It’s finally here!! Working with @DrinkFreshenUp to make a flavor that I know would even keep the spirits awake!!!
Now that my flavor is here I’m helping out the family!! If you’re close to partner or your flavor drop your code!
🚨 NEW CREATOR FLAVOR ALERT 🚨
👻 SPIRIT SURGE 🍇🍒
Teaming up with @DynastyParanormal to bring you a hauntingly epic Grape Cherry fusion experience!
🎁 FIRST 10 ORDERS = A FREE HYDRATION TUB!! 🎁
🛒https://t.co/arRfw5HmGq
This ghostly Grape Cherry blend hits like a full ghost hunting session - sweet, juicy, and mysteriously delicious. Perfect crash-free energy for late-night ghost hunts, streams, or powering through your day.
Available in Hydration • Core • MAX
Who’s ready to summon the surge? Drop a 👻 if you’re grabbing one! Don’t let our stock disappear!
Rockwood Park and Museum (located in Wilmington, Delaware)
This location is a genuinely haunted 1850s Gothic Revival estate. Visitors and paranormal investigators report encountering spirits like Joseph Shipley (the original builder) and "Little Eddie," who is known for playfully moving objects. The estate's active haunting history was famously featured on the Syfy channel's Ghost Hunters 👻
Our paranormal tour continues
John Dickinson Plantation
This historic plantation, which was originally built in 1739 and suffered significant damage during a British raid in 1781, is considered by paranormal enthusiasts to be one of the spookiest locations in the state
Visitors and paranormal investigators report hearing his phantom quill scratching on parchment in his old study, strange cold spots, and unexplained electronic voice phenomena (EVP) of his voice throughout the grounds
The mansion was rebuilt after a fire in 1804, and the grounds contain an African American burial ground identified in 2021
Have you previously investigated historic plantations?
#ghoststorytime #ghosthunting #paranormal
Today’s ghost tale! Going to start doing weekly tails from haunted places across America! Fort Saulsbury • Slaughter Beach
Fort Saulsbury was constructed commencing in 1917 to safeguard the Delaware Bay. During World War II, its artillery was removed and the site was repurposed as a prisoner-of-war camp, detaining German and Italian prisoners.
A Cape Gazette feature subsequently described a paranormal investigation wherein the property owner recounted investigators claiming substantial activity and an alleged request that someone return speaking German. While this account is based on reported experience rather than empirical evidence, it undoubtedly constitutes one of the more specific anecdotes from our Delaware travels.
Which concern is more disconcerting to you: an unseen voice requesting a German translator or entering a concrete bunker during this heat wave?