Stunned nurse catches 'carcass-eating witches' on security camera

These witches of beast-wick must have been wicked hungry. A Canadian nature lovers attempt to capture wildlife on camera backfired terrifyingly after she inadvertently documented what appeared to be naked witches eating a carcass at night right by her house.

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These witches of beast-wick must have been wicked hungry.

A Canadian nature lover’s attempt to capture wildlife on camera backfired terrifyingly after she inadvertently documented what appeared to be “naked witches eating a carcass” at night right by her house.

Social media posts depicting the alleged deer-crunching coven are currently blowing up online, with viewers speculating the nighttime noshers were conducting some sort of satanic ritual.

“I don’t know what the heck was up with that,” Corinea Stanhope, 36, told Kennedy News of the spine-tingling sight. “It really freaked us out, it’s not something you see every day.”

The Powell River native had reportedly been riding one of her horses when she came across a dead deer in her garden.

While most might’ve turned their nose up at the sight, the mother of three and her grandpa Bob, 76, decided to set up a camera to see if the carcass would attract any critters at night.

Canadian nature lover Corinea Stanhope, 36, attempted to capture nocturnal wildlife on camera, only to inadvertently document what appeared to be “naked witches eating a carcass” at night right by her house.
One of the “witches” appears to bite the dead deer’s hoof in the chilling footage. Kennedy News & Media
One of the ghostly figures looming over the carcass. Kennedy News & Media
“Maybe they were paying their respects but they were naked,” said Stanhope. Kennedy News & Media

“Me and my grandpa put up a trail camera to see if we could see animals and we got a bobcat [on camera], which was pretty cool,” the Canuck described.

Little did she know, that wasn’t the only bloodthirsty beast they would catch on camera. “I came the next day and grandpa said he’d got naked people on the camera and I said ‘no you didn’t … bulls–t’ so he showed me,” Stanhope recalled.

The bone-chilling photos, taken just after sunset, showed two “disheveled”-looking women with long black hair obscuring their faces squatting over the dead deer and appearing to dine on its remains like something out of the 2014 horror flick “The Witch.”

The wicked hungry pair is completely naked except for what looks like loin cloths over their netherregions in the found footage horror film-esque scene.

“It looks like they have wigs on,” described Stanhope. “One looks like she has blonde hair underneath.”

She added, “You can’t really tell from the photos but the hoof was brought right up to her mouth.”

The aghast gal said she wasn’t sure if the so-called witches of beast-wick were “kissing it, smelling or eating it” but was nonetheless sickened by the ritual given the “the amount of bacteria” that was potentially on the “decaying carcass.”

“There’s rumors around town about a cult that collects animal bones,” said Stanhope. “I don’t know if it’s real or not.” Kennedy News & Media

Stanhope said she was especially “creeped” out because the impromptu carrion cuddling session occurred only two minutes from her house.

“I was concerned about them messing with my horses at night,” the medical practitioner said. “The horses always get really spooked and unnerved around that area.”

She added, “I thought they imagined stuff at first so I didn’t think anything of it. Maybe I believe them now.”

Stanhope’s camera did catch a bobcat eating the deer carcass. Kennedy News & Media

Social media seemed convinced that the Canadian had witnessed witches, a local cult or some other malevolent entity performing a demonic ritual.

“This is actually terrifying,” commented one viewer, while another posited, “That’s a skinwalker, they look ‘human’ so you come up to them and once you do you’re gone.”

“That’s basically a walking demon from hell,” theorized a third. “If you hear screaming stay inside and get a gun you leave it alone.”

Stanhope and her daughter Ashtyn, 15. Kennedy News & Media

One occult lover even postulated that the barenaked ladies were wendigos, native American spirits who possess people and turn them into cannibals.

“This creature has long been known among the Algonquian Ojibwe, Eastern Cree, Saulteaux, Westmain Swampy Cree, Naskapi, and Innu peoples,” reads their description on Legends of America. “They have described them as giants, many times larger than human beings.”

They added, “Although descriptions can vary somewhat, common to all these cultures is the view that the wendigo is a malevolent, cannibalistic, supernatural being strongly associated with winter, the north, coldness, famine, and starvation.”

Commenters had their own theories about who the mysterious carcass munchers were. Kennedy News & Media

Some commenters suggested they were part of some demonic cult, according to Stanhope.

“There’s rumors around town about a cult that collects animal bones. I don’t know if it’s real or not,” she said. “Some people have mentioned it since I posted the photos. A friend said they came across two people in the woods carrying some dead squirrels.”

A few concerned viewers even urged Stanhope to call the police, which she said she was tempted to do before her grandpa Bob pointed out that the duo wasn’t doing anything “illegal technically.”

“He was pretty mortified,” said the woman, who hopes that the deer diners were simply pulling a prank.

“I’m hoping they went for a walk in the day, saw the trail cam was set up and wanted to have a bit of fun with us or they’re on some good drugs,” she said.

“The horses always get really spooked and unnerved around that area,” said Stanhope. “I thought they imagined stuff at first so I didn’t think anything of it. Maybe I believe them now.” Kennedy News & Media

Many social media commenters supported this theory, citing Stanhope’s aforementioned observation that the so-called “witches” had long blonde hair under their wild raven wigs.

Either way, perhaps these “The Craft” cosplayers should consider moving to New York, which was named the best city for witches in 2021, according to a study by Lawn Love.

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