Weekly Megathread: The Week the Hum Changed Frequency
Saturday, May 24th — 08:47
Morning, everyone.
Seven days. That's how long it's been since the Hum shifted. If you've been following along, you know what I'm talking about. If you're new here—welcome, and buckle up.
## What Happened This Week
Starting last Sunday (May 18th), that low-frequency sound some of us have been tracking changed pitch. Not dramatically—we're talking maybe 2-3 Hz—but enough that it's measurable. Enough that Old Harold called me Tuesday morning asking if I'd noticed. He's been hearing it since the 60s. When Harold notices a change, I pay attention.
The shift coincided with increased aerial activity over The Ridge. Three separate observers reported lights between 21:00 and 23:00 on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday. Always in threes. I caught two of those nights myself—thermal camera picked up heat signatures that moved against the wind. Could be drones. Could be atmospheric. Could be something else.
Wednesday brought equipment failures. My SDR receiver locked up twice during peak monitoring hours. The backup unit showed similar instability. Solar panels are fine, batteries are charged, connections are solid. No logical explanation for the crashes—but they happened during the same window when others reported compass deviations and GPS drift.
## What You've Been Sending Me
The submissions this week have been... significant. Someone in eastern Kentucky reported identical Hum frequency changes on the same timeline. Another observer in northern Alabama documented the same three-night pattern of aerial lights. A ham operator in western North Carolina logged signal interference matching my timestamps.
The pattern is expanding geographically. That concerns me.
Several of you asked about The Flashes—those brief, intense bursts of light we've tracked over the past year. Nothing this week. When the Hum changes, the Flashes stop. I've documented this correlation seventeen times now. Seventeen. That number again.
## Questions for the Community
This is where I need your help. I'm one guy with limited equipment in one location. You're my extended sensor network.
First question: Has anyone else experienced the Hum frequency shift? If you've been monitoring that low-frequency sound—whether you hear it naturally or you're using detection equipment—did something change between May 18-24? Document the dates and times. Precision matters.
Second question: The aerial activity pattern—three consecutive nights with one night off, then resuming. Has anyone observed this cycle in their area? I need to know if this is localized to Tennessee or if it's regional.
Third question: Equipment malfunctions. Did your electronics act strangely this week? Specifically Wednesday, May 21st, between 21:00-23:00 local time? GPS drift, compass errors, receiver lockups, camera failures. I'm building a timeline.
## What I'm Watching Next Week
The seventeen-day cycle puts us at a potential convergence point on May 28th. If the pattern holds—and it usually does—we should see increased activity mid-week. I'll be at The Clearing every night with full monitoring equipment.
The Hum is still running at the new frequency as of this morning. If it shifts back, that tells us something. If it stays changed, that tells us something different.
## A Personal Note
I know some of you think I'm chasing shadows. Maybe I am. But when shadows start appearing in multiple locations at the same time, following the same patterns—that's not random. That's signal.
The numbers don't lie, but they don't always tell the whole truth either.
Stay vigilant out there. Document everything. And remember—you're not alone in noticing these things. That's why we're here.
What did you observe this week?
I'm curious what you think. Here are a few questions to consider:
- 1Has anyone else experienced the Hum frequency shift between May 18-24?
- 2Did you observe the three-night aerial activity pattern in your area?
- 3Did your electronics malfunction on Wednesday, May 21st between 21:00-23:00 local time?
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