
Scotland's UFO capital: What was happening in Bonnybridge?
Lights, darting and diving through the darkness, danced across the sky above them. One hovered, paused within feet, then zipped away with impossible speed.
Veteran crews might have expected some strange nocturnal sights from passing planes, satellites or shooting stars.
But this was like nothing they'd ever seen before ...
The 1980s incident in the Stirlingshire skies would not be the first, nor was it far from the last to leave onlookers in the area questioning what on earth – or, perhaps, not on earth – they had possibly seen.
Within a few years, a wave of even more vivid and unusual sightings of unidentified objects in the night sky would see the area around the Stirlingshire town of Bonnybridge gain international notoriety as Scotland's UFO capital.
Throughout the 1990s – and beyond – an area dubbed the Falkirk Triangle became the focus for vivid claims of extra-terrestrial activity, scoffed at by some and igniting the curiosity of others.
Now a newly published book suggests the skies above this part of the country were playing host to something unexplained long before the world was watching.
Co-authored by veteran UFO researchers Malcolm Robinson and Ron Halliday, Bonnybridge: The Definitive Guide to Scotland's UFO Hotspot is a meticulous compendium of eyewitness accounts, official responses, theories and the persistent mystery that has long hovered – sometimes literally – over the region.
UFO investigator Malcolm Robinson has spent years researching the unexplained
And crucially, says Halliday, it peels back the curtain on sightings that stretch far earlier than the widely reported explosion of activity in the 1990s.
'I was surprised myself,' he says about the sheer number of strange incidents stretching back years before the 1990s when the area came to be regarded as a UFO hotspot.
'I had been involved with the sightings in the 1990s, but I hadn't realised there were so many earlier accounts.
'It suggests there's been something happening in this area for much longer than we thought.'
Among the testimonies is the young woman who was stopped in her tracks by a glowing red light hovering above a house in Denny, not far from Gardrum Moss and just a few miles from Bonnybridge.
Squinting a little, she realised the light was emanating from an egg-shaped object, perched at an angle and with a glowing white band of light around its centre.
These days she might have reached for her phone to capture what she was seeing, to share across social media and watch her video go viral.
But this was October 1980, and all she could do was stare as it lifted straight up into the still dark sky and, in a sudden burst of speed, disappear.
A new book explores the mystery of Bonnybridge UFO sightings (Image: Getty)
Should she mention it to anyone? Would they even believe her?
Then there was Janet Middleton from the village of Laurieston on the fringes of Falkirk, who, in 1983, glanced up while walking her dog and saw what she later described as a 'huge starship', with six windows and a metallic enamel sheen, gently descending over the hills before fading away.
More sightings followed. From glowing orbs to dazzling lights to shimmering metallic craft, the phenomenon extended beyond one-off occurrences into a patchwork of strange and consistent events spanning several decades.
The new book now suggests patterns of sightings across the area long before the international spotlight turned on the town in the 1990s.
What makes many sightings stand out says Halliday, is they come from 'ordinary' men and women who had no reason to make anything up.
'A lot of witnesses have nothing to gain and everything to lose,' he points out.
'We have had a police officer, people in professional jobs… they don't want to be branded 'loonies'.
'Folk speak out knowing they are at risk of being ridiculed, yet they feel they have to talk about their experiences.'
The book comes in the wake of rising speculation over UFOs following a NASA panel set up in 2023 to explore unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) which confirmed some defied explanation.
US President Donald Trump has also indicated previously locked Pentagon files relating to UFO activity could be released.
The new book explores in detail dozens of sightings, among them a spate of early 1990s incidents which led to Bonnybridge becoming Scotland's UFO hotspot leading to film crews descending from as far as Japan, and a host of documentaries, articles and theories.
Read more by Sandra Dick:
Among the most intriguing was the incident on a March evening in 1992, when Isabelle Sloggett strolled on a quiet back road between Hallglen and Bonnybridge with her daughter Carole and son Steven.
Their eyes were drawn to a peculiar circle of blue light in the sky which swooped to the ground and landed first in a nearby field, and then moved on to the road around 60 feet behind them.
Bonnybridge Councillor Billy Buchanan led calls for UFO investigations (Image: Gordon Terris)
A fence began to rattle and shake, there was a strange whirring sound – likened to a door opening – and then, according to the book's account, a 'howl'.
As the family fled at a furious pace down the road, a blinding intense light shone out at them through a range of trees.
Within a few weeks, other locals came forward to tell of seeing bluish lights in the area, balls of light and odd objects.
They included pals Steven Wilson and David Gillespie, both in their early twenties at the time, who were driving on a quiet road close to their home in Maddiston – a few miles south of Bonnybridge.
It was the early hours of an August morning in 1992, and their eyes locked on a strange object in the sky.
'The object was oval in shape, red in colour, and was sharply defined,' says Robinson.
'They estimated that they observed this object for roughly one and a half minutes. No sound at all could be heard coming from the object.'
Witnesses ranged from pensioners living in Falkirk's high rise flats who, used to seeing passing planes, reported odd colours and lights in the sky, to 12-year-old schoolboy, Craig Morrison, who reported watching red lights form patterns above his home in Larbert, around three miles east of Bonnybridge.
'As he was walking down the street, he suddenly heard a tremendous 'whooshing' sound come from above him in the sky," says Robinson.
"Looking up, he observed three red lights in a rectangular pattern with a curved structure below them which appeared to be hovering above some nearby rooftops.
"Suddenly, the object flew off and was eventually lost to view.'
Paranormal and UFO investigator Ron Halliday, co-author of a new book exploring the Bonnybridge UFO sightings
But perhaps the most significant sighting involved a local businessman, James Walker, as he drove on a country road between Falkirk and Bonnybridge.
Just ahead of him, hovering above the road, was a glowing star shaped object.
Halting for a better look, he watched the lights form the shape of a triangle. This, he later told his friend, local councillor Billy Buchanan, he was sure wasn't due to an obvious source such as an aircraft.
The strange incidents would be among many: it's been suggested there have been as many as 300 sightings.
From being a quiet town with an industrial heritage of brickmaking, sawmills and foundries tied to its proximity to the Forth and Clyde Canal, cut through by the Antonine Wall and with the remnants of Rough Castle Fort on its fringes, Bonnybridge became a byword for odd activity.
But why Bonnybridge?
'We've always had hotspots that seem to flare up,' says Halliday. 'Bonnybridge in the nineties was like that – a sudden burst of reports, more than anywhere else in Scotland.
'But these older cases suggest there was always something simmering below the surface.'
The book pinpoints the role of the local councillor at the time, Billy Buchanan, who found himself inundated with UFO reports.
Read more by Sandra Dick:
Though sceptical, he became the town's most unexpected UFO advocate – not because he chased little green men, stresses the new book, but because, as he put it, he'd been elected to serve his constituents, and they were demanding answers.
Risking ridicule, he called for the Ministry of Defence to look into the sightings and penned letters to Margaret Thatcher, John Major and Tony Blair.
He became known as the 'UFO Councillor' and while some locals cringed and scoffed, he'd later go on to receive a public apology from Nick Pope, a former civil servant who once investigated UFOs for the Ministry of Defence at the time, for dismissing claims of 'close encounters' around the village.
The book also captures the public's shift in attitude as more people came forward, igniting a growing willingness to share strange sightings that might otherwise never have been mentioned.
Emboldened, people who might have kept their sightings to themselves, spoke out.
'There's still stigma,' adds Robinson. 'For every five people who see something, only one might speak up.
'But in Bonnybridge, it reached a point where people couldn't stay quiet.'
Some sightings were particularly vivid.
There was the man driving with his sons near Denny when a black, doorless craft hovered beside their car, emitting a tingling, electric sensation through their bodies.
And another motorist near Castlecary Viaduct who watched two triangular craft, point-to-point, floating above the road before vanishing into the night.
'These weren't just lights in the distance,' Robinson adds. 'Some were structured objects, seen at low altitude, close to witnesses.
'Not planes, not helicopters – and not explainable by conventional means.'
Bonnybridge High Street (Image: Robert Murray, Geograph, Creative Commons)
And while there have been other Scottish UFO hotspots – Dumfriesshire in the '70s, East Kilbride, Aberdeen in the '50s - Bonnybridge stands out not just for the number of sightings, but their intensity, consistency, and proximity.
So, what was going on?
The authors stress up to 95 percent of sightings can be put down to misidentified aircraft, satellites or natural phenomena.
A small number, perhaps, are black-budget military tech.
But it's the remainder – the inexplicable 1% – that they argue continue to defy analysis.
UFO investigator Malcolm Robinson at Dechmont Law, near Livingston, scene of another UFO mystery (Image: Malcolm Robinson)
And in Bonnybridge, for a febrile spell in the 1990s, that one percent felt unusually concentrated.
'Why Bonnybridge?' Halliday muses. 'Is it a window area? Are we glimpsing into another dimension, another universe?'
It's a mystery within a mystery, he adds.
'There have been so many reports, photos and videos.
'People know a bit about the sky, they know what a plane looks like, they realise Mars is visible at certain times of the year, and Venus.
'There's something going on, and we can't just dismiss it.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
14 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien show – can you guess her famous parent?
Her dad won a prestigious award for his work in a popular drama series nepo star Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien show – can you guess her famous parent? Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A NEPO-baby with a TV star dad posed on the red carpet with her co-star - but can you work out her famous parent? Alien: Earth serves as a prequel to the iconic 1979 movie Alien, starring Sigourney Weaver. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 4 The cast of Alien: Earth posed on the red carpet Credit: Getty 4 Lead actress Sydney plays character Wendy - but do you know her famous real-life parent? Credit: Splash 4 Her dad is the Emmy-winning actor Kyle Chandler Credit: AFP The series is set to release on FX and FX on Hulu from August 12. Lead character Wendy is the first-ever hybrid - meaning someone whose human consciousness is transferred into a synthetic body. Rising actress Sydney Chandler, 29, portrays this pivotal role in Alien: Earth. If her surname sounds familiar, you'd be right, as her dad is famed actor Kyle Chandler. Read more on Nepo Babies double take Nepo-baby looks identical to movie icon dad on red carpet - can you guess who? Kyle, 59, is well-known to audiences for his role in NBC sports drama Friday Night Lights. In 2011, he won the Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for his portrayal of Eric Taylor. Viewers may also recognise Kyle from Grey's Anatomy, or films such as King Kong and Super 8. Joining Sydney in Alien: Earth are the likes of Alex Lawther, Timothy Olyphant and Adrian Edmondson, among others. She has previously appeared in the television series Pistol, playing singer Chrissy Hynde of The Pretenders. Sydney also appeared opposite Colin Farrell in the neo-noir mystery dama Sugar. Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien movie - can you guess her famous parent? In 2022, Sydney portrayed Violet in psychological thriller film Don't Worry Darling. The cast also included Florence Pugh, Harry Styles, Chris Pine and Olivia Wilde, who directed the movie. Meanwhile, Sydney isn't the only star following in a famous parent's footsteps. Nakoa-Wolf will star as one of the twins born to Timothée Chalamet's character Paul Atreides and Zendaya's Chani in Dune 3, as per Deadline. This nepo-baby will make his big screen debut as Leto II. In the flick, his on-screen sister, Ghanima, will be played by Ida Brooke. Nakoa-Wolf's mother and father in the real world are known for their acting abilities, too. His parents are none other than Jason Mamoa and Lisa Bonet.


Metro
a day ago
- Metro
Scientists pinpoint when humans start ‘ageing'
There comes a certain time where we start groaning trying to get ourselves off of a chair. We complain that our bodies are getting old, and we just don't have the energy that we used to. Well, researchers now say they have pinpointed exactly when we start ageing... (Picture: Getty) The new research says that we begin seriously ageing as young as 30. This is the age where our bodies begin to break down. At this time, the adrenal gland, which sits in the top of the kidneys and releases hormones vital for regulating bodily functions, begins to show changes in protein levels. The researchers found an increase in 48 disease-related proteins as tissue samples trended older. But this isn't the age when we seriously begin ageing – that's at 50 (Picture: Getty) Publishing their study in the journal Cell, researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences collected tissue samples across the body's major organ systems from 76 individuals of Chinese ancestry. The samples came from those who had died from accidental brain injury and were aged between 14 to 68 (Picture: Getty) The experts discovered that certain tissues, such as blood vessels, experience ageing faster than others. The scientists also identified the proteins responsible for this accelerated process. Large changes in protein levels were spotted around the ages of 45 and 55, and one of the biggest shifts was in the aorta. Scientists suspect that blood vessels carry these age-accelerating molecules throughout the body (Picture: Getty) The authors wrote: 'Based on aging-associated protein changes, we developed tissue-specific proteomic age clocks and characterised organ-level aging trajectories. Temporal analysis revealed an aging inflection around age 50, with blood vessels being a tissue that ages early and is markedly susceptible to ageing' (Picture: Getty) This study's conclusion fits in nicely with a previous study from Stanford University which showed that humans largely experience a period of accelerated ageing at around 44 and the early 60s. Stanford University's Michael Snyder, a professor of genetics, and lead author of the study, said about the current study: 'It fits the idea that your hormonal and metabolic control are a big deal. That is where some of the most profound shifts occur as people age. We're like a car. Some parts wear out faster' (Picture: Getty) Understanding how humans age will help doctors to find ways to help us live healthy, longer lives, and to learn more about how the body experiences ageing throughout our lifetime. 'These insights may facilitate the development of targeted interventions for ageing and age-related diseases, paving the way to improve the health of older adults,' said the study authors (Picture: Getty) Your free newsletter guide to the best London has on offer, from drinks deals to restaurant reviews.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
When Scotland was the world's UFO hot spot
Thirty years ago, Scotland was the centre of the UFO 1990s started with a photograph that has achieved almost folkloric status as one of the best images of an Unidentified Flying came a flood of sightings of mystery objects in a part of central Scotland which came to be known as the Falkirk captured the world's imagination, attracting journalists from around the globe and leading to claims of conspiracies, cover-ups and cheap publicity truth may still be out there. It is certainly complicated. And three decades on, what actually happened is still the subject of passionate debate. Bonnybridge is a village of about 6,000 people near Falkirk. It lies close to the main Edinburgh to Glasgow rail line and Forth and Clyde many of the surrounding towns and villages, the manufacturing industries which once prospered there are long gone. It is a quiet, tucked-away part of the country and was probably on few radars until 1992, when locals started reporting strange lights in the Robinson has lived in the area for most of his life. He has been interested in UFOs and the paranormal since childhood and founded the amateur research group Strange Phenomena Investigations (SPI) in 1992, he became aware of something on his own doorstep."I heard about it on a local radio station," he says. "Billy Buchanan, the local councillor, was on there talking about these UFO sightings and I went: 'Wow, by God I really need to get in touch with him and see if I can lend any assistance'."Councillor Buchanan had begun collecting reports from constituents who said they had seen strange lights and objects in the sky. Things they did not recognise, things they could not explain. Towards the end of that year, he had recorded more than 200 incidents. It is important to say that the term UFO means Unidentified Flying Object. It does not describe alien ships visiting the Bonnybridge UFO reports covered a wide spectrum of events, including a motorist describing lights in the form of a cross hovering above a road before morphing into a another occasion a family witnessed a bright circle of light landing in a interest was immediate and intense. The local newspaper and national tabloids were hungry for headlines. TV reporters joked about alien visitors but still came looking for crews were dispatched to cover a UFO watch, held on a cold November night. They left without a close encounter.A public meeting was held in January 1993. Concerned locals were looking for answers. The term Falkirk Triangle was coined, covering the area between Stirling, Falkirk and West Lothian. Those who study UFOs know that media reporting leads to greater public awareness and more sightings. That certainly happened around Bonnybridge. Sightings continued to make headlines for another three or four years. In 1997, they were the subject of the prime time TV programme Strange But it, Billy Buchanan talks about writing to the recently elected Prime Minister Tony Blair, demanding an investigation. His request was photographs and tales of unexplained encounters continued. But the story drew accusations of fakery, publicity-seeking and even tabloid newspaper claims that aliens had been in contact with Robinson was there throughout - investigating the reports, following up what people said they had seen and checking air traffic, police and military records. "I was astonished by how massive the story was," he says. "Everybody and their granny wanted to know about what was going on there. And quite rightly so."The problem we got is that some members of the media community were hyping things up. So if it was 100 sightings it suddenly became 1,000 sightings."Malcolm puts the total number of sightings in the region at about 350 between 1982, the year he began recording incidents, and Lyndsay was a Ministry of Defence (MoD) press officer in Scotland during that period and remembers recording the reports."When I started work there in 1989 I fairly quickly discovered that nearly always in the evening there would be someone calling RAF Pitreavie about lights in the sky or something like that."Nearly always around Falkirk, Bonnybridge, to the point that we actually had what you call a pro forma form. If the controllers weren't busy, they would just fill in the form and send it off to London."But if they were busy, they would divert the call to me, and I would speak to the person and get the details and I would fax the thing off to London and we never heard anything more about them. It was a fairly common occurrence."It was just, to be blunt, folks coming out of the pub and seeing things." But the Falkirk Triangle is not the only UFO mystery to come from that weekend, at a public talk in Perthshire, enthusiasts will gather to discuss one of the subject's most enduring was captured by camera in the skies above Calvine on a summer's day in 1990?The photo we see today is grainy and indistinct. It is framed by the branches of a tree and a wood and wire fence. Between them, low in the sky, is a diamond-shaped object, a ridge along its and slightly lower and flying right to left is a small, modern military jet. It has been identified as a Harrier, a fighter then in service with the appears to be approaching the object, which looks unlike anything generally seen crossing Scotland's skies. This is what we know about the was taken by two young chefs from a Pitlochry Hotel while walking near Calvine at about 21:00 on 4 August to the account they later gave the MoD's Craig Lindsay, the craft made no sound, left no smoke trails, and appeared to be hovering. They watched as the Harrier flew around it. The men took six photos of the object before it flew away vertically, disappearing at great sent the photos to the Daily Record newspaper, which got in touch with Craig at his office at RAF Pitreavie Castle. After the paper sent him copies of the photos, he contacted his bosses in London, duly spoke to the men who witnessed the incident, filed the details and moved the newspaper never ran a story, never published the that year, while on a routine visit to the MoD in Whitehall, Craig saw a copy of the best photo on display in a room."I opened a door and facing me on the wall was a big poster-sized print. I made some remark about 'oh crikey you guys are taking this thing seriously now' and we got talking and they produced prints of the other six," he says."After that I waited to see what was going to happen. London said they'd sent it off to the specialists and gradually I forgot about the thing. It just went out of my mind."Craig came across a reference to the Calvine sighting six years later in Nick Pope's book Open Skies, Closed Minds. Pope was a civil servant who worked on the MoD's "UFO desk" for three years in the 1990s, analysing reported sightings and assessing whether they posed a threat to national wrote: "The Calvine report remains one of the most intriguing cases in the Ministry of Defence's files. The conclusions, however, are depressingly familiar: object unexplained, case closed, no further action." Someone else who read that book was Dr David Clarke. A journalist and academic, he has studied UFO reports for more than three decades and has been instrumental in analysing official records held in the National Archives in 2009, he found a reproduction of the photo in one of the files there. He was keen to know more but it took another 12 years of searching before the trail led him to Craig Lindsay, by then long-retired from the MoD and living quietly in David recounts in a 2022 article revealing the existence of the photo and his search for answers, Craig told him: "I have been for waiting for someone to contact me about this for more than 30 years."Craig said he had not seen the picture in all that time but after searching through boxes of old papers and books stored in his garage, discovered a full-quality copy of the best image showing the craft and Harrier together.A photographer colleague of David's at Sheffield Hallam University has analysed the picture and vouches for its authenticity. The image shows a real object captured on film. Whatever it is, it was there in the David sees it, there are a huge number of unanswered questions about the Calvine photo. The identities of the men who took it remain a secret, nobody knows why the Daily Record never ran the story, no trace has been found of the Harrier or its is determined to find answers."I've got my MP involved now, asking questions of John Healey, the Minister of Defence. Saying, you know, you can't just say all we know about this is what's been released to the National Archives," he says."That's nonsense. There must be something about it somewhere that's not been released." All around the world, people continue to see strange things in the US Congress has held hearings examining multiple reports from military pilots about unexplained big unanswered question about Calvine, the Falkirk Triangle, indeed any reported UFO sighting, is what did they see?There is no consensus on this. David does not believe in alien visitors. In fact, few people seriously studying the topic think that. Nor does he buy into some of the other theories put forward for the Calvine photo: that it is a mountain peeking through mist or something reflected on of the most common explanations given for UFOs for decades now is that they are secret, experimental spy planes. The 1990s in particular were filled with reports of the US "Aurora" programme, said to be the next generation of very fast stealth air base in Kintyre, with its relatively remote setting and two-mile long runway, was frequently identified as the source of fast objects crossing Scotland's skies, making impossible the US government has never admitted to building such a plane and no evidence links the base to any secret programmes. The MoD closed its UFO desk in 2009 because it "served no defence purpose".A spokesperson told BBC Scotland News: "The MoD has no opinion on the existence of extra-terrestrial life and no longer investigates reports of sightings of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena or Unidentified Flying Objects. "This is because, in over 50 years, no such reporting to the department indicated the existence of any military threat to the UK, and it was deemed more valuable to prioritise MoD staff resources towards other defence-related activities."Malcolm Robinson estimates there are still about 45 to 60 UFO reports in the Falkirk Triangle every year. He and Billy Buchanan continue to lobby politicians at Westminster and Holyrood for a public inquiry."There still is phenomena attached to Bonnybridge or why would we go down to see subsequent prime ministers?" Malcolm asks. "There is something definitely ongoing." David Clarke is determined to find out what was in the skies over Calvine 35 years ago."It's straightforward. It's either a hoax or a prank that just got out of hand, or it's some kind of military exercise. There's no other explanation. I don't believe in aliens," he says."And I just want to get to the bottom of it because, as an investigative reporter, I hate mysteries."Dr David Clarke will be speaking at Blair Atholl Village Hall at 16:00 on Saturday 2 August.