Mysterious Green Glow Appears in Hawaii Sky
Jake Asuncion, a local photographer who often shoots landscapes on Hawaii’s Big Island, went to Keahole Point to film the sunset. Nothing unusual — just ocean, sky, and a camera.
While he was there, everything looked normal. No strange colors, no lights, nothing that stood out.
Only later, going through the footage, he noticed something odd. A faint green glow in the sky. Easy to miss, but it was there.
The strange part is he didn’t see it at all while filming. Not even a little.
At first, it didn’t seem like a big deal. Could be the camera. Could be anything. Still, he came back the next day and recorded the sunset again.
Same spot. Similar time. And again — that green tint showed up on video. That’s when it started to feel less random.
Some people mentioned aurora. The color kind of fits. But Hawaii isn’t exactly the place for that. It’s too far from where auroras usually appear.
There was no solar activity either. No storms, no warnings. So that explanation didn’t really hold.
Other ideas came up — satellites, planes, reflections. None of them matched what the footage showed.
One possible explanation is the atmosphere. Around sunset, light can behave in strange ways near the horizon. There’s also something called a green flash, but that’s usually quick and sharp.
This wasn’t like that. It looked softer. And it stayed a bit longer.
Another thought is the camera itself. Sensors can pick up subtle colors that don’t stand out to the eye, especially in low light.
Still, no clear answer. Just a few guesses. In the end, it was supposed to be a regular sunset. Turned out a bit different.
Original source: Coast to Coast AM. Read the full article here
We previously reported on a mysterious merging of lights in the California evening sky. A married couple accidentally spotted and captured on video a strange, unidentified object with bright yellowish-orange lights.






