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Covering
180 miles of Oregon coast travel: Astoria, Seaside, Cannon Beach, Manzanita,
Nehalem, Wheeler, Rockaway, Garibaldi, Tillamook, Oceanside, Pacific City,
Lincoln City, Depoe Bay, Newport, Waldport, Yachats & Florence.
02/08/08
Ghost Hunters Say Oregon Winery Haunted
(Nehalem,
Oregon) – In the middle of bucolic fields near the north Oregon
coast, beneath the gaze of a close by cluster of small mountains, one
seller of wine has a quirky, offbeat sense of humor that defies the usual
stuffiness often associated with vino and tasting rooms. But if you believe
the tales and the research, there are more than one kind of spirits flowing
at the Nehalem Bay Winery.
According to various employees and those who have stayed
in its guest rooms – this old building is haunted. The stories of
things going bump or moan in the night go back years. Then, in September,
a group of ghost hunters from McMinnville pulled an all-nighter on the
two floors of the building
The group is called C.A.S.P.E.R Investigations (Central
Arizona Specialists in Paranormal Event Research) and based out of McMinnville,
Oregon. Headed by founder Brian Robertson, it began two years ago in Arizona,
but moved to Oregon with him a year ago.
Robertson and group are still mulling over the evidence
taken at the winery, so they aren’t willing to make an official
designation just yet. But Robertson comes just short of declaring the
place officially haunted.
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| The tasting room at Nehalem Bay Winery, where manager Melissa Stetzel
said she's had numerous experiences |
“There is most definitely something there, based
upon our personal experiences,” Robertson said.
The difference is that they have only a scrap of evidence
so far, an EVP recording (Electronic Voice Phenomenon) of a woman’s
voice. They don’t proclaim anything on the record until they have
some solid evidence on recording or visually.
Their own experiences include hearing voices, spotting
shadowy figures, one member getting pushed and the fleeting movement of
something outside.
Among Robertson’s crew was investigator John Hanna,
as well as winery employee Angi Wildt, who works at the sister business,
Depoe Bay Winery, on the central Oregon coast. Three main areas yielded
experiences for the group: one of the guest bedrooms, an open area on
the second floor that is being remodeled, and a corridor behind the winery’s
stage.
 |
| The stage and theater area: behind that black wall, ghost hunters
encountered something they couldn't explain |

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Hanna and Wildt were in the cramped corridor. It was nearly
pitch black, said Wildt, with only a very faint light visible from outside.
“They saw a shadowy figure behind the stage,”
said Robertson. “It formed into a figure of an actual person.”
In one of the bedrooms – where employees stay or
live for short periods of time – Hanna, Robertson and others were
checking out the electrical closet. Electrical circuits like that can
give off electro-magnetic waves, said Robertson, and sometimes account
for the feeling of uneasiness people get in rooms. But something appeared
from out of that closet.
“We were sitting on the bed, and we saw this shadow
come out of the electrical closet and cover the wall,” Robertson
said. It began slinking across the wall, and someone reported seeing it
become a full-formed apparition of a man.
“John pointed to the wall, and just then it came
next to us,” Robertson said. “We felt a strong breeze pass
between us.”
 |
| Creepy, creaking stairs have freaked out employee Angi Wildt |
Upstairs, things got really weird. There is a large, spacious
area between the bathroom and owner Ray Shackelford’s bedroom. That
entire upper floor has been the product of various tales from employees
or guests, including the purported voices of a man and a woman arguing.

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But the ghost hunters were never told that.
“We have one solid EVP from there,” Robertson
said. “We started hearing two distinct noises. First, a female groaning.
Then it became clearer. And we have that voice saying ‘Kill me,
kill me,’ over and over again. John (Hanna) is a sensitive, and
he felt the presence of a female, and it seemed to be upset about something
with a baby. He guessed – and it was only a guess – that she
killed herself while pregnant with a baby.”
While there, Robertson felt something on his shoulder,
as if someone was trying to get is attention. He turned to Hanna, thinking
it was him, but he wasn’t even looking at Robertson. “I went
back to that spot to see if it could happen again, and I felt someone
touch my hair.”
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| During the summer, the winery hosts many high profile events |
At one point, as a flash camera was going off, Robertson
could’ve sworn he saw an apparition of a woman near the doorway
of Shackelford’s room. He asked them to continue the flash picture-taking
some more, in hopes of catching sight of this again. It didn’t happen.
Later, Robertson heard a slam in the dark. “John
had been knocked into the wall,” he said. “He didn’t
think it was an angry push. He felt it was just someone trying to get
past him.”
Robertson and his crew aren’t looking to make any
decisions to the public based on their own experiences. He is adamant
about finding documented evidence. “So it can’t be disputed,”
Robertson said. So far now all they’re talking about is their own
encounters and that they have one EVP recording. “Nine times out
of ten we find reasons for everything going on that aren’t paranormal.”
He does say he believes there is activity at the winery.
“We believe there are at least two entities.”
 |
| The entire Nehalem Bay is host to a variety of strange haunting
rumors, and other paranormal legends |
Robertson and his crew will go back to collect more evidence.
Manager Melissa Stetzel is one of those who believe the
north Oregon coast attraction is haunted, although Shackelford does not.
She recounted numerous tales from employees who lived there for a while
or guests who stayed there, saying they’ve encountered stuff that
creeped them out.
Her own experiences with the winery are quite varied, and
include encounters in the tasting room where she could swear someone was
walking behind her – and there was no one there – to hearing
a man and a woman arguing upstairs, where the C.A.S.P.E.R. group had their
biggest meetings.
Then
there was the strange experience at the winery’s office door. She
and another employee had a view of the back door while chatting with another
co-worker. “It was summer, so there was no wind,” Stetzel
said. “All of a sudden the door flew open, and Marty and I saw a
flash of light fly out the door. We both looked at each other and couldn’t
believe it.”
Wildt lived at the building for a while last year, and
claimed numerous encounters, including creeking noises outside her bedroom
door one night. “Later, I went back and tried to get that part of
the floor to creek, and it wouldn’t,” Wildt said.
Shackelford is clearly amused by the stories, but
he isn’t a believer. “I’ve had some weird experiences
here,” Shackelford said. “But nothing I’d say was from
a ghost. But a lot of people have been freaked out.”
Click
here for a video on another paranormal legend of the Nehalem Bay area.
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