CARMAN,.
“Beginning in the spring of 1975, residents of the small farming town of Carman in southern Manitoba began reporting recurring sightings of a bright red, slow-moving aerial object.”
Manitoba schoolteacher and researcher Grant Cameron documented the original wave in detail. His files include independent witness statements, hand-drawn sketches, photographs, and accounts of physical effects on automobile electrical systems. Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer Fern Belanger filed a formal incident report after observing the object at close range during a night patrol in 1975. The local newspaper The Carman Valley Leader carried regular contemporaneous reports.
A second pulse of sightings occurred in November 1996, including multiple-witness reports along Highway 13 and an event in which a bright red object was observed by RCMP officers. The 1996 wave generated coverage by national Canadian media, including the Globe and Mail, and prompted Cameron and other Manitoba investigators to revisit the original 1975–1976 case files. Common features across both waves included the deep red colour, low altitude, slow movement, and apparent silence of the principal object.
The Carman case is significant in Canadian UFO history for its sheer duration, the consistency of its principal phenomenon, and the depth of local journalistic and amateur investigation. It also represents one of the most thoroughly grassroots-documented cases in the public record, with witness statements collected at the time rather than reconstructed years later. Cameron has placed his archive online through his Presidents UFO Website.