Within Cornwall UFOs

When Cornwall UFO Stories Outrun the Records

Cornwall's UFO story often turns on the gap between sparse official files and faster-moving newspaper or social-media accounts.

On this page

  • What official records actually preserve
  • How local media amplifies strange lights
  • How to weigh gaps, dates and reporting routes
Preview for When Cornwall UFO Stories Outrun the Records

Introduction

Cornwall’s UFO record is best understood as a gap between two speeds of evidence. Official files move slowly and preserve only a thin trace: a date, a place, a witness description, sometimes a police or RAF reporting route, and often no firm conclusion. Local media and social media move much faster: a strange light over Torpoint, Porthtowan, Truro or the north coast can become a “UFO sighting” before anyone has checked aircraft, satellites, drones, flares, searchlights or weather.

Overview image for Records vs Claims That does not mean local witnesses are wrong, or that official records are complete. It means the two sources answer different questions. The official record usually proves that a report was made. Local coverage often proves that a story spread. Neither, by itself, proves that an extraordinary object was present. Cornwall is a useful county for this comparison because its skies include dark rural horizons, sea approaches, aviation activity, military associations and a strong local news culture, all of which can turn ambiguous lights into durable UFO stories. The National Archives notes that the Ministry of Defence kept UFO records from the 1960s, but that many reports describe shapes, lights and flashes that can often be explained, while a smaller number remain more unusual. [The National Archives]nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk.

What official records actually preserve

Official UFO records for Cornwall are most valuable when read as evidence of reporting, not evidence of identity. A Ministry of Defence list entry can show that a sighting reached the defence system; a police log can show that a caller was worried enough to contact emergency services; a Freedom of Information response can show how a force searched its own incident systems. What these records rarely provide is a full investigation, recovered physical evidence, or a definitive answer.

The older MoD material gives Cornwall several compact but striking entries. In the Guardian’s indexed version of released British UFO files, a 31 March 1993 report at Looe Mills near Liskeard involved a police sergeant who described two “silvery white” stars hovering and then moving off in parallel. The same release lists a 4 August 1993 Camborne police patrol sighting of a blue-white circular light in cloud that descended rapidly towards the ground. A 29 October 1993 St Austell report is more dramatic, involving a Royal Navy midshipman who reported a 30-foot object with bright lights to police, alongside a telepathic-message claim. [The Guardian]theguardian.comThe Guardian UFO sightings: The British X-files in full | News | theguardian.comThe Guardian UFO sightings: The British X-files in full | News | theguardian.com

Those three examples show why official status needs careful handling. The Camborne entry gains weight from the witness category: a police patrol is a more accountable reporting route than an anonymous rumour. The St Austell entry, by contrast, is officially recorded but contains elements that make it harder to evaluate as an aerial observation. The fact that both sit in official files does not place them on the same evidential footing. The record preserves the report; the reader still has to assess the content.

A later 15 May 1996 Tintagel report shows another pattern that often appears in British UFO files: a civilian contacted RAF police about a “suspicious object believed to be UFO” above his house, described as enormous, triangular and brightly lit. [The Guardian]theguardian.comThe Guardian UFO sightings: The British X-files in full | News | theguardian.comThe Guardian UFO sightings: The British X-files in full | News | theguardian.com This is useful because triangular-object reports became a recognisable part of late twentieth-century UFO culture, but the entry is still brief. It does not, on its own, tell us whether the object was an aircraft, a formation of lights, an optical effect, or something genuinely unidentified.

The MoD’s 2008 and 2009 public report lists add more Cornish texture, especially repeated orange-light cases. In 2008, Delabole produced multiple entries: a bright orange light moving oddly on 6 April, lights flying silently upwards on 4 May, and three objects or a bright orange light over the sea on 19 May. The same 2008 list includes a bright light zig-zagging southwards near Millbrook and Torpoint on 31 May, and bright orange star-like lights near Davidstow in July. [GOV.UK Assets]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukUK AssetsUK Assets In 2009, Lelant and Newquay appear on the same evening: two orange lights over Hayle Estuary at Lelant and a bright orange object moving west to east at Newquay. [GOV.UK Assets]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009

The pattern is clear: Cornwall appears in official lists, but usually as short-form sighting data. These entries are not useless; they are the backbone of any serious county-level history. But they are not case files in the dramatic sense. They usually lack witness interviews, photographs, radar confirmation, astronomical checks, aircraft correlation, or formal closure. That thinness is not a cover-up by itself. It reflects how the MoD’s UFO-reporting machinery actually worked, especially in its final years, when it was handling public reports, correspondence and Freedom of Information requests as much as conducting anything like field investigation. The National Archives’ release material says the UFO desk’s daily work included briefings, investigations, FOI handling, and press enquiries, before the desk closed in November 2009. [cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk.

Records vs Claims illustration 1

Why local media can make strange lights feel more solid

Local media often enters the story at the opposite end: not with a sparse table entry, but with witnesses, video clips, social posts, headlines and quick public reaction. That is useful because newspapers can capture what official records miss: the emotional texture of seeing something unexpected, the geography of where people were standing, and whether multiple residents noticed the same thing. It can also make a weakly identified light feel more mysterious than the evidence supports.

Recent CornwallLive coverage illustrates the mechanism. In December 2024, reports of strange lights around Porthtowan and Torpoint were written up as UFO-style stories, including a Porthtowan dog walker’s sighting at about 7.18pm on 9 December and a Torpoint family’s account of lights near hills by their home. [cornwalllive.com]cornwalllive.commore ufo sightings reported cornwall 9799174more ufo sightings reported cornwall 9799174 In a follow-up, Charlotte Helyer’s Torpoint account described a “really strange series of lights” that seemed to float, reduce to two white balls, and move away over a distance she estimated at about six miles; she raised drones as an initial possibility but doubted that explanation because of brightness, silence and apparent range. [bristolpost.co.uk]bristolpost.co.ukWest Country family spot 'UFO' and are left baffled by whatWest Country family spot 'UFO' and are left baffled by what

That is exactly the sort of account local reporting is good at preserving. It gives the witness’s reasoning, not just the event label. The weakness is that the story can circulate before enough checks have been made. A witness’s “too bright to be drones” or “too far away for a controller” may be sincere, but it is not the same as a technical exclusion. Distance at night is notoriously difficult to judge; bright points over hills can be mislocated; several lights can appear to belong to one object when they are separate sources; and a camera clip can flatten depth, speed and scale.

A similar dynamic appears in Cornwall and Devon coverage of Starlink. In 2019, “40 UFOs” over Truro were later explained as linked to Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite programme. [cornwalllive.com]cornwalllive.com40 ufos seen over truro 359187640 ufos seen over truro 3591876 By 2020, local outlets in Devon and Cornwall were again reporting that Starlink satellite trains had been spotted, with some viewers initially startled by the line of lights. [devonlive.com]devonlive.comelon musks starlink satellites spotted 4060355elon musks starlink satellites spotted 4060355 This matters for Cornwall because many of the older MoD entries describe silent orange or white lights moving in lines, groups, or repeated sequences. Not every such report is Starlink, especially before Starlink existed, but the modern example shows how easily an unfamiliar but ordinary sky event can become a local UFO story.

The same point applies to rocket-related displays. In March 2025, a glowing spiral seen across the UK and Europe was widely discussed before being attributed to a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket’s frozen exhaust plume reflecting sunlight. Sky News reported the Met Office explanation that the plume appeared to spin in the atmosphere and reflect sunlight, producing a spiral. [Sky News]news.sky.comNews Glowing spiral appears in night skyNews Glowing spiral appears in night sky A county such as Cornwall, with wide sea horizons and dark viewing locations, is well placed for such spectacular but non-local causes: the object may not be “over Cornwall” in any ordinary sense, even if it is seen from Cornwall.

The police log sits between the file and the headline

Devon and Cornwall Police records are especially useful because they sit between formal government archive and fast local storytelling. They show what happens when a member of the public turns an unusual sight into an official incident log. The 2026 Freedom of Information disclosure is also a reminder that record searches are shaped by keywords and systems. The force searched incident systems from 2020 to February 2026 using terms such as “UFO”, “unidentified flying”, “unexplained light”, “anomalous craft”, “lights in the sky”, “alien” and “extra-terrestrial”, then removed irrelevant results such as illegal-alien references, invasive species and drone-related anti-social behaviour. [devon-cornwall.police.uk]devon-cornwall.police.ukUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall PoliceUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall Police

One of the most useful Cornish entries is from Truro on 14 December 2020. A caller walking a dog reported a flash “like lightning but not lightning”, followed by what she described as shooting-star shapes that were not shooting stars. The log records that police called back, noted no bang and no aircraft signs from the caller’s position, and spoke to Truro aerodrome, where someone had also seen a flash. No flights or weather issues were reported there, no further calls came in, and the log was closed. [devon-cornwall.police.uk]devon-cornwall.police.ukUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall PoliceUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall Police

This is a strong example of what a good official log can and cannot do. It does not solve the sighting. But it does establish a time, a location, a reporting route, a second observation from the aerodrome, and a limited check against nearby aviation activity. That makes it more useful than a bare social-media post. At the same time, the closure tells us the practical threshold: no continuing danger, no cluster of calls, no obvious aircraft incident, no further police action.

The 18 September 2021 Callington log is more dramatic. The caller described a silent saucer-shaped, low-flying object with bright white-yellow and red lights, apparently huge enough to fill the windscreen view, moving across fields and causing concern that something might have crash-landed. [devon-cornwall.police.uk]devon-cornwall.police.ukUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall PoliceUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall Police The wording is vivid, but the record as published does not provide corroboration, flight checks, photographs, a location search result, or a final identification. It is an important local claim because it entered a police system; it remains evidentially limited because the public extract preserves only the narrative.

The 25 November 2024 Torpoint entry shows a different official outcome. A caller reported an orange-yellow flame or light with a black smoke trail, wondered whether it might be a light aircraft, flare or helicopter, and said it disappeared behind a tree line. The log noted nothing showing on flight radar in the area and concluded it was likely an illumination flare. [devon-cornwall.police.uk]devon-cornwall.police.ukUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall PoliceUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall Police This is precisely where official records can weaken a media-style UFO framing: not by proving the witness imagined it, but by offering a mundane working explanation that fits at least part of the description.

Records vs Claims illustration 2

How gaps, dates and reporting routes change the strength of a claim

The fairest way to read Cornwall UFO material is not to ask whether each story is “true” or “fake”. The better question is: what kind of record is this, and what would have to be true for the strongest version of the claim to stand?

A Cornish case becomes stronger when the date and time are precise, the location is specific, the witness route is accountable, and independent checks are possible. A police patrol report at Camborne, an aerodrome cross-check at Truro, or a police log from Torpoint is more useful than a vague “lights over Cornwall” post because it gives researchers something to test. But even then, official reporting only raises the quality of the record; it does not automatically raise the strangeness of the object.

A claim becomes weaker when the story depends mainly on impressions that are hard to calibrate at night: “too fast”, “too low”, “too bright”, “too silent”, “too far away for a drone”, or “hovering over hills”. Those phrases may be honest, but they are not measurements. Cornwall’s geography adds extra difficulty. A light seen across water, moorland or a valley can appear nearer or stranger than it is. Low cloud can reflect lights from the ground. Sea horizons can make aircraft, flares and celestial objects look displaced. A coastal county gives witnesses dramatic sightlines, but dramatic sightlines are not the same as precise distance estimates.

The MoD’s final position also matters. The closure of the UFO desk in 2009 did not mean the government had solved every case. It meant the MoD judged that continuing to collect reports served no defence purpose. The final National Archives release says the UFO desk received more than 600 reports in 2009, three times the previous year, and that internal files described the work as serving no defence purpose while generating correspondence. The same release says ministers were told that more than 50 years of reports had not shown evidence of a military threat to the UK. [cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk.

That policy context should shape how Cornwall’s post-2009 cases are read. When a modern local article says a family has filmed a UFO, there may be no MoD desk waiting to receive, analyse and publish it. A later police log may exist if the incident caused concern, but many sightings will live mainly as media clips, Facebook posts, Reddit threads, local-news articles or private photographs. The absence of an MoD file after 2009 is therefore not very meaningful by itself. The reporting system changed.

A practical way to weigh Cornwall records against claims

For Cornwall, the most reliable reading is a layered one. Start with the official record, then add local reporting, then test ordinary explanations before calling a case unresolved. This does not drain the subject of interest. It makes the interesting cases easier to see.

A useful reader’s test is:

  • Was there an official trace? A MoD entry, police log, aviation report or FOI disclosure gives the sighting a firmer starting point than a reposted clip.
  • Was the witness route accountable? Police, RAF, aerodrome or named witnesses are easier to evaluate than anonymous social-media claims.
  • Did anyone check aircraft, satellites, drones, flares or searchlights? The Truro aerodrome check and the Torpoint “likely illumination flare” note are small but important examples of useful verification. [devon-cornwall.police.uk]devon-cornwall.police.ukUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall PoliceUF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall Police
  • Did later reporting strengthen or weaken the story? Starlink explanations for lines of lights over Truro and Devon-Cornwall skies show how a striking first report can become less mysterious after context is added. [cornwalllive.com]cornwalllive.com40 ufos seen over truro 359187640 ufos seen over truro 3591876
  • Is the case still only a description? A vivid account without corroborating data may be worth preserving, but it should not be treated as a solved extraordinary event.

This approach also prevents an easy mistake: assuming that sceptical explanations are always dismissive. Sometimes they are the most useful part of the record. If a “UFO” turns out to be Starlink, a rocket plume, staging lights or an illumination flare, the case still teaches something about Cornwall’s UFO history. It shows what the county’s witnesses are actually seeing, how quickly reports spread, and which modern technologies now create the same sense of strangeness once produced by older aircraft, meteors or military activity.

Records vs Claims illustration 3

What the records leave unresolved

The most honest conclusion is that Cornwall has a real UFO-reporting history, but not a neat official mystery narrative. The strongest material is fragmented: Camborne and Looe Mills in 1993, Tintagel in 1996, clusters of orange-light reports in 2008 and 2009, and police-log entries from Truro, Callington and Torpoint in the 2020s. These records show that people in Cornwall, including some official or semi-official witnesses, have reported things they could not identify. They do not show that Cornwall has a confirmed extraordinary craft history.

Local media adds immediacy and human detail, but it can also outrun verification. Official records add structure and accountability, but they are often too brief to settle the matter. The best reading sits between them: Cornwall’s UFO stories are most credible when local testimony, official traces and later checks point in the same direction. They are weakest when a dramatic label travels faster than the evidence.

That tension is the real story of “records versus claims” in Cornwall. The county’s UFO archive is not empty, but it is sparse. Its local sightings are not all nonsense, but they are often under-checked. The useful question is not whether Cornwall is a hidden UFO hotspot. It is which reports survive careful comparison between what people said, what institutions recorded, and what later evidence made more or less likely.

Amazon book picks

Further Reading

Books and field guides related to When Cornwall UFO Stories Outrun the Records. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.

BookCover for UFOs

UFOs

By Leslie Kean

Directly addresses how government records, military reports, and witness accounts differ from public UFO narratives.

eBay marketplace picks

Marketplace Samples

Example marketplace items related to this page. Use the search link to explore similar finds on eBay.

Using USA

Endnotes

  1. Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/explore-the-collection/explore-by-time-period/postwar/ufo-reports/

  2. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: UK Assets
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a789e38ed915d042206403a/ufo_report_2008.pdf

  3. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: ufo report 2009
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7582c440f0b6397f35efcb/ufo_report_2009.pdf

  4. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-files-reveal-behind-the-scenes-of-the-ufo-desk.pdf

  5. Source: cornwalllive.com
    Title: more ufo sightings reported cornwall 9799174
    Link: https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/more-ufo-sightings-reported-cornwall-9799174

  6. Source: bristolpost.co.uk
    Title: West Country family spot ‘UFO’ and are left baffled by what
    Link: https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/west-country-family-spot-ufo-9822298

  7. Source: cornwalllive.com
    Title: 40 ufos seen over truro 3591876
    Link: https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/40-ufos-seen-over-truro-3591876

  8. Source: devonlive.com
    Title: elon musks starlink satellites spotted 4060355
    Link: https://www.devonlive.com/news/devon-news/elon-musks-starlink-satellites-spotted-4060355

  9. Source: news.sky.com
    Title: News Glowing spiral appears in night sky
    Link: https://news.sky.com/story/glowing-spiral-appears-in-night-sky-as-met-office-reveals-likely-cause-13335297

  10. Source: devon-cornwall.police.uk
    Title: UF O sightings | Devon & Cornwall Police
    Link: https://www.devon-cornwall.police.uk/foi-ai/devon–cornwall-police/disclosure-logs/2026-disclosures/ufo-sightings/

  11. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/final-tranche-of-UFO-files-released.pdf

  12. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: ufo report 2007
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a78a53fed915d04220643b2/ufo_report_2007.pdf

  13. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: 0850 i
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7cada5e5274a2f304ef6bf/0850_i.pdf

  14. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a789caced915d07d35b10c2/reqsep10.csv

  15. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a795f38ed915d0422067e25/reqfeb11.csv

  16. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7e41b3e5274a2e8ab46d7a/ReqMay2012.csv

  17. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: Sanctuary 38
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a79e15bed915d042206bb45/Sanctuary_38.pdf

  18. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: publishing.service.gov.uk Aircraft Incidents
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a74c9d9ed915d502d6cb041/20569401.pdf

  19. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/617be4f88fa8f52985dd76c1/rhc-drones-report.pdf

  20. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/cornwalllivenews/posts/a-visitor-to-the-cornish-coast-was-left-stunned-after-spotting-mysterious-swirli/1275009954652322/

  21. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/cornwalllivenews/posts/government-figures-show-reports-of-unidentified-objects-in-uk-skies-have-rockete/1350032277150089/

  22. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/cornwalllivenews/posts/now-a-video-has-captured-the-baffling-twirling-lights-over-cornwalli-have-never-/1276903271129657/

  23. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/nightskyappreciationcornwalluk/posts/1144041201265628/

  24. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/CornishNews/posts/police-were-called-to-a-ufo-sighting-on-the-north-cliffs-of-cornwall-near-portre/1115397300031250/

  25. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/cornwalllivenews/posts/the-absolutely-craziest-ufo-over-cornwall-video-weve-seen-yet/988786039941383/

  26. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/isleofwightradio/videos/did-you-see-strange-lights-in-the-sky-over-the-weekend-they-may-well-have-been-t/2563298217246357/

  27. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/adafruitindustries/posts/declassified-drawings-from-the-british-governments-ufo-desk/10156001362427578/

  28. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/ayrshiredailynews/posts/the-met-office-received-many-reports-of-an-illuminated-swirl-in-the-sky-this-eve/1040643304751217/

  29. Source: facebook.com
    Title: starlink satellite observing group
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2365809903441367/posts/27187048340890846/

  30. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/thejournal.ie/posts/a-blue-and-white-light-spiral-seen-over-europe-was-likely-caused-by-a-spacex-fal/1053145260191767/

  31. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/bbcworldservice/posts/this-large-glowing-spiral-visible-in-the-night-sky-in-the-uk-is-believed-to-have/1058004229687142/

  32. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/MattDevittWeather/posts/new-not-a-ufo-but-a-train-of-starlink-satellites-from-spacex-was-spotted-passing/1477979900357334/

  33. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-video-transcript.pdf

  34. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/the-ufo-files-extract.pdf

  35. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/aug-2009-highlights-guide.pdf

  36. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Title: ufo highlights guide 2013
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-highlights-guide-2013.pdf

  37. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/aug-2009-research-guide.pdf

  38. Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/rss/podcasts.xml

  39. Source: reddit.com
    Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/Cornwall/comments/1ghczcp/what_could_this_be/

  40. Source: reddit.com
    Title: ufo sighting in cornwall uk as family films
    Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/InterdimensionalNHI/comments/1hogntu/ufo_sighting_in_cornwall_uk_as_family_films/

  41. Source: reddit.com
    Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOB/comments/1smqwnp/can_anyone_explain_what_this_was_starlink_or_any/

  42. Source: cornwalllive.com
    Title: ufo sighting cornwall family films 9815680
    Link: https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/ufo-sighting-cornwall-family-films-9815680

  43. Source: devonlive.com
    Title: spirals glowing blue light spotted 10726364
    Link: https://www.devonlive.com/news/local-news/spirals-glowing-blue-light-spotted-10726364

  44. Source: spacex.com
    Link: https://www.spacex.com/

  45. Source: theguardian.com
    Title: The Guardian UFO sightings: The British X-files in full | News | theguardian.com
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2009/aug/17/ufo-sightings-x-files

  46. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/spacex/?hl=en

  47. Source: theguardian.com
    Title: mod report ufo sightings
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/aug/17/mod-report-ufo-sightings

  48. Source: theguardian.com
    Title: documents reveal how mod played down ufo thesis in x files study
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/may/06/documents-reveal-how-mod-played-down-ufo-thesis-in-x-files-study

Additional References

  1. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DHoB0nDMxcw/

  2. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DW05BGhFHKR/

  3. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DYiFP_BjGgG/

  4. Source: x.com
    Link: https://x.com/metoffice/status/1904312821858644415?lang=en

  5. Source: 247wallst.com
    Link: https://247wallst.com/investing/2026/06/22/spacex-ripped-past-a-2-5-trillion-valuation-following-its-historic-ipo-is-spcx-stock-a-dangerous-bubble-at-185/

  6. Source: caa.co.uk
    Link: https://www.caa.co.uk/newsroom/news/step-forward-in-unlocking-drones-flying-beyond-visual-line-of-sight/

  7. Source: dailymotion.com
    Link: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9gqe7u

  8. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DD_j8g0NQFF/

  9. Source: carrot.co.uk
    Link: https://www.carrot.co.uk/uk-vlos-visual-line-of-sight-drones

  10. Source: dronesaferegister.org.uk
    Link: https://dronesaferegister.org.uk/blog/im-a-hobby-drone-pilot-where-can-i-fly-my-drone

Topic Tree

Follow this branch

Parent topic

Cornwall UFOs

Related pages 3