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The 1954 French flap:

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Summer 1954 or 1955 or 1956, Yronde-et-Buron, Cantal:

Reference for this case: 5-nov-54-Yronde.
Please cite this reference in any correspondence with me regarding this case.

Reports:

[Ref. red1:] R. EYRAUD:

Scan.

An ignored landing in the Puy-de-Dôme

Investigation by R. Eyraud

Towards 1954 or 1956, in the summer, at 3 o'clock in the afternoon approximately, Mr DLV (does not want publicity, he never spoke about it so far) is on the slopes of the castle of Buron, located at 4 km of Coudes, in the north of Issoire - 63, more exactly halfway in straight line between the castle and the Allier river. It is a Thursday; like his comrades, he takes part in a play of patronage: a camp had taken position at the foot of the castle which it is charged to defend, the other camp whose witnesses were par of, goes to attack the castle. So a half-dozen of children climb the path and look towards the castle, on their right. Suddenly, they stop short, amazed, at 25 or 30 meters, two characters measuring 0,90 to 1 meter approximately, are busy with an out of the ordinary work in this little attended place. They are dressed with a shining silver plated diving-suit. Their head is wrapped in an enormous helmet. Of 50 centimetres diameter approximately, this helmet is equipped with a circular visor punt (with the manner of an English helmet, but broader), the helmet seems of comparable nature than the diving-suit. The witness will not distinguish a face, a reflection is at this place, a little more shining that the remainder of the diving-suit is his only memory. Close to the two dwarves, is a rectangular case without lid, it seems to be made of the same matter than the diving-suits. The characters take stones on a collapsed section of a wall made of dry stones (common basalt in the area). The stones which they choose could weigh between 1 and 2 kg, they take them with two hands, take some steps, deposit them in the case while bending (without folding the lower members) and return to the stone heap. To this fantastic vision, the fact is added that the characters are moving very slowly. A little as if they were subjected to gravity difficulties to support for them, "as in a film in slow motion" specifies the witness. After two minutes of observation approximately, one of the young boys is seized with fear and flees, the others to follow immediately. Mr DLV cannot specify if an external force prevented him to approach, if it were not is amazement, they felt nothing and the dwarves did not see them.The witnesses did not see an apparatus on the ground, nor in the sky, it is true that the meadow which was the scene of this strange deeds was bordered of thickets.

After 12 or 14 years, we found the exact place of the observation (although a little leafier), we took two photographs and took two samples on the collapsed wall.

Scan.

[Ref. jbe1:] JEAN-MARIE BIGORNE:

Scan.

The sketch by Jean-Marie Bigorme is captionned:

11) 1 m (54 or 56) Château-de-Buron: 63 (L. D. L. N. 98).

[Ref. ldl1:] UFOLOGY MAGAZINE "LUMIERES DANS LA NUIT":

This magazine indicates that on November 5, 1954, in Buron-Yronde, two characters were seen picking up stones. An investigation was done by M. Eyraud, the report was publish in "Lumières Dans la Nuit" #98.

The magazine located the department as "54 or 56", probably because of the error on the name of the locality which is Yronde-et-Buron and not Buron-Yronde.

[Ref. jgd1:] JEAN GIRAUD:

-50-

DATE 1954 or 1956 in the Summer.

HOUR 03:00 p.m. approximately

PLACE Buron (Puy de Dôme)

WITNESSES Monsieur D. L. V.(anonymity expressed) and comrades.

THE FACTS.

Un jeudi après midi, des enfants (une douzaine) jouaient à un jeu de patronage. Ils grimpaient un chemin et regardaient vers le château à leur droite. Soudain, ils tombèrent en arrêt, stupéfaits car à 20 ou 30 m d'eux, deux personnages de 90 cm à 1m de haut s'activaient à une besogne peu ordinaire. Ils étaient vêtus d'un scaphandre argenté brillant. Leur tête était enveloppée dans un casque énorme de 50 cm de diamètre environ et muni d'une visière circulaire plate (à la manière d'un casque anglais, mais plus large). Le casque semblait de même nature que le scaphandre. Le témoin ne distingua pas le visage car à son emplacement, il y avait un reflet un peu plus luisant que le reste. Près des deux nains se trouvait une caisse rectangulaire sans couvercle d'une matière semblable à celle du scaphandre. Les personnages prélevaient des pierres sur un pan de mur écroulé en basalte (commun dans la région). Les pierres choisies pouvaient peser 1 à 2 Kg. Ils les saisissaient à deux mains, faisaient quelques pas et les déposaient en courbant le corps, sans plier les jambes, dans leur caisse, puis ils retournaient en chercher d'autres. A cette vision insolite s'ajouta le fait que lespersonnages se déplaçaient très lentement, comme s'ils étaient soumis à une pesanteur trop forte pour eux, ou "comme dans un film au ralenti". Après deux minutes d'observation, un des enfants prit de peur s'enfuit provoquant du même coup la fuite de ses camarades. D'après le témoin qui ne ressentit rien, ils n'auraient peut être pas été découverts par les "nains". Auprès des êtres, il n'y avait aucune machine insolite, affirmation sous réserve car le terrain de l'observation était bordé de bosquets.

One Thursday afternoon, children (a dozen) were playing a patronage game. They climbed a path and looked towards the castle to their right. Suddenly, they stopped, stupefied because 20 or 30 m from them, two figures 90 cm to 1 m high were busy doing an unusual task. They were dressed in a shiny silver spacesuit. Their head was wrapped in a huge helmet about 50 cm in diameter and equipped with a flat circular visor (like an English helmet, but wider). The helmet seemed of the same nature as the diving suit. The witness did not distinguish the face because in its location, there was a reflection a little more shiny than the rest. Near the two dwarves was a rectangular box without a lid of a material similar to that of the diving suit. The figures took stones from a crumbling section of basalt wall (common in the region). The chosen stones could weigh 1 to 2 Kg. They seized them with both hands, took a few steps and deposited them by bending their bodies, without bending their legs, in their box, then they returned to look for others. To this unusual vision was added the fact that the characters moved very slowly, as if they were subjected to too much gravity for them, or "like in a slow motion film." After two minutes of observation, one of the children took fright and fled causing at the same time the fleeing of his comrades. According to the witness who felt nothing, they might not have been discovered by the "dwarfs." Near the beings, there was no unusual craft, a conditional assertion because the field of observation was bordered by groves.

SOURCES.

Unknown

INVESTIGATION.

It was made in 1968 and on this occasion, samples of the wall that the "beings" took were taken for analysis.

INVESTIGATOR.

Roger Eraud Cercle LDLN Clermont Riom

[Ref. tbr1:] TED BLOECHER:

(Jean-Luc Rivera is the source of these items submitted by Ted Bloecher: Translations by Lex Mebane. Summarized by Mildred Biesele.)

Lumieres dans la Nuit (LDLN) #98, February 2, 1969. Investigation by B. Eraud: M. DLV tells of an event that occurred on a summer afternoon in 1954 or 1956 (sic). He was with a group of children on the slopes of the Chateau de Baron [sic], Puy-de-Dome, when they came upon two "personages" dressed in shiny silvery diving suits, their heads covered with enormous, helmets with wide circular visors. The two were taking stones from a broken drystone wall and putting them into a rectangular box that seemed to be made of the same material as their suits and helmets. They moved slowly and stiffly, "like a slow motion film," carrying the 1 or 2 kg hunks of native basalt in front of them with both hands. M. DLV and the children watched unobserved for about 2 minutes then turned and fled. They saw no machine in the air or on the ground, although one could have been hidden behind the bushes that surrounded the field.

[Ref. fsr1:] "FLYING SAUCER REVIEW" MAGAZINE:

THE STONE COLLECTORS

R. Eraud

The witness, Monsieur D.L.V., is not anxious for publicity, and has never spoken to anyone about this episode until quite recently, when he gave the details to me.

At about 3.00 p.m. one Thursday in the summer around about 1954-1956 he was on the slopes beneath the chateau of Buron, which is 4 kilometres from Coudes.

With his companions, Monsieur V. - then a boy - was taking part in a young people's outing. One group of them had installed themselves below the castle, which they were "defending", while the other group, to which the witness belonged, was "attacking".

Half-a-dozen of them are moving along up a path and looking towards the castle, which is on their right. Suddenly, dumbfounded, they freeze in their tracks. Just ahead of them, at a distance of no more than 25 or 30 metres, are two beings about 90 centimetres or 1 metre in height. They are wearing bright shiny "divers' suits", and their heads are encased in enormous helmets about 50 centimetres wide. The helmets have a flat circular visor (as on an old style British Tommy's helmet, but wider). The helmets seem to be of the same material as the diver's suit".

The witness was able to make out no features; his only recollection is of a reflection of something there, a bit brighter than the rest of the helmet.

Near the two dwarfs stood a square box without a lid, seemingly made of the same material as the "divers' suits". The two little beings were taking stones from a section of wall made of stacked unmortared stones (the local basalt, commonly found in the region). The stones they were selecting seemed to be around 1-2 kilogrammes in weight. They were lifting the stones with both hands, carrying them a few paces, and bending down and placing them in the box (without bending their legs) and then returning to the wall for more. To this fantastic sight, add the fact that the beings were moving very slowly, somewhat as though they were subjected to a weight that it was difficult for them to bear. "Just like in a slow-motion film," said the witness.

After they had watched for about two minutes, one of the boys was seized with panic and fled, followed immediately by the rest.

Monsieur D.L. V. was unable to say whether any force other than astonishment had prevented the boys from approaching more closely. The boys felt nothing, and it is possible that the dwarfs did not see them.

The boys saw no machine on the ground or in the air. The meadow which was the setting for the unwanted episode is however bordered with groves of trees. Visiting the site some 12 or 14 years after the alleged occurrence, we found it precisely, though it is rather more overgrown with vegetation now than then. We took two photographs and also some samples from the crumbling wall.

NOTE: There is a geological fault-line about 300 metres to the south-west of the site.

Translation by Gordon Creighton
from the original article which appeared in Lumières dans la Nuit for February 1969 (No. 98). (see page 25)

[Ref. fru1] MICHEL FIGUET AND JEAN-LOUIS RUCHON:

The two authors indicate that in 1954 or 1956, in the summer, in France, at the Castle of Buron, around 3 p.m., Mr. Div and 6 other children took part in a play of patronage and climbed a pathway between the castle of Buron and the Allier river.

At 25 or 30 meters, two small characters, of 90 centimeters to 1 meter height approximately, equipped with brilliant silver plated diving-suits, the head wrapped in an enormous helmet of 50 cm in diameter approximately, of the same matter, provided with a circular visor, were busy on a collapsed section of wall, made of dry stone (basalt). They choose parts from 1 to 2 kg, take them with the two hands, take some steps and deposit them in a case while bending themselves, without folding the legs. Then they return to the wall. They are moving slowly.

After two minutes of observation, one of the young boys became afraid and fled. The others follow immediately.

The authors indicate that it is a rare case of beings with no UFO and that the source is R. Erthaud in Lumières Dans la Nuit, page 5, #98.

[Ref. mft1:] MICHEL FIGUET:

This ufologist noted:

CASE Nr CLASSIFICATION DATE HOUR PLACE ZIP CODE CREDIBILITY SOURCE
50 CE3a Summer 1954/6 15 h Coudes Castle of Buron 63114 D4 NI [= not identified], OVNI: 6.646

[Ref. jsr1:] JEAN SIDER:

French author Jean Sider provides the investigation by Mr. Eyraud, except that he spells "Eraud" and locates the case in 1954 instead of 1954 or 1956. He indicates that the source is LDLN #98 page 5.

He reproduces a sketch published in this source, made by Fernand Lagarde called an "illustrated interpretation."

[Ref. lhh1:] LARRY HATCH - "*U* COMPUTER DATABASE":

3681: 1954/08/00 15:00 2 3:13:00 E 45:37:00 N 3213 WEU FRN PDD 8:5

COUDES,FR:TEEN KIDS:2 1M 'MEN' PUT STONES from FENCE in BOX:HELMETS+SLVR SUITS

Ref#217 Jean SIDER: Le DOSSIER 1954 (2 vol.) Page No. 160 : FARMLANDS

[Ref. goe1:] GODELIEVE VAN OVERMEIRE:

1954, summer (or 1956)

FRANCE, Castle of Buron

Around 3 p.m., Mr. Div and 6 other children take part in a game of patronage and climb a path between the Château de Buron and the Allier river. At 25 or 30 meters, two small figures, approximately 90 cm to 1 m tall, dressed in shiny silver diving suits, their heads wrapped in an enormous helmet of approximately 50 cm in diameter of the same material, fitted with a flat circular visor, s are working on a section of collapsed wall, made of dry stones (basalt). They choose pieces of 1 to 2 kg, take them with both hands, take a few steps and place them in a box, bending over, without bending their legs. Then they go back to the wall. They move slowly. After two minutes of observation, one of the young boys, seized with fear, fled. The others follow immediately. (M. FIGUET/ J.L. RUCHON: "Ovni, Premier dossier complet..." ed. Alain Lefeuvre 1979, p. 66, 647)

[Ref. ars1:] ALBERT ROSALES:

Albert Rosales indicates in his catalogue that near Coudes, France, on Summer, 1955, at 1500, D. L. V. then a boy, was beneath the chateau of Buron with several other boys when they saw, no more than 30 yards away, 2 beings about 3 ft tall, wearing bright shiny "diver's suits" and enormous helmets about 18" wide. These helmets had flat circular rims, like World War I helmets. No features were visible. Near the dwarfs was a square metallic box without a lid, and they were taking stones from a dry broken dry stone wall and putting them in this box. Their movements were very slow, as though under a heavy weight. The boys watched for about 2 minutes before running away. No UFO was seen.

Albert Rosales indicates that the source is R. Eraud, FSR Vol. 4, #6, and Humcat 1955-12.

[Ref. jgz1:] JULIEN GONZALEZ:

The author indicates that there was a close encounter of the third kind in Coudes in the Puy-de-Dôme, in the summer of 1954 or 1956, at 03:00 p.m.

A "Mr. DLV", who asked for anonymity, and six other children, attended a patronage game, and climbed a path between the Buron Castle and the Allier River. Looking towards the castle on their right, they stopped, stunned, for at 25 or 30 meters from them, there were two small figures, about 0.90 m to 1 meter tall, who were busy on a wall of collapsed dry stones.

They were dressed in a brilliant silver suit, their heads wrapped in an enormous helmet about 50 cm in diameter, fitted with a flat circular visor in the manner of English helmets, but wider. This helmet seemed of the same nature as the diving suit.

The witnesses did not distinguish the face of these beings, perhaps because of the more accentuated reflection in this place of their person.

The two beings took samples of stones that they lifted with the two hands, taking a few steps and depositing them in a crate by bending without folding the lower limbs and then returning to the wall.

These beings moved slowly, a little as if they were subjected to a gravity hard to bear for them.

After two minutes of observation, one of the young boys became frightened and fled; the others followed immediately.

Julien Gonzalez publishes the sketch by Jean Giraud, extracted from the magazine INFO-OVNI, in the special issue "Les humanoïdes", and notes that the witnesses did not see any craft on the ground nor in the sky.

The sources are indicated as "Lumières dans la Nuit, #98, page 5 (investigation by Mr. R. Eraud); Michel Figuet and Jean-Louis Ruchon, OVNI.. le premier dossier complet des rencontres rapprochées en France, pages 646-647."

[Ref. ubk1:] "UFO-DATENBANK":

Case Nr. New case Nr. Investigator Date of observation Zip Place of observation Country of observation Hour of observation Classification Comments Identification
19540000 00.00.1954 Buron France 15.00

Explanations:

Map.

We are served with a rather pathetic UFO case here.

First of all, there is no UFO. To talk about a "landing " does not make any sense here, and raises the questions of the will to believe of the investigator.

Then, I did not find anything certain in connection with the date. Had some investigator simply wished to add this case to the 1954 French lore? How did it happen that the case is dated as of November 5, 1954, by the ones whereas the apparently initial report notes "1954 or 1956 in summer"? We will further see that the summer is probably correct while November is probably invented.

What is crystal clear on the other hand is the description by the witness, who was a child at the time of this event.

There are odd characters, in white, with helmets, appearing of the same matter as their clothes, the top being described with this very important detail: in the shape of English helmet. There is this box, and these flat things which are put in the box. The investigator, the witness, probably associated these flat things with the stones of the wall, but these flat things were perhaps simply posed against this wall.

There is this slow movement of the characters, of which the investigator suggests that it is consequence of the aliens not being accustomed to the terrestrial gravity.

Actually, all becomes rather simple and consistent and in conformity with the account if one thinks of bee-keepers:

Bee-keepers at work:

Picture Picture Picture Picture

The british helmet:

Picture.

Thus: probable bee-keepers.

Keywords:

(These keywords are only to help queries and are not implying anything.)

Yronde et Buron, characters, boxes, stones

Sources:

[----] indicates sources that are not yet available to me.

Document history:

Version: Created/Changed by: Date: Change Description:
0.1 Patrick Gross May 12, 2004 First published.
0.1 Patrick Gross February 11, 2008 Conversion from HTML to XHTML Strict.
1.0 Patrick Gross December 23, 2008 First formal version. Additions [tbr1].
1.1 Patrick Gross December 3, 2011 Addition [fsr1].
1.2 Patrick Gross January 13, 2017 Additions [jgz1], [ubk1].
1.3 Patrick Gross March 20, 2022 Additions [jgd1], [jbe1], [mft1], [lhh1].
1.4 Patrick Gross June 22, 2022 Addition [goe1].

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