In case you were unable to attend, here's a 7 part video series covering the entire Arkansas Bigfoot Conference. Lots of great speakers with good information. Check it out:
I remember as a kid being enthralled with the movie he refers to in the video (The Legend of Boggy Creek). Man, it scared the hell out of me. Of course in those days I actually believed such a thing was possible and I was heavily into Bigfoot and anything remotely connected to it. I’m still interested in the subject but now it’s mainly for entertainment value and the various personalities involved in it. With each succeeding year my belief started to erode until now I no longer believe altogether. I check in here when time allows but nothing of importance seems to come up and I quickly read the story if it appears interesting, laugh at the comments and move on. I keep checking because if there ever is something of major interest I’m sure it will appear here. I have to say that nothing I have read in recent memory has caused me to reevaluate my skepticism and I’m firmly in the camp of those who require an actual body to believe but after almost 50 years of being interested in the subject I’m not holding my breath.
Something of "entertainment value" doesn't leave physical and historical evidence such as crappy foot casts with fake dermals, hairs found to be synthetic fibers, and hundreds of years of native legends that have been dishonestly manipulated by white people.
This story was circulating the internet way back in 2004, or maybe as far back as 1999. Back when everybody was on 56k dial-up modems and a "Facebook" was just a regular book with directory listing of names and headshots. This story was so disturbing and so shocking that nobody believed it at the time. It was the Robert Lindsay " Bear Hunter: Two Bigfoots Shot and DNA Samples Taken " story of the time. And like Robert's Bear Hunter story , this witness didn't have a name. The only thing known about the witness is that this person was a government employee, anonymous of course. The author of the story was a science teacher named Thom Powell who believe it really happened and that the whole story was an elaborate cover-up. Powell said the anonymous government employee alerted the BFRO about a 7.5 feet long/tall burn victim with "multiple burns on hands, feet, legs and body; some 2nd and 3rd degree burns". Sadly, there was no DNA samples taken from...
Tonight on Coast To Coast AM, Bigfootology's Rhettman Mullis will talk about Bigfoot sightings, and give us an update on the Oxford Bigfoot DNA project.
This photograph was first shown at a Bigfoot conference in Washington over the weekend where witnesses were blown away. While we're currently seeking permission to post the screengrab here, we'll provide the link to the image on Facebook for now. The image is just a snapshot of a 5 minute-long footage of a Bigfoot caught on thermal. Washington Bigfoot researcher Derek Randles explains the image:
TCT IS A W H O R E
ReplyDeleteYou wish. Theres not enough money or guns in the world to get you lucky chump.
Delete#40 year old virgin blog troll gone wild
It's odd how Bigfoot is the only fringe topic where its "skeptics" are more demented and obsessed than its "believers"
ReplyDeleteFor the love of Bigfoot this blog SUCKS!
ReplyDeleteI remember as a kid being enthralled with the movie he refers to in the video (The Legend of Boggy Creek). Man, it scared the hell out of me. Of course in those days I actually believed such a thing was possible and I was heavily into Bigfoot and anything remotely connected to it. I’m still interested in the subject but now it’s mainly for entertainment value and the various personalities involved in it. With each succeeding year my belief started to erode until now I no longer believe altogether. I check in here when time allows but nothing of importance seems to come up and I quickly read the story if it appears interesting, laugh at the comments and move on. I keep checking because if there ever is something of major interest I’m sure it will appear here. I have to say that nothing I have read in recent memory has caused me to reevaluate my skepticism and I’m firmly in the camp of those who require an actual body to believe but after almost 50 years of being interested in the subject I’m not holding my breath.
ReplyDeleteSomething of "entertainment value" doesn't leave physical and historical evidence such as crappy foot casts with fake dermals, hairs found to be synthetic fibers, and hundreds of years of native legends that have been dishonestly manipulated by white people.
DeleteJoe
Oh and tiddly doo!
DeleteVilonia Arkansas has a long history of Bigfoot activity. It's a hotspot folks.
Delete