why does he need to take a geiger counter to do so ? There is zero evidence he had any prior interest or knowledge of UFO lore.
none of them were ever aware of the lighthouse before that night ?
Google AI says Burroughs had been at Rendlesham since June 1979 as a base policeman. He's the only one for whom I can find that info ( though I suspect it is out there for the others ). So, Burroughs had been there a year and a half and had never heard of the lighthouse ?
https://www.airandspaceforces.com/article/0494hollow/External Quote:
Losing trained and experienced personnel was bad enough, but the late 1970s also saw a drop in the quality of new recruits. Figure 3 shows a general decline in the number of recruits with high school diplomas. Quality also declined in terms of Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) scores. The AFQT classifies recruits on a scale of trainability—Category I being the highest, Category IV the lowest. Figure 4 shows the percentage distribution over the period. The numbers of Category IV trainees peaked at nine percent in 1979 and 1980.
Also from Ian's site is this interview with forestry worker Vince Thurkettle (copyright BBC), the location is believed to be approximately where the airmen saw the flashing UFO, near the eastern edge of the forest.External Quote:
HALT: OK, we're looking at the thing, we're probably about two to three hundred yards away. It looks like an eye winking at you. Still moving from side to side. And when you put the Starscope on it, it sort of has a hollow centre, a dark centre, it's...
ENGLUND(?): Like a pupil...
HALT: Yeah, like a pupil of an eye looking at you, winking. And the flash is so bright to the Starscope that it almost burns your eye.
It would be very bright viewed through a Starlight Scope, he's looking at a lighthouse through an image intensifier which also has 4x magnification (power cuts out above a set level of brightness, TM-11-5855-203-10, Operator's Manual... ...AN/PVS-2 https://www.liberatedmanuals.com/TM-11-5855-203-10.pdf).External Quote:The time interval between 'There it is again...there it is' [on Halt's tape] is 5 seconds, the flash rate of the Orford Ness lighthouse.
External Quote:
ENGLUND: Yes, there is, definitely. That's on the centre spot. There is an after-effect.
NEVELS: What does that mean?
ENGLUND: It means that when the lights are turned off, once we are focused in and allow time for the eyes to adjust we are getting an indication of a heat source coming out of that centre spot, as er, which will show up on...
HALT: Heat or some form of energy. It's hardly heat at this stage of the game.
I don't know if the USAF has an equivalent to a "Stand To", where personnel are awakened/ abandon routine tasks, security measures are implemented and a higher level of vigilance expected, but it almost certainly does (at least for personnel responsible for physical security).External Quote:
HALT: 03:30 and the objects are still in the sky, although the one to the south looks like it's losing a little bit of altitude. We're turning around and heading back toward the base.
HALT: The object to the south is still beaming down lights to the ground.
HALT: 04:00 hours. One object still hovering over Woodbridge base at about five to ten degrees off the horizon, still moving erratic and similar lights and beaming down as earlier.
The bigger question is why is Holt out there at all? IF this is a Broken Arrow or plane crash, he as part of the base command structure, would have dispatched the appropriate personal for the task at hand. He MAY have wondered out to get a look at whatever was supposedly going on sometime later, but he wouldn't be running around the woods with a bunch of enlisted SPs and a Geiger counter no one knew how to work to find a lost nuke.
He's part of the base command, an administrator, not a field operative. He would not be tasked with grabbing a Geiger counter he could't use and going out to find a nuke. Makes no sense at all.
Your claim, among many, suggests he was out there as part of a ruse or a cover-up. At least for part of it? Again, makes no sense at all. After losing a nuke we send a base commander out with some SPs, a night-vision scope, a Geiger counter and have them record it so as to imply there looking for UFOs?
Or is the first part of the recording with Holt, some SPs and Geiger counter actually the real search for the nuke? Then what?
Instead of destroying or classifying the recording which could hint that they were looking for a nuke, who ever was coordinating the cover-up instead had Holt and the rest add a bunch UFO sounding segments to the original tape at a later date. Really?
The idea that Holt was a bit of micromanager who liked to get his shoes dirty with "the men" explains his presence. He leaves a party filled with other officers and spends the night running around in the woods with a bunch of enlisted guys cosplaying that he's looking for the previous nights UFO. Running around in the woods with a bunch of enlisted guys is certainly not how a base commander finds a lost nuke.
1) Bear in mind that a lighthouse beam seen through the trees is not the same as when seen from an unobstructed view, such as from a ship at sea, and might well have been seen as a shorter blink. Your description of the length of the light path is off the mark.
(2) You've already been told that "miles per hour" is not the way to measure a rotating light. You need the angular speed instead.
Re-reading the transcript
Yet you fail to explain what Halt is doing in the woods with a geiger counter and why he ever took one ' to debunk a UFO'. No amount of sophistry explains that.
You talk of things that don't 'makes sense'. Well, it makes sense to take a geiger counter to actually do what its job is for....to measure radiation !
You don't take a geiger counter just to debunk some 'lights in the woods'. I mean...what are we expecting in that hypothesis ? That Halt was simply going to say ' Nope, no radiation, so can't have been a UFO'. Seriously ?
I think we've pretty well established that toting a Geiger counter along on a UFO investigation was (maybe still is) a thing, if you found radiation beyond what was normal, maybe oooOOOooOOOoOOOoooOOHHhhhH, you have a space ship from beyond the stars or something. Even if it is not something YOU would do, it's a thing that people investigating UFOs did/do.Yet you fail to explain what Halt is doing in the woods with a geiger counter and why he ever took one ' to debunk a UFO'. No amount of sophistry explains that.
You talk of things that don't 'makes sense'. Well, it makes sense to take a geiger counter to actually do what its job is for....to measure radiation !
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cash–Landrum_incidentExternal Quote:
In 1998, journalist and UFO skeptic Philip J. Klass, found a few reasons to doubt the story by Cash and Landrum: When Schuessler inspected Betty's car in early 1981 and used a Geiger counter to check for radioactivity, he found none. Presumably he also checked for radioactivity when he visited the site of the (alleged) incident, and found no abnormal radiation ...
https://www.observer-reporter.com/n...put-westmoreland-county-community-on-the-map/External Quote:Roadblocks went up in Kecksburg after the thump in the woods was heard, and firefighters, officers from the Pennsylvania State Police and members of the U.S. Army's 662nd Radar Unit from Pittsburgh scoured a 15-square-mile area for seven hours. The result? "We found no fire and no marks," according to Capt. Joseph Dussin of the Greensburg state police post. Geiger counters were used to measure potential radiation, but nothing was detected.
Lighthouses are meant to shine a beam toward ships that are at sea level.I am open to any examples of beams of light from any lighthouse 'coming down to the ground'.
In Yesprimeministerish: they need to take measurements, that takes measurements, therefore they must take that.It's a thing that is part of the meme-plex of UFO investigatiing.)
...you fail to explain what Halt is doing in the woods with a geiger counter and why he ever took one ' to debunk a UFO'
Would add, Halt described the lights as moving erratically. He viewed them (at least some of the time) through an 8-12 magnification optic (maybe a monocular or binos), anyone whose done a bit of stargazing with unsupported binoculars (i.e. hand-held, not on a mount) will be familiar with how the "target" dances and zig-zags.External Quote:British investigator Jenny Randles adds another telling quote on pp. 123–4 of her book UFO Crash Landing (1998). She says Halt told her that when he was back at base, 'the objects were still in the sky – however, it was getting light and they were getting faint'. Jenny adds: 'I suspect that this is the final clue that demonstrates that these star-like lights to the north were, indeed, just stars.'
Wikipedia, List of military nuclear accidents https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_military_nuclear_accidentsExternal Quote:A B-47E of the USAF 310th Bomb Wing developed problems shortly after takeoff and jettisoned its two 1,700 gallon external fuel tanks. They missed their designated safe impact area, and one hit a hangar while the other struck the ground 65 feet (20 m) behind a parked B-47E. The parked plane, which was fuelled, had a pilot on board, and was carrying a 1.1 megaton (4.6 PJ) B28 nuclear bomb, was engulfed by flames. The conflagration took sixteen hours and over a million gallons of water to extinguish, partly because of the magnesium alloys used in the aircraft. Although two men were killed and eight injured, the US and UK governments kept the accident secret: as late as 1985, the British government claimed that a taxiing aircraft had struck a parked one and that no fire was involved.
The lighthouse is actually at 95 degrees. So the alleged UFO is a full 15 degrees to the right of where the lighthouse was. That's some 30 times the diameter of the Moon, for scale. A big difference.
Because he was there, and he wanted to take something as to not seem unprepared.Seriously, why do you think he took it? If he did at all.
He's out looking for a UFO and radiation and UFOs is a well known trope, so he grabs one when they head out.
Lighthouses are meant to shine a beam toward ships that are at sea level.
Of course, you'd also take one if you were trying to find misplaced nuclear devices. Investigators carrying a Geiger counter is perfectly consistent with either hypothesis of what they thought the were looking for, its presence does not indicate one over the other, nor rule either out.
It's your assertion (and Halts?) that Halt took the Geiger counter to "debunk a UFO".
That's a distinction without a difference.No, Halt has never specifically stated that he took the geiger counter to debunk the UFO. He has stated that he went out to put an end to all the UFO nonsense
Don't know. But those questions are equally MORE odd if they were looking for a lot nuke, and knew that what they were looking for was radioactive. If they were instead looking for a UFO, wouldn't they grab whatever bit of kit was close to hand that seemed potentially useful? Or were part of the ideas permeating the culture when thinking about investigating a UFO, one if which would be a Geiger counter?Why did Halt need to measure the radiation in the impressions in the ground, when Penniston had already ( shortly after the first sighting ) taken plaster casts that would themselves clearly have been exposed to radiation and would even contain radioactive pine needles. Halt was aware of their existence....so why didn't he just ask for those. Why didn't Penniston measure the radiation at the time ? I mean...that was far more his job that it was Halt's.
People after do things that make little sense to me. The question is, is this a thing they might have plausibly done in the moment? Under either scenario, it seems reasonable that a person would have grabbed a Geiger counter. They are quite useful in looking for a nuke that's gone walkabout, and IN THE CULTURE, IF NOT IN REAL LIFE, they are seen as a tool for investigating UFOs. I suppose he could have gone out without any equipment, but to what purpose? Why NOT grab a Geiger counter?None of this story makes any sense.
Absurd.....as the absence of radiation, which is surely what he would have been expecting under that scenario, would not prove there was not a UFO.
I'm not sure there is much more to be said about it. It has been posited that taking it makes no sense, a response has been given that it is a standard thing people do in that situation. This has been repeated several times, and barring somebody thinking of anything new to add, I don't think there's much need to keeping repeating either position.Apparently, Holt and the Geiger counter could use its own dedicated thread.
Well, no, one has to really be stretching things to argue that a lighthouse beam rotating every 10 seconds ( two beams..so one flash every 5 seconds ) whose beam at Halt's distance would actually be travelling at 12,000 mph ( I base this on there being two opposing beams ) could possibly constitute a beam coming down to the ground long enough for Halt to even say those words. Plus it was a totally clear night. There was no haze or mist for the beam to have reflected off.
Here's a photo (photographer Kristin Wilkinson) of a lighthouse on a foggy night. And yes, I know, the night this event was seen was clear; I am showing you a lighthouse in fog only because it illustrates that the light, as has been pointed out for you before, is NOT a sharply-focused laser beam. Light scatters all over the place, so please don't get your knickers in a twist about the beam "not reaching the ground". Observe the light on the green grass in the foreground.And your point is ? I mean, they are at sea level....effectively the same height above sea level ( about 50 feet ) that the bridge of a small ship would be.
WHY do YOU think he took the Geiger counter? You still haven't answered that simple question. Everyone else has offered their opinion, with examples, that searching for radioactivity is a standard trope in UFO stories particularly in the time frame of the event. Holt taking a Geiger counter to a possible UFO landing site fits the trope. He's right in the middle of the UFO zeitgeist of the time.
Here's a photo (photographer Kristin Wilkinson) of a lighthouse on a foggy night. And yes, I know, the night this event was seen was clear; I am showing you a lighthouse in fog only because it illustrates that the light, as has been pointed out for you before, is NOT a sharply-focused laser beam. Light scatters all over the place, so please don't get your knickers in a twist about the beam "not reaching the ground". Observe the light on the green grass in the foreground.
If they were instead looking for a UFO, wouldn't they grab whatever bit of kit was close to hand that seemed potentially useful? Or were part of the ideas permeating the culture when thinking about investigating a UFO, one if which would be a Geiger counter?
No, Halt has never specifically stated that he took the geiger counter to debunk the UFO... ...Which of course begs the question....why did he take it.
But Halt has never said he went out to 'look for a UFO'. He has consistently stated in every single interview on the matter that he went out to debunk and to 'put the matter to rest'...
People had been at 'the landing site' for two entire days prior to Halt's visit.
We don't know why the security chief at Bentwaters ( an entirely different base ) called the police only after he'd called the men back to base.
Wikipedia, RAF Woodbridge https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_WoodbridgeExternal Quote:Beginning on 8 July 1958, Woodbridge was operated as "twin base" (twin airfield) with RAF Bentwaters, and as a single unit with Bentwaters under the 81st Tactical Fighter Wing.
Armold and Burroughs (one of the 3 SPs sent into the forest earlier on the 26th) met the two Suffolk PCs at East Gate (IIRC) and accompanied them into the forest.External Quote:
EASTON: As your call was apparently logged after 4.00 a.m., this must have been subsequent to Burroughs having any 'close encounter'. In Flight (Shift) Commander Fred Buran's statement, he wrote:
"At approximately 0354 hours, I terminated the investigation and ordered all units back to their normal duties".
According to this timeline, you must have driven to see Burroughs after he had returned to duty and was back at 'east gate'.
ARMOLD: Yes, I remember the call was rather late in the shift and I'm certain the decision to call the local constabulary was one that was made late in the morning and with hesitation. You see no one was particularly eager to call the local police and ask silly questions about UFO's. However one also must cover all the bases so we made the decisions to call and ask if they had any reports of aircraft accidents or similar phenomenon. I'm quite certain the word UFO wasn't a part of the conversation. It was after that time that I scooted out to RAF Woodbridge and met up with Burroughs and yes, we did indeed stomp around the forest a bit more.
Nobody has ever explained how a lighthouse light becomes a 'beam...coming down to the ground'. ...Everyone has missed the bit where ( its on the tape ) there was not just one object but five 'similar' such objects. Five lighthouses ?
I don't think anyone who thinks the Orford Ness lighthouse played a part is claiming it was responsible for all lights seen (and misidentified),
Please have a quick look at "What were the other lights seen by Colonel Halt?" on Ian Redfern's website
http://www.ianridpath.com/ufo/rendlesham3.html. Halt's account of lights in the sky beaming down onto RAF Woodbridge were refuted by his superior, Conrad, who had been listening in to the radio traffic and who went outside to have a look. A later claim by Halt- that a beam fell on the weapons storage area (WSA) at Bentwaters- was refuted by USAF Security Policeman Tim Egercic who was on duty at the WSA at the time.
Would add, Halt described the lights as moving erratically. He viewed them (at least some of the time) through an 8-12 magnification optic (maybe a monocular or binos), anyone whose done a bit of stargazing with unsupported binoculars (i.e. hand-held, not on a mount) will be familiar with how the "target" dances and zig-zags.External Quote:British investigator Jenny Randles adds another telling quote on pp. 123–4 of her book UFO Crash Landing (1998). She says Halt told her that when he was back at base, 'the objects were still in the sky – however, it was getting light and they were getting faint'. Jenny adds: 'I suspect that this is the final clue that demonstrates that these star-like lights to the north were, indeed, just stars.'
But he WAS going out to investigate one. So he grabbed the closest-to-hand piece of equipment (or prop) UFO investigators liked to carry, and headed out into the night. Using a Geiger counter to find no radiation does not disprove a UFO claim, of course -- but it does allow you to say "I went out there and didn't find any stupid UFO, and yes I did check thoroughly, I even checked for radiation like the guys in all those other UFO investigations did, and I found nothing."But Halt has never said he went out to 'look for a UFO'. He has consistently stated in every single interview on the matter that he went out to debunk and to 'put the matter to rest'...I seem to recall his phrase being. In other words, Halt did not believe there was any UFO to investigate. That is the context. He's not going out to prove UFOs exist.
If you DID take pictures, and showed no fairies, it might be more supportive of your position than if you left the camera in the house.Its kinda like me taking my camera to the bottom of the garden to prove fairies don't exist. It what conceivable way does me NOT taking a photo of a fairy at 3.30am on a Sunday establish that there aren't any fairies there ?
Then his goal to "put the matter to rest" was one he should have known was impossible. Can't prove a negative, after all.I don't understand why people can't see that their rationale for Halt taking the geiger counter specifically to debunk the UFO is ass backwards. I'm sure even Halt was clever enough to grasp that you can't disprove a negative.
Debunking is surely about asking all the pertinent questions....even if that puts long held assumptions under scrutiny. I love tugging at the loose ends, and the Rendlesham incident is full of them.
But he WAS going out to investigate one. So he grabbed the closest-to-hand piece of equipment (or prop) UFO investigators liked to carry, and headed out into the night. Using a Geiger counter to find no radiation does not disprove a UFO claim, of course -- but it does allow you to say "I went out there and didn't find any stupid UFO, and yes I did check thoroughly, I even checked for radiation like the guys in all those other UFO investigations did, and I found nothing."
.....after the initial incident in the woods ( which caused the very imprints in the wood that Halt later measured )
Are you talking about the scrapings that local police thought might have been caused by rabbits?