I thought so at first glance, also. But, to me, the size of the moving lights from a mile or more away, would have been much smaller if they were Chinese lanterns, I think.
I found this: How big is a sky lantern?
When fully inflated the lantern is 15" x 22.625" x 40.5".
And, don't lit Chinese lanterns keep rising straight up until they burn out? I've never seen them stop at one altitude and then travel all together on the breeze.
And if they were traveling on the breeze, doesn't the breeze blow inward from the ocean? These were flying along the coast. (Maybe someone will correct me.)
I think they are even too large to be sports-sized drones with lights. They looked to be as large as a car or even bigger (to me at least) considering how far away they had to be.
Fullofit lol Thumper covers Ben Tues 2 AM (he pays for a subscription) so you can listen to it while yawning. https://rumble.com/user/Thumper14
The show is called Hyperdrive.
He's a bit slow and rambling.
He's from the west (Washington State).
I like the UFO videos.
The first stream of orange "UFOs" looks like chinese lanterns.
I thought so at first glance, also. But, to me, the size of the moving lights from a mile or more away, would have been much smaller if they were Chinese lanterns, I think.
I found this: How big is a sky lantern?
When fully inflated the lantern is 15" x 22.625" x 40.5".
And, don't lit Chinese lanterns keep rising straight up until they burn out? I've never seen them stop at one altitude and then travel all together on the breeze.
And if they were traveling on the breeze, doesn't the breeze blow inward from the ocean? These were flying along the coast. (Maybe someone will correct me.)
I think they are even too large to be sports-sized drones with lights. They looked to be as large as a car or even bigger (to me at least) considering how far away they had to be.
Thus - I think they were something else.
Noted. I have watched Chinese lanterns go up a little way, drift on the wind, then descend as the flame diminishes.