Watch This: Rabbit Decomposition Time-Lapse-- Yes, It's Bigfoot Related
The group, PNW Bigfoot posted a video of how quickly a corpse can disappear in the woods. Could this explain why a Bigfoot carcass is impossible to find?
Why we don't find corpse of the Big Fella, watch at day 4 the maggots leave and go of to become flies, By day 5 the animals spread the bones even further by one week this rabbit could be pooped out 15 miles away, just food for thought on why no corpse.
Kind of nasty but I get the break down of it.... SHAWN WELCOME HOME!!!! lol
ReplyDeleteMonster Quest did the same thing with a deer. They had the same result. The size of the animal does not seem to matter when it comes to decomposition.
ReplyDeleteNever realised how little time that takes. You'd think the bones of a fully grown Saquatch would survive a lot longer though. I'm not having a dig, maybe they dispose of their own, or maybe there are a few Park Rangers out there with a garage full of bones.
ReplyDeleteOR the real reason we dont find a bigfoot corpse is because it dont exist?
ReplyDeleteEver notice how footers claim that the woods are not conducive to fossilization yet the cave bear has an extremely extensive fossil record?
DeleteAre you pretending not to be a footer ?
DeleteI saw the mentioned deer episode too. It is unreal how fast Mother Nature reclaims bodies. It is also one of the reasons why I bring my deer and elk carcasses back to the woods instead of throwing them in the trash. Insects and animals all use the remains. I dropped an elk carcass last year and came back the following weekend. I found three vertebrae and a femur. The second weekend when I dropped off a deer carcass, nothing was left. Three weeks later, you could barely see my tire tracks on the soft shoulder and only vague impressions of my foot prints in the woods. No bones were found from two full carcasses, one every bit as large as bigfoot. How many animals die every day in the forest? If Mother Nature did not reclaim her critter carcasses fast, the forest would be covered in bones. In thirty five plus years of hunting, camping, hiking, and fishing I have seen one bear skull, no cougar skulls, and never more than a handful of bones together unless it was a fresh kill or dump. Even if bigfoot does not do anything with their dead, Mother Nature will. And in a hurry.
ReplyDeleteSome inconsiderate deer decided to die close to my house so I helped drag it into the woods. It was fully intact. Two days later, there was no evidence except a tuft of fur. Most likely, coyotes dragged it off and its body parts were dispersed.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I find it more likely that squatches have some sort of burial ceremony or whatnot.