Ever since the Kuzarian family purchased a Depot Road home in 1986, Yvette said strange things have been happening. Fly nests covered the house windows, she said. Random objects started to levitate, she said. She said they heard voices and saw people in their 30-year-old house and yard. Yvette Kuzarian said it all started happening 19 years ago when they began building a horse-riding arena on their six-acre property. "I gave riding lessons and we needed to put an arena out front," Kuzarian said. "Once we started digging for the foundation, weird things started happening. Someone didn’t want us digging up the earth." Kuzarian shared her story with Raymond residents Kathleen Chamberlain and Barbara Edgar, who are filming a documentary on haunted places in the Raymond area for cable access Channel 22. The ghost-hunter team talked with Kuzarian at her haunted home on Monday. More than 200 years ago the property was a cow pasture where Kingston farmers brought their cattle to graze. Kuzarian says smack-dab in the middle of the pasture is New England’s oldest apple tree, which she believes was a meeting place for townspeople. Kuzarian had the tree classified by University of New Hampshire agriculturists. She was also told an old stagecoach road lined the stone wall at the rear of her property. When the Kuzarians bought the Depot Road house in 1986, it had been abandoned for years for unknown reasons. When family members started work on the horse arena, they said they started to sense the presence of ghosts.