It has long been rumoured that a woodland in Somerset is one of the most haunted spots in the UK. From "banshee-like" screams heard by campers to drivers discovering chilling handprints inside their cars, locals believe they have experienced numerous encounters with a notorious ghost known as Sally.
Many of these spooky incidents have been connected to Browne's Folly nature reserve near Bathford and a nearby road called Sally in the Wood.
So what do people say happened in the woodland? The unusual stories are being explored in a BBC Sounds series produced by BBC Radio Somerset, called The Other Side.
Stories surrounding a ghostly woman reportedly seen by people have been connected to a car accident and a murder - none of which have ever been proven.
There was, in fact, a real person named Sally or Sarah Gibson who lived in the area in 1700s.
According to research by the Bathford Society, local records show Gibson had lived in a cabin in the woods until she passed away two months short of her 100th birthday.
One man who believes he may have encountered the local ghost is account manager Jamie Vaughan.
In his teens, he would often sit in his car with his friends in the Browne's Folly Nature Reserve car park.
After a night of driving they would sometimes hear knocking on the metalwork which he put down to the vehicles "cooling down".
"I tried to be sceptical about it," he said.
"One night we were sat wing mirror to wing mirror and the knocking started getting louder, it was underneath me in the driver's seat."
When he turned on his lights, he saw a muddy handprint on his front window.
"I reversed out of here like a bat out of hell."
"I tried to clean off the handprint - it wouldn't come off because it was on the inside of the window."
"My windows were up. I can't explain any of it."
"I've never had the courage to talk about it up until now - it's been almost 14 years since I talked about it," Vaughan added.
Another local, retired officer Philippa Cole, also believes the ghost could have been behind an unusual call out.
On a night shift in the late 90s, Cole attended a road traffic incident on the road Sally in the Wood.
"The first thing he [the driver] said to me was, 'Is the lady okay?' At that time we didn't know anyone else was involved," she said.
"He said she was in the middle of the road, had swerved to avoid her, had a white coat on and didn't move."
"I remember he also said he had heard a scream afterwards. Our fear was he'd struck her."
She immediately searched the area for the woman he described, but said there was "absolutely no trace of anyone" and put it down to "the famous ghost of Sally in the woods".
"It was spooky. I had heard the tale from other officers that accidents have occurred because of the lady from Sally in the Woods."
"I use that road quite a lot and it makes me think about it all the time, especially when I'm driving through it at night," she added.
Youth group leader Shea Stew recounted a camping trip in Browne’s Folly where he looked back and saw a pinprick light moving towards them.
“It was the dead of night. We were trying to go in single file,” he said.
“We all looked back at the light. it got closer to us and we literally heard the most horrific scream – like a banshee scream.
“It went through your bones. Everybody had a massive freak out.”
He described the noise as a “human scream” that felt like a warning to “get out”.
“There is a strange feeling here. You’ve almost got that white noise that just covers this wood.
This wood is incredibly haunted,” he added.
Chairman of the Bathford Society Peter Martin has heavily researched the topic, but admitted he has never seen the ghost in question.
“Sally was a real person. She was born in 1724 at Monkton Farley, Wiltshire and was one of five children,” he said.
“Her husband John Gibson had a certificate that allowed him to hunt game.
“When he died she was asked to leave the gamekeeper’s cottage and she went to live in a hut nearby.”
The dwelling was located south east from Browne's Folly in Warleigh.
He went on to explain how records show she hung mugs outside of her home "in which people deposited coins".
“She lived till she was around 100 which is extraordinary,” Martin said.
He said a "sepulchral scream" in the area was often reported.
“It was commonplace and people would say, ‘Oh, that’s just Sally’.
“She was always thought of in good terms - never as an evil person,” he added.