Paranormal Investigation
Inside the Horse Palace: What the Animals Still There Told Me
Superstitious Times · January 1, 2023
Superstitious Times followed our team into Toronto's historic Horse Palace. I went in the way I always do, ready to rule things out first, and open to the animals who still linger there.

People assume a paranormal investigator wants every creak to be a ghost. I am the opposite. When I walk into a place like Toronto's historic Horse Palace with my team at Canadian Paranormal Investigations, my first job is to rule things out. Old buildings settle. Pipes knock. Drafts move curtains. Most of what frightens people has an ordinary explanation, and I will always look for that first. That is not the skeptic in me fighting the psychic. It is what makes the real moments trustworthy when they come.
What I bring that the equipment cannot is the animals. A site like this held horses for generations, and animals leave an imprint of feeling behind them, the way a warm hand leaves warmth on a railing. Being able to sense that, to communicate with what lingers, adds a whole layer to an investigation that a meter cannot read.
That is the work I love, the marriage of rigour and intuition. Bring the evidence, bring the technology, and bring a trained sensitivity too. When you honour all three, you stop chasing shadows and start actually understanding a place.
Ask about animal communication or a speciality session if that curiosity is calling you.
My first job is to rule things out. That is what makes the real moments trustworthy when they come.
Curious about the unseen side of a place you love? Ask me about a speciality session.
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A responsible approach rules out ordinary explanations first, then uses trained intuitive sensitivity alongside evidence and technology to understand what remains.