26/07/2025
Something was there.
Midway through a live rocket launch, at an altitude of around 16 kilometres far above where planes fly and far beyond the reach of any bird an object appears.
It enters from the top left , cuts down across the frame, and disappears. No explanation. No warning. Just a flash of movement in an area that should be clear.
At this point, the rocket is moving at nearly 2,000 miles per hour. We’re not in space yet, but we’re deep into the upper atmosphere. Too high for vultures. Too fast for drones. Too early for satellites. And commercial planes? Nowhere near this zone.
So what is it?
Whatever it was, it got close. Too close. And it wasn’t the first time.
This keeps happening objects appearing near launches, watching, tracking, moving with purpose. Silent. Precise. Like they’re not just passing by… they’re waiting.
We’re told launches are controlled, predictable, secure. But every so often, something breaks through that illusion. A glimpse. A shadow. A reminder that not everything in the sky is accounted for.
Someone or something is watching. And they’re not far away.
“The video includes black-and-white, original color, and color corrected versions for comparison. The first segment is slowed to one frame per second to allow detailed observation of the object’s downward trajectory. The original, unaltered video is presented at the middle for reference.”
Credit SpaceX