CASE FILE 003 — FALCON LAKE INCIDENT — UFO METAL PRINT
CASE FILE 003 — FALCON LAKE INCIDENT — UFO METAL PRINT
Whiteshell Provincial Park, Manitoba, Canada. May 20, 1967. Approximately noon.
Stefan Michalak was a 51-year-old industrial mechanic and amateur geologist — a practical man who worked with his hands and spent his spare time prospecting for quartz and silver in the Canadian wilderness. He was not the kind of man who told stories. On the morning of May 20, 1967, he hiked into the forest near Falcon Lake with a hammer, a compass, a map, and a packed lunch. By noon he was near a quartz vein when a nearby flock of geese erupted in sudden alarmed honking. He looked up.
Two cigar-shaped objects with a reddish glow hovered 45 meters away. One ascended into the clouds. The other landed on a flat outcrop of Precambrian rock near the lakeshore — 35 feet in diameter, bathed in purple-white light so intense it outshone the midday sun. Michalak sketched it for thirty minutes. He assumed it was an experimental American military aircraft. When a panel opened and he heard voices inside — two distinct voices, one higher-pitched than the other — he called out in English. Then Russian. Then Polish. Then German. No response. The panel sealed.
He reached out and touched the craft. The glove on his hand melted at the fingertips. The craft rotated and a grid of exhaust holes fired directly into his chest. His shirt ignited. He tore it off as the craft lifted and disappeared into the clouds above the lake.
The RCMP, the Royal Canadian Air Force, and the Canadian Department of Health and Welfare all investigated. Radioactive debris was recovered from the landing site. The burns on Michalak's chest formed a precise grid matching the exhaust pattern he described — burns that returned unprompted nine months later. The RCMP concluded in their final report that the burns, the illness, and the radioactive contamination were, in their words, unexplainable. CBC News has called it Canada's best-documented UFO case. Stefan Michalak never changed his account once in 32 years until his death in 1999.
This UFO metal print renders the landing site exactly as Michalak described it — the craft on the rocky lakeshore, the purple-white exhaust illuminating the Precambrian stone and the still water, the boreal forest at the edge of the frame. The steam rising from the rock is not artistic license. Investigators confirmed scorched and disturbed soil at the site weeks after the encounter.
THE EVIDENCE — 12 x 18 inch aluminum panel — Dye sublimation process — vivid, permanent, fade-resistant — Gloss finish — amber and blue tones are particularly vivid on metal — Ready to hang — hardware included — Lightweight — approximately 1.5 lbs — Wipe clean with dry cloth
THE COORDINATES 49.6833° N, 95.3167° W — Falcon Lake, Whiteshell Provincial Park, Manitoba, Canada.
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