Flying saucer made a tumultuous Sydney

A "strange object" appeared in the west of Sydney on Sunday 23 March and still makes the city buzz. A woman had taken pictures and she insisted on flying.

Picture 1 of Flying saucer made a tumultuous Sydney

Picture 2 of Flying saucer made a tumultuous Sydney

The photo of Mrs. Hastigan capturing the object she thought was the flying saucer.According to her, it did not make a sound.Source: The Daily Telegraph


A strange object from the bright clouds appeared, tumbling down a crowded neighborhood and then fluttering away and disappearing in the sunset.

Although it only appeared completely unexpected for a few seconds but it was enough for Fiona Hartigan, a mother with two children, to observe and capture pictures to prove her statement.

Ms Hartigan recalled that on Sunday afternoon, she had just stepped out of her car to take pictures of the brilliant sunset - she was an amateur photographer - fortunate to witness the event. this. 'I was shooting when I saw a black object moving, appearing about 800 meters away from me and approaching, about 400 meters. At that time, two other small objects of the circle appeared above this light orange light area. They all made no noise. It seems quiet, friendly but extremely difficult to understand '.

Hartigan said she took the main flying saucer above Governor Macquarie's mansion at Chipping Norton, while the two smaller ones flew in the opposite direction.

"I don't know how to explain it. I am very bewildered," she said.

For skeptics, Mrs. Hartigan's photographs may be just a stain on the lens or an insect that accidentally flies over the camera.

But according to Doug Moffett, spokesman for New South Wales State's Flying Saucer Research, Hartigan's photographs are very reliable and the event is not surprising.

He said: "It may be an abnormality of charge, but who ever met; maybe a ship of extraterrestrials, which could be something else ." then he commented. : 'But it is an occasion for us to learn something new'.

Mr. Moffett said that every year in Australia people meet between 1,000 and 1,500 such cases and also have clear evidence.