Episode 96…Blame It on the Witch


Things go wrong and there is only one logical reason. It has to be that woman on the edge of town, the one little kids fear and older people secretly go to for help. She’s the perfect combination of outsider and un-understandable power. She’s coming for your children and is the focus of your rage. Join Tripping on Legends as we explore the history of blaming the witch in Florida from some old legends already told to the infamous Blue Moon Killing. Of course, there will be time to connect all of it to the witch living in your neighborhood.

Check out some of our witches episodes…

Witches and Murderers at Arbuckle Creek in Lorida 

The Swamp Witch of Hog Island

The Three Ghostly Witches of Florida 

Click to view books on Amazon


You can contact us with questions, comments, and your favorite legend or tidbit of folklore at spookytripping@gmail.com.

Check out Christopher Balzano’s books, including the newly released Haunted Ocala National Forest.

Feel free to call our new phone number during our lives shows to get involved or whenever just to share a legend you’ve heard to ask a question at ((813) 418-6822. 

Keep visiting the site for the trip log of our travels and other urban legends at: www.trippingonlegends.wordpress.com

Follow us at: www.facebook.com/trippingonlegends

Twitter: @SpookyBalzano

Instagram: @SpookyTripping

7 responses to “Episode 96…Blame It on the Witch”

  1. […] his arms, all he had to do was give her his firstborn child.  He was infuriated.  He grabbed the crone, swearing to anyone who might have heard them on that night that he would never give up his child.  […]

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  2. […] was like fate that the Blood Moon happened to fall on a night when Natalie and I were both free of kids and had just heard of an odd […]

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  3. […] a story of a witch, a woods, and people who visit her ghost in the hopes of touching her wall and earning a little of […]

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  4. […] That includes the Lone Star State. I was actually a little surprised to find some stories of witches graves in […]

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  5. […] been described as witch-like creatures, not fully human or owl when fully transformed. They prey on sleeping humans, preferably children […]

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  6. […] to make a connection between multiple stories, say the motivation for the attack was that she was a local witch who had been trying to seduce young women to join her and young men to feed her. This was her […]

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Explore the darker side of Fort Myers with Christopher Balzano during the dark on a hauntingly unforgettable walking tour with True Tours.

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Check out Christopher Balzano’s books, including the newly released Haunted Southwest Florida.

Feel free to call our new phone number during our live shows to get involved, share a legend you’ve heard, or to just ask a question at (813) 418-6822.

Follow us at: 

www.facebook.com/trippingonlegends
Instagram: @SpookyTripping

You can contact us with questions, comments, and your favorite legend or tidbit of folklore at spookytripping@gmail.com.

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