admin
Administrator
March 6, 2026
A clip is circulating showing what some viewers describe as glowing “orbs” moving near a volcano. Instead of relying on reposts, I went looking for a primary source. The best source I can find is the Mayon Volcano livestream archive from March 5, 2026, which is publicly available on YouTube. If the lights were captured live, they should be visible there in the archived footage.
Here is the archive video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NWk0kGkocw
If you watch the night portion and scrub around, you can see periods where bright points appear and move near the lower right portion of the frame. Without a confirmed timestamp and without a second camera angle, it is still not possible to say what these lights are. One important detail is that Mayon has been showing active glow and volcanic activity recently, including night incandescence captured on official monitoring footage. That matters because glowing volcanic activity, atmospheric haze, reflections on the lens, aircraft, drones, and even insects close to the camera can all create misleading effects on night webcams.
For now I am treating this as unverified.
If anyone can provide:
a precise timestamp in the archive
a clipped segment directly from the archive
or a second independent camera view
then we can narrow down whether this is likely a drone, aircraft, lens artifact, or something genuinely unusual.
A clip is circulating showing what some viewers describe as glowing “orbs” moving near a volcano. Instead of relying on reposts, I went looking for a primary source. The best source I can find is the Mayon Volcano livestream archive from March 5, 2026, which is publicly available on YouTube. If the lights were captured live, they should be visible there in the archived footage.
Here is the archive video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NWk0kGkocw
If you watch the night portion and scrub around, you can see periods where bright points appear and move near the lower right portion of the frame. Without a confirmed timestamp and without a second camera angle, it is still not possible to say what these lights are. One important detail is that Mayon has been showing active glow and volcanic activity recently, including night incandescence captured on official monitoring footage. That matters because glowing volcanic activity, atmospheric haze, reflections on the lens, aircraft, drones, and even insects close to the camera can all create misleading effects on night webcams.
For now I am treating this as unverified.
If anyone can provide:
a precise timestamp in the archive
a clipped segment directly from the archive
or a second independent camera view
then we can narrow down whether this is likely a drone, aircraft, lens artifact, or something genuinely unusual.