Enter your search terms:
Top

You can camp at property that inspired ‘The Conjuring’

Nobody is allowed to live at 1677 Round Top Road in Burrillville, Rhode Island because it was deemed too “powerful.” But you can stay for a night or two this summer — if you’re brave enough.

The Conjuring house, the iconic haunted Rhode Island farmhouse where evil happenings inspired the 2013 horror movie “The Conjuring,” is offering another season of camping on its property.

Known as “GHamping,” which is “ghost plus camping,” people can reserve spots in tents on “The Conjuring House” property from the end of May through Nov. 1.

Of course, nothing is normal at “The Conjuring House.”

“We recommend bringing a respectful offering (something biodegradable) and invoking protection against anything suspicious that might try to lure you deeper and deeper into the woods,” the website states.

There are eight different sites available with three to four person tents. Some of the sites include a reported extraterrestrial portal, pet cemetery, and “The Floating Regrets Tent.”

“The Floating Regrets Tent is set back in the woods at the intersection of the river just over the bridge. We have heard tales of a deceased boy found floating down this river and of the demise of native children caught in a flash flood,” the website states. “Let us not forget The Conjuring movie of Lorraine watching her daughter float past as a dire warning. What secrets will these waters reveal? Bring your equipment, and hope you aren’t filled with regrets for choosing this haunt near whispering waters.”

Overall, guess with have access to almost all of the 8.5 acres of land.

“Expect to encounter or hear wildlife, including foxes, snakes, coyotes, bats, frogs, turkeys, chipmunks, ticks, birds, mosquitos, and whatever else might be lurking in the dark,” the website warns.

Cell service and internet can by spotty, the organization warns.

The cost ranges from about $300 to $400 per night.

The house was purchased in 2022 for $1.525 million — $300,000 over the asking price — by Jaqueline Nuñez, a Boston developer with a deep fascination and belief in the paranormal.

With the buying stipulations from the previous owner being that whoever owns the home cannot live in it year-round due to its “powerful energy,” as Nuñez told The Boston Globe, Nuñez said she would be running day tours and allowing guests to book overnight for “investigations.”

“Legend has it, the home is haunted by the presence of Bathsheba Sherman, who lived in the house in the 1800s,” Realtor Mott & Chace Sotheby’s International Realty said, MassLive previously reported. “To this day, countless happenings have been reported.”

This post was originally published on this site