Just about every day I have a series of links I visit. For example, the first thing I do is go to the UFO Stalker. You didn't ask, LOL, but I'll tell you a few of my site wanderings anyway.
UFO Stalker maps all the reports that come in about UFO sightings. It's interactive: If you hover over the icon of the flying saucer or black triangle icon, you will get the person's actual report. They are fun to read, complete with the odds and ends of daily life ("I was having a smoke on the back porch when...." or "I was walking my dog down at the lake when...") I like the fact that it's always up-to-date.
The cool thing about the UFO Stalker is that over time you see where "they" are hanging out. I'm seeing definite patterns, but hey, maybe that's just me. It seems to tie into what some people call "energy portals." The Upper Hudson Valley, where our colleague Hope is, is one of them.
Stephenville, TX is big with the sighting of the huge mother ship again. That's been going on for quite awhile now. There's a report on that just about every day.
Then I click my Google news page, which has "UFO" as a search term. That turns up all the major stories and reports that have hit the news media. There is so much there that never hits the American news. What I get the biggest kick out of are the village newspapers in England that report sightings. There are all kinds of sightings going on in the UK and there has been for quite awhile. You know the British and their wry sense of humor. These reports are priceless. My latest fave is the mother and daughter who recorded a UFO with a red beam hitting the ground. The footage is excellent and it really stirred up the papers and the people around there.
Then, of course, I subscribe to C2C (CoasttoCoast) so I have to go check on the programs. Just about every week is one or two UFO programs. I have those on my iPod and will listen to them several times, just to get all the info down.
Some sites I only visit once in awhile because it takes that long for them to accumulate enough interesting content. Whitley Streiber's Dreamland is a good example of that. But when I visit, there is a LOT of good content. Another example is Linda Moulton Howe's Earthfiles. She's a very good reporter (award winning) and can she ever deliver a story. She's very good with the graphics, providing maps, pictures, etc.
After that I have to head to disclose.tv and view the latest sighting clips.
There are more--way more--but you get the idea.
Then after I convince myself to go to bed, I will most likely retire with a UFO DVD in my little DVD player or I will read a book on UFOs that I've tracked down. Right now I am reading Budd Hopkins.
I'm not obsessed or anything. Wouldn't want you to think that. :)
Cher