Imagine a camp at Pine Barrens. You hear a voice and see a strange creature lurking in the shadow. It might be a jersey devil. The legend of Jersey Devil began in 1735 and is said to be the thirteenth child of Mrs Leeds. When she learned that she was pregnant with a thirteenth child, she told it to curse it and to be a devil. When it was born, the midwife died in shock, the devil ate 12 seconds, and shouted out of his mother and jumped out of the chimney (Juliano 1). Another version of this story is Mrs. Lady.
Jersey Devil is a myth that can not be proved unless you take real photographs. If someone actually finds it and is close enough to take a picture, he may not have the chance to run. The legend of the devil of Jersey may last long without any evidence. This monster is real or imaginary. You have to decide yourself
Why it is spooky: Let's make it a reality: The usual fanatics of New Jersey Devil is worse than Jersey Devil's obvious crap legend. And guards - the legend that became quietly famous in 2015 - is like a horrifying David Fincher's movie. If you do not know the details, in the summer of 2015, a young family moved to a $ 1 million house in Westfield, New Jersey. Shortly thereafter, they began to receive a letter signed by a person claiming to be a "guard" and insisted that he was responsible for "watching" the house, "Is it necessary to fill the house? I am young Do you want blood? "And" Which bedroom faces the street? "God"
The situation of driving in New Jersey seems not to be so bad. What is a jug handle? The simple answer is that it is part of the Jersey devil's plan to turn New Jersey into hell. The long answer is that it is a traffic lamp on the right side of the road, you can turn to the left ... Yes. You did not misunderstand it. Basically, you can not turn left at New Jersey without losing your mind. However, New Jersey really likes to see tourists tortured by this small invention.
Jersey Devil is a legendary inhabitant of the poorly populated Pine Barrens area in New Jersey, USA and is a kangaroo-like creature with horses / dogs heads, dragon feathers, tails and horns. Located in the state's National Hockey League Team - New Jersey Devils -, the name comes from this regional monster. Although a headless knight was a topic of folklore in Europe, the unknown knight who is known today appeared in Owen's strange short story "The Sleeping Hollow Legend" in Washington in 1820 and immediately there I got into the masses. Imagination In autumn, anyone walking on a solitary country road will come up with ideas for "Hessen to gallop."