Watch man describe what it's like to be attacked by Australian's Bigfoot [Video]
Dean Harrison Australian Yowie Research |
The Yowie (also called Yahoo or the Great Hair Moehau in New Zealand) is an alleged hominid reputed to lurk in the Australian wilderness, similar to the Himalayan Yeti and the North American Bigfoot.
Watch below as Australian Yowie Research's Dean Harrison recollects his terrifying Yowie encounter to CFZ Australia's Mike Williams.
Dean Harrison talks about his terrifying yowie encounter
Australian's Bigfoot: Map of Yowie Sightings
[via www.cfzaustralia.com]
That was a very unique encounter. Quite convincing. When I was tracked in the woods of West Virginia, it was like that. When I stopped, it stopped. It paralleled me and when I sped up, it sped up. It was like it was escorting me from the woods.
ReplyDeleteThat was an amazing story. Very convincing indeed!!
ReplyDeleteI have trouble with the location. I don't see how any hominin but Homo sapiens could make it to Australia. Of course, I probably would have said the same about the island of Flores and some of our relatives ended up there.
ReplyDeleteStill, there were no land bridges to Australia. Homo erectus was probably capable of building rafts, but nothing that could get them all the way to Australia. I firmly believe that the aborigines were the first primates (and the first placental mammals besides bats) to set foot on the continent. Then they brought dogs and other placental mammals and a lot of really cool marsupials and reptiles went extinct.
Natural history does not support the existence of a yowie. It doesn't really support the existence of bigfoot, either, unless he made it across the land bridge during the ice ages.
You defeat yourself in your own argument. The Aboriginese got there somehow. You say that rafts would not get them there, then how did they get there? The Aborigines have no culture of seafaring or reminants of that would still exist. The marsupials are unique in development because of the isolation of the continent and they predated any human presence. They were not brought there or they would be found elsewhere.
DeleteIf humans made it across the Bering Sea to North Americal why not any other primates or huminin even more adapted to survival in the wild? According to Native American oral history, BF was here when they got here during the last ice age. There have been numerous ice ages.
@Autumnforest
ReplyDeleteSome friends and I had an experience like yours, but we blamed it on demons. We were fundamentalist Christians. Usually, a person's beliefs determine what they perceive.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Phillip K. Dick
When I stopped believing in demons, I stopped seeing them. Yes, at one point in my life I honestly thought I had SEEN demons. In retrospect, I see how I was fooled.
Dude stop making stupid comments on everyones posts. I thought it was a demon following me, so what was it Bigfoot? Demon? Crazy hippies stalker? So now you don't believe in god, so it couldn't have been a demon. What kind of drugs were you using to see demons? Then there's the comment about Australia. How then did the aboriginals get there? If you believe in evolution and everyone originated from Africa then they had to get there some how. A group of primitives did say hey let's see if we can swim a couple hundred miles and see what we can find. Even though you lost your faith don't knock other peoples. If you remember from your Christian upbringing it says in the bible that man will never understand all the mysterious the world has to offer. Just lighten up!!!
ReplyDelete[quote"Anonymous said...
ReplyDeleteDude stop making stupid comments on everyone's posts. I thought it was a demon following me, so what was it Bigfoot? Demon? Crazy hippies stalker? So now you don't believe in god, so it couldn't have been a demon. What kind of drugs were you using to see demons? Then there's the comment about Australia. How then did the aboriginals get there? If you believe in evolution and everyone originated from Africa then they had to get there some how. A group of primitives did say hey let's see if we can swim a couple hundred miles and see what we can find. Even though you lost your faith don't knock other peoples. If you remember from your Christian upbringing it says in the bible that man will never understand all the mysterious the world has to offer. Just lighten up!!!" quote]
THANK YOU Anonymous THANK YOU...there are no words that can describe my immense gratitude to you for the above post!
Thank you again.
Blondie
The illustration of the yowie on the map reminds me of the the video of Larry Surface. Also he describes various colors of the bigfoots in the sightings from black,to grey to yellowly cream represented by the different colored dots. The height he described would have been about right for Larry Surface's pictures too. Very interesting.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if the Yowie that attacked Dean Harrison was protecting his family or perhaps a female maybe giving birth?? One thing about it if the Yowie had wanted to kill him it could have very quickly. It's kinda like at one point Dean crossed a certain line. Hmmmm
Yeah, this isn't really a forum intended for discussing atheism vs. religion. However, the belief that evolution is proven fact is itself fiction. Pasteur proved long ago that spontaneous generation does not occur. Yet evolutionists, who feel compelled to put everything through their naturalistic filter, must continue to hold on to the fiction that it does occur. Also, the belief that mind-bogglingly complex genetic information comes out of nowhere as organisms supposedly become increasingly complex is also an entirely untenable position. However, if your belief system firmly dismisses all forms of the supernatural (i.e. God), then one has no choice but to continue to believe the untenable position that chance has the power to make something out of nothing. As much as some philosophers and naturalists have attempted to poo poo the teleological argument, it still takes a lot of faith to entirely dismiss it. Just like bigfoot, belief in creative intelligence has glimpses of evidence, but it still takes faith to fully believe in its existence.
ReplyDeleteDean Harrison's encounter was similar to the "Cowman of Copalis Beach" story in which a Bigfoot ran down a 12 year old boy and gave him a forearm shiver that sent him rolling, and them moved back to the woods. When I origonally heard of Bigfoots in Austrailia, my natural response was how they got there? Looking at my globe you see how close Indonesia and New Guinea is to Australia, especially at the Torres Strait which is full of many tiny Islands that in a very shallow sea that serve as a stepping stone, especially during the ice ages. This is a theory for the Aboriginal People. Also the Bigfoot is a natural and tremendous swimmer. Dean Harrison has an excellent web site, Yowie Hunters.com. The encounters portray that same traits and appearance( although perhaps a little shorter) as the North American Sasquatch. I have no doubt whatsoever that Bigfoot is in Austrailia.
ReplyDeleteI wonder why they converted it to that unwatchable high key reverse thing? It was impossible to see anything.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteDear Anonymous somebody,
ReplyDeleteAtheist guy actually stated, "I don't see how any hominin but Homo sapiens could make it to Australia."
I believe the word "but" means he believes HS, hence aboriginal folk, made it to Australia. Maybe you should "lighten up". I believe he made a good point.
If sea levels dropped enough during subsequent ice ages, then an island land bridge of sorts could have been a gateway to Australia from Indonesia. Otherwise Yowie would have to have been a pet or something else (insert imagination)brought over by the 2 waves of Aboriginies 50 and 35,000 years ago. I'm not up on Indonesian land bridges, though I believe one did not exist from Java to Flores though as we know the little people existed there. But, they may be a smaller H. Erectus. Who's to say Yowie is not of the same lineage.
As far as believing in "spontaneous generation" , I always thought that was called creationism. Nothing spontaneous about evolution. Unless you're talking about viruses or bacteria. As far as complex organisms, I think we're talking about millenia.
Come on, are you guys for real. You guys are arguing over land bridges, evolution, religion etc. You're all missing the bleeding obvious - do yowies even exist in the first place is what you should be questioning. They are about as real as the toothfairy my friends. Time to get yourselves into rehab if you have any doubts. Not too hard to switch on a camera, narrate a scar story, convert it to black & white and superimpose some chilling background music....sucks them in all the time. :-)
ReplyDeleteDr. Doolittle, People who live in glass houses, shouldn't throw stones. Talk about living in a fantasy world, or were you just born with that name, eh mate?
DeleteFairly sure that if visit:-
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNF0LAv6Imc&list=UUReY1GZMUMxSQNs4okQPcOg&index=4&feature=plcp
the video is in colour......and for a little more info on the Australian Yowie visit :-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNF0LAv6Imc&list=UUReY1GZMUMxSQNs4okQPcOg&index=4&feature=plcp
Some good stories and info from credible people but some nutters amongst them too.
Pasted the wrong link to the Australian Yowie Research site.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.yowiehunters.com.au/