A note from the administrator.

I have had to close the forum to new members. Registration is shut. I'm sorry for it - but I can no longer vouch for who comes through the door.

You may also find that certain older topics are no longer where you left them. I have, with great reluctance, removed a small number of threads and posts from this forum. I did so at the written request of a firm of solicitors acting for the landowner, who hold that the material touched on matters they would prefer were not aired in public.

I have complied, because I am one man and they are not. I want it set down plainly, here, that I did so under protest, and that I do not accept the grounds. Nothing removed was untrue. Nothing removed was anyone's business to suppress.

But I will not delete this board. What is left here stays, and you may read it for as long as I can keep the lights on. I have locked the doors; I have not burned the house. I have kept copies of everything. I would ask, gently, that those of you who hold anything of your own do the same.

E. Selwood

Phantom hitchhiker on the A4?

Post Reply
Message
Author
geocache_gaz
Posts: 14
Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2017 10:10 pm

Phantom hitchhiker on the A4?

#1 Post by geocache_gaz »

weird one. driving back from a cache hunt late on the A4 near the downs, picked nobody up i promise, but i SAW someone, side of the road by the old coach route, dressed wrong, old-fashioned, just standing. gone in the mirror. probably a tired bloke and me driving badly. but then i googled it and theres loads of phantom hitchhiker stories on that road going back years, a woman in grey, a man who asks for a lift to a village thats not there anymore and vanishes from the back seat. anyone know the actual local version? freaked me out a bit ngl.
400+ caches and counting. if its hidden ill find it

RevdMargaretA
Posts: 13
Joined: Sat Feb 18, 2012 5:34 pm

#2 Post by RevdMargaretA »

The vanishing passenger is one of the oldest road-stories in the world, Gary, and every county has its stretch. The A4 was the great coaching road, and a road that old gathers them. The classic shape, which yours has a piece of, is the traveller who asks to be taken home to a place the driver cannot afterwards find, or that proves to have gone years before. I would not lie awake over it. I would only say that long roads remember their traffic, and the people who walked and rode and died along them, more than we comfortable drivers like to think. Be kind to the thought of them, and drive carefully on that bend.
The land is full of the memory of those who walked it.

Honeystreet_Haunts
Posts: 10
Joined: Sun Jul 13, 2014 2:58 am

#3 Post by Honeystreet_Haunts »

Margaret has the old shape of it right. For the walk I collected three A4 versions: the grey woman near the Beckhampton turn, a coachman with no face on the long straight, and the one Gary half has, a man who asks for a lift to a village and is gone before you can ask which village. That last one is the good one, for my money, because it is so specific and so sad. He just wants to go home, and home is not there, and he cannot stay in the car long enough to be told. I do not put that one on the comedy part of the walk.
Wiltshire Paranormal. Investigating the vale since 2009. The truth is out there, mostly :shock:

geocache_gaz
Posts: 14
Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2017 10:10 pm

#4 Post by geocache_gaz »

ok the man who wants to get home to a village that isnt there anymore has genuinely got me a bit. thanks Mrs A and Mick. driving that road in daylight from now on. lovely and horrible, this thread, in equal measure.
400+ caches and counting. if its hidden ill find it

Post Reply