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  • 13: Haunted Road trip series: The Hoodoos and Ghost Towns of Alberta
    2025/07/25

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    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we journey across Alberta’s eeriest landscapes — from ancient stone guardians to the forgotten towns they watched over.

    First, we explore the haunting Indigenous legends behind the Hoodoos of the Alberta badlands — towering rock formations believed to be petrified giants, guardians of sacred lands, and even cursed beings struck down by the spirits.

    Then, we travel through time into four of Western Canada’s most chilling ghost towns:

    • Anyox, BC – A lost copper town only accessible by boat, where lights still flicker in buildings with no power.
    • Frank Slide, Alberta – The site of Canada’s deadliest landslide, where rock buried nearly a hundred souls — and some say, still holds them.
    • Phoenix, BC – A once-bustling city now watched over by a woman in black, forever mourning a forgotten grave.
    • Bankhead, Alberta – A mining town swallowed by silence, where voices still echo through ruined wash houses and unmarked graves.

    We explore the tragic history, eerie encounters, and the folklore that lingers long after the last train left.

    🔍 Referenced Legends & Lore:

    • Hoodoo origin stories from Blackfoot and Cree traditions
    • The 1903 Frank Slide disaster (Turtle Mountain)
    • Reports from Phoenix Cemetery and the Woman in Black
    • The ghost of Bankhead and the legend of the exhumed grave
    • Urban explorer accounts from Anyox

    📚 Sources & Further Reading:

    • Parks Canada interpretive materials (Bankhead & Frank Slide)
    • Canadian Encyclopedia – “Frank Slide”
    • Mystery Weekly Magazine – “Haunted Canada: Ghost Towns”
    • Medium: “The Ghost Towns of British Columbia”
    • Puzzle Box Horror – “Legends of the Hoodoos”
    • Indigenous oral storytelling traditions (Blackfoot, Stoney Nakoda references)
    • Ron’s Amazing Stories: Canadian Ghost Towns Series
    • Weird Canada Archives

    📲 Stay Connected:

    🔗 Website: letstalkspookypodcast.buzzsprout.com
    📸 Instagram & TikTok: @LetsTalkSpookypod
    💬 Got a local legend to share? Email us at letstalkspooky@gmail.com

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    25 分
  • 12: Don’t Stop Here: Urban Legends from the Road
    2025/07/19

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    In this episode, we buckle up for a journey through some of the world’s most haunted highways. These roads are more than just routes — they’re stitched with ghost stories, legends, and unexplained encounters that have left even seasoned drivers shaken.

    Featured Locations & Legends:

    • 🛣 Clinton Road (New Jersey, USA)
      Known for phantom trucks, time slips, and the tragic tale of a ghost boy at the bridge who returns tossed coins. A real-life murder case involving serial killer Richard Kuklinski adds chilling weight to the legend.
    • 👰 Blue Bell Hill (Kent, England)
      Home of the Vanishing Bride. Drivers pick up a woman in a white dress—only to have her vanish from the backseat. Local legends tie her to a fatal 1965 car accident.
    • 👹 Route 44 / La Mala Hora (New Mexico, USA)
      "The Evil Hour" apparition terrifies drivers at night — a dark-robed woman with red eyes said to foretell death or madness.
    • 🏞 Ghost River Road (Alberta, Canada)
      Near Ghost Lake, Indigenous legends tell of lingering battle spirits. Campers report drumming, fog, and voices that rise from the river itself.

    📚 Sources & References

    • Weird NJ Magazine – Clinton Road legends & Richard Kuklinski case
    • Atlas Obscura – Clinton Road hauntings
    • Kent Live – Blue Bell Hill ghost bride
    • Myths and Folklore Wiki – La Mala Hora
    • [Reddit / r/NoSleep / r/Paranormal] – First-hand road horror stories
    • Puzzle Box Horror – Vanishing hitchhiker lore
    • [Tumblr Urban Legend Threads] – Ghost River folk stories & user encounters
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    24 分
  • 11: Dark Nursery Rhymes
    2025/07/12

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    Episode Summary:

    They sound sweet, playful… harmless.
    But behind the sing-song melodies of childhood lies something far older — and often far darker.

    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we peel back the innocent surface of familiar nursery rhymes to uncover the bloody history, buried warnings, and folkloric origins they carry. From the burning martyrs behind “Three Blind Mice” to the sinister symbolism of “Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary” and the terrifying legend of “The Muffin Man,” we explore how these rhymes became time-traveling vessels for superstition, grief, and hidden truths.

    🕯️ What You’ll Hear:

    • 🎵 The Tudor executions encoded in Three Blind Mice
    • 🪦 The hidden graveyard symbolism in Mary, Mary Quite Contrary
    • 🧁 Whether The Muffin Man was a street vendor or a serial killer
    • 🧺 How nursery rhymes may have acted as coded warnings in public
    • 🕸️ Why folklore loves to dress darkness in rhyme
    • 👶 Why children’s songs are perfect carriers for cultural memory

    📚 Referenced Articles & Sources:

    • BBC Culture – The Hidden Meaning of Nursery Rhymes
    • History Extra – The Bloody Origins of Nursery Rhymes
    • Smithsonian Magazine – “Mary, Mary Quite Contrary” and English Execution Folklore
    • Oxford University Press – The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes by Iona and Peter Opie
    • Folklore Society Archives – Songs as Oral History: Rhymes and Riddles as Codes
    • “The Muffin Man” Creepypasta origins – Uncyclopedia (archival satire, not factual)
    • JSTOR Daily – The Evolution of Folk Songs in Oral Tradition

    🔮 Listener Note:

    This episode includes references to historical violence, child death, and folklore with dark origins. Listener discretion is advised.

    💀 Want More Spooky in Your Feed?

    Be sure to subscribe, rate, and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts — and share the episode with your favorite folklore lover.

    🌒 Follow us on TikTok & Instagram: @LetsTalkSpooky
    🎧 All episodes: https://letstalkspookypodcast.buzzsprout.com

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    19 分
  • 10: Rituals of Death - Part Two
    2025/07/03

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    In Part Two of our funeral superstitions series, we explore the eerie traditions and strange rituals people have used across history to keep the dead from rising — and protect the living from what might return.

    We cover:

    • Revenants in Slavic folklore and how communities fought back with stakes, decapitation, and fire
    • Victorian safety coffins and the real fear of premature burial
    • Superstitions about burial direction, mirrors, coins, and thresholds
    • The chilling story of Rosângela Almeida dos Santos, a modern-day case in Brazil where a woman may have been buried alive
    • Folklore from the Amazon, where families hold vigils and sleep beside the dead to guide the soul safely on
    • The symbolism behind nails, ropes, and weights in burial rituals meant to hold spirits down
    • Why some graves include broken tools, upside-down shoes, or iron keys

    📚 Sources & References:

    • Neplach’s Chronicle (14th Century) – Account of Myslata of Blov, a revenant in Bohemia
    • “The Fear of Premature Burial” – Jan Bondeson, 2001
    • JSTOR – Ethnographic studies on Brazilian funeral customs
    • Folklore Society archives – Burial superstitions and corpse-control practices in Eastern Europe
    • News reports: Case of Rosângela Almeida dos Santos (Brazil, 2018)
    • “Revenants and the Boundaries of Death” – Paul Barber, 1988
    • Smithsonian Magazine – "Victorian Era’s Obsession with Avoiding Premature Burial"
    • “Sleeping with the Dead: Vigil and Transition Rituals in Amazonian Tribes” – Ethnos, 2014

    🧠 Listener Tip:

    Superstitions weren’t just fear-based — they were survival stories. Whether it was disease prevention or spiritual defense, many of these practices were born out of lived experiences and local lore.

    🔗 Follow & Subscribe:

    Listen to more eerie episodes of Let’s Talk Spooky at:
    🎧 letstalkspookypodcast.buzzsprout.com

    Follow on TikTok & Instagram: @LetsTalkSpooky
    Tag us with #LetsTalkSpooky to share your own funeral superstitions or family lore!

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    21 分
  • 09: Rituals of Death - Part One
    2025/06/27

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    In this chilling first part of a two-part series, Shauna takes you on a journey through centuries of funeral rituals shaped by both reverence and terror. From sin-eaters in rural Britain to ancient Greek coins meant to pay the ferryman, this episode unearths the spiritual, folkloric, and at times horrifying ways humans have tried to ensure the dead stay at rest. With stories that span from historical rituals to near-death modern miracles, we peel back the veil on how humanity has tried to say goodbye… and why we’re still afraid it might not be enough.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • Fear of death vs fear of the afterlife
    • Historical burial practices
    • The role of the Sin-Eater in rural England and Wales
    • Ancient Greek funerary coins and beliefs in the afterlife
    • Cross-cultural comparisons (Egypt, Norse, Haitian traditions)
    • The true purpose of wakes and stories of premature burial
    • Modern near-death story from Reddit (u/missymaypen)
    • Teaser for Part Two: Rituals meant to trap the dead
    • Sources & Historical References:
    1. Sin-Eaters:
      • Davies, Owen. The Haunted: A Social History of Ghosts.
      • Ronald Hutton’s work on British folklore and folk magic
      • "The Last Sin Eater" (historical references to Richard Munslow, Shropshire)
    2. Ancient Greek Burial Customs:
      • Garland, Robert. The Greek Way of Death
      • Archaeological studies of obol placement in 5th–4th century BCE graves
      • Classical mythology of Charon and the River Styx
    3. Premature Burial and Wake Traditions:
      • Jan Bondeson, Buried Alive: The Terrifying History of Our Most Primal Fear
      • Victorian mourning rituals & the role of wakes before embalming
      • Case study: Susan Armstrong (1839) [urban legend and folklore reports]
    4. Cross-Cultural Funerary Practices:
      • Egyptian Book of the Dead references to Duat
      • Norse burial ships and coin offerings
      • Haitian Vodou rituals involving Baron Samedi
    5. Reddit User Story (modern legend):
      • Shared by u/missymaypen on Reddit’s r/Paranormal

    Have your own eerie tale or hometown haunting?Email: ⁠letstalkspookypodcast@gmail.com⁠Follow Instagram @letstalkspookypodcast on TikTok @ letstalkspookypod


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    21 分
  • 08: Haunted Houses: Echoes
    2025/06/21

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    This week on Let’s Talk Spooky, we unlock the doors to two haunted homes that history tried to forget.

    First, we travel to the tangled fields of Goa, India, where the tragic legend of the D’Mello House still lingers—two brothers, one house, and a silence that never truly settled.

    Then, we journey to Nova Scotia’s oldest town to visit the Bailey House, a Georgian-era home where ghostly perfume drifts through the halls… and a pale woman is said to still wait by the window for a ship that never returned.

    Ghost stories, historical echoes, and the kind of hauntings that don’t scream—they watch.

    📚 Sources & References

    🏚️ D’Mello House – Goa, India

    Local legend compiled from regional folklore, local accounts, and oral retellings

    Anecdotes from tourist blogs and video entries of midnight visits (e.g., Goa-based haunted places on YouTube)

    Mentioned in articles like:

    Haunted Places in Goa - Holidify

    India Times - Haunted Houses of India

    🕯️ Bailey House – Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia

    Built c.1770, Georgian-style house

    Historical context from:

    Historic Places Canada Registry – Bailey House

    Annapolis Royal Heritage Tour Guides

    Folklore and ghost sightings gathered from:

    Local tourism and B&B guest testimonials

    Ghost stories featured in Nova Scotia supernatural forums and books like Haunted Canada series

    Destination Halifax Haunted Highlights

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    19 分
  • 07: Forests That Watch: Haunted Forests
    2025/06/12

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    Some forests welcome you. Others… watch you.

    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore two of the world’s most haunted forests: Aokigahara, Japan’s mysterious Sea of Trees, known for its silence, sorrow, and restless spirits... and Germany’s Black Forest, where werewolves roam, witches cast curses, and tall shadowy figures are said to follow wanderers home.

    If you’ve ever felt the woods were watching — maybe they were.

    Content Warning:

    This episode contains discussion of:

    • Suicide and grief (Aokigahara)
    • Historical executions and violence
    • Themes of isolation and supernatural danger

    Listener discretion is advised.

    If you or someone you know is struggling, please know you are not alone.
    📞 Canada & U.S.:
    National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Dial 988 (24/7, free, and confidential)

    📞 For Canada (Talk Suicide Canada):
    1-833-456-4566 | talksuicide.ca

    📞 For listeners outside North America:
    Visit https://findahelpline.com for international resources.

    Sources & Further Reading:

    • Wandering in Japan’s Suicide Forest, The New York Times
      https://archive.nytimes.com/lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/25/wandering-in-japans-suicide-forest/
    • “The Werewolf of Bedburg” (Peter Stumpf) – 1589 trial records and historical analyses
    • “The Wolf of Ansbach” – Bavarian legend and folklore (1685)
    • Morbach Monster – U.S. military base accounts and shrine folklore (1988)
    • “Yūrei: The Japanese Ghost” by Zack Davisson
    • Encyclopedia of German Superstition and Folklore (translated editions)

    Connect with Us:

    • 🎧 Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts
    • 📸 Instagram: @letstalkspooky
    • 📩 Got a spooky forest near you? Please send us your stories!
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    23 分
  • 06: Haunted Hospital Horrors
    2025/06/05

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    In this chilling episode, we step behind the crumbling walls and flickering lights of some of the world’s most haunted hospitals. From the infamous death tunnel of Waverly Hills Sanatorium, to the mysterious and tragic lore of Sayama Hospital in Japan, to the silent echoes trapped inside the overgrown halls of Riverview Hospital in British Columbia, we explore what happens when pain lingers long after the patients are gone.

    🧠 Topics Covered:

    Dark history of Waverly Hills Sanatorium (Louisville, Kentucky)

    Sayama Hospital and the cultural impact of the Sayama Incident (Japan)

    The rise and fall of Riverview Hospital (Coquitlam, British Columbia)

    🔗 Resources & References:

    Waverly Hills Sanatorium

    Waverly Hills Historical Overview: https://www.therealwaverlyhills.com

    “The Haunted History of Waverly Hills Sanatorium” – Legends of America

    Personal testimonies and ghost tours via [YouTube – Ghost Hunters & BuzzfeedUnsolved]

    Sayama Hospital & Sayama Incident

    Background on the Sayama Incident: Human Rights Now – Sayama Case

    Creepy Reddit encounter near Sayama: r/Paranormal

    Cultural impact and hospital myth: [r/UnresolvedMysteries]

    RiverviewHospital

    Riverviewhistory via BC Archives: BC Government Heritage Site

    CreepyReddit tales and eyewitness accounts:

    r/coquitlam– haunted places

    r/Paranormal– bus ghost story

    r/britishcolumbia– abandoned buildings

    📲 Connect With Us:

    👻 Instagram: @letstalkspooky

    📩 Email Your Stories: letstalkspooky@gmail.com

    🎧 Subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen!

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    19 分