Ohio Bigfoot Hunting


Ohio Bigfoot Hunter Tim Stover takes a look at the past year, and the bigfoot evidence he has collected, or not collected.

Comments

  1. "not collected" being the key words.

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  2. A lot of people do not realize how much dense forest and bountiful habitat there is in Ohio. If they eat corn and soybean, they have an unlimited food supply there and we have so many deer they hang out in our back yards! They are literally everywhere!

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    Replies
    1. Ohio has been occupied by white settlers over 230 years and that's not counting the native Americans who have lived there for long before. With an estimated population of 11.72 million now living there and the prevalence of high quality cameras everywhere (such as game cameras) it's very unlikely how ANY large creature could escape detection for so long and with so many people no matter how much cover there is especially during the winter.

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    2. https://www.bfro.net/GDB/state_listing.asp?state=oh

      Uuuuuuuum, I think Bigfoot’s not done a very good job and remaining undetected at all.

      “For almost 150 years Ohio residents have witnessed a creature called the Grassman lurking about rural farms and fields. The Grassman is a monster alleged to inhabit Ohio and Western Pennsylvania, and looking back at reports it is almost certainly a Sasquatch. The first sightings occurred in 1869, where witnesses described it as a large, hairy, bipedal creature up to nine feet tall.
      The beast allegedly eats wheat and other tall grasses, hence the name, but this is a food source we would expect an omnivore like Bigfoot to take advantage of if given the chance. Some researchers theorize that the Bigfoot population in more agricultural areas of Ohio may have adapted to consuming cereal crops. This too would make sense, as planted crops would provide an easy source of food for an enterprising Sasquatch.
      The Grassman has been reported to share many characteristics similar to Bigfoot, but the grass-eating thing is not the only difference. For instance, the Grassman has also been spotted in groups, where most Bigfoot sightings are of a single individual. And, like the Skunk Ape in the south, the Grassman is reported to give off a strong odor.
      We may think of Ohio as an Eastern state, but really it was part of the Northwest Territory established in the late 18th century. The population of Ohio in 1800 consisted of only 34,000 European citizens. (New York City alone had over 60,000, and Philadelphia over 40,000.)
      Even the Native American populations in Ohio were in decline prior to this. In the 17thh century a combination of disease and war with Iroquois tribes from the east had decimated much of the indigenous population. Eventually they would begin to recover.
      So, while the eastern part of the country was flourishing, Ohio was largely populated by Native American tribes who had fled west to avoid the European invasion, and the remnants of battered tribes indigenous to the area.
      Ohio was also beyond the Proclamation Line established in 1763 as a promise between the Native Americans and English to limit colonial expansion. This would hold off the population boom for a few more years.
      What does all of this have to do with Bigfoot? It adds up to a longer period of time before the European population began to explode, and allowed more time for Bigfoot to adapt to the presence of a large number of people in his territory. Where big animals such as the black bear and eastern cougar were under pressure from the new colonists, Bigfoot would have enjoyed a relative period of peace in the Ohio territory.
      In later decades the population of Ohio grew many times over, but even though the current census is over eleven million much of the population is clustered around major cities. There are still a whole lot of woods and farmland in Ohio where a creature like Bigfoot might live.
      In the eastern part of the United State, the forests extend from the Appalachian Mountains into eastern Ohio. The Appalachian Mountains and the associated Appalachian Trail are thought by some researchers to be a kind of Bigfoot superhighway, enabling Sasquatches to migrate up and down the east coast in relative obscurity.”
      https://exemplore.com/cryptids/Bigfoot-Sightings-Ohio-Grassman

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