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Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/22/2018 in all areas

  1. Weekend outing with an old buddy (we're both over 70) to the Placer Mt/Flat Top Mt area, which is E of Manning Park in BC, and N of the Pasayten Wilderness in Wa. The weather was perfect, frost on the ground in the mornings, but beautiful blue skies all day, and temps about 10-12C, perfect for hiking, without getting all hot and sweaty. Our prime purpose was deer hunting, with a side of grouse hunting and sasquatch seeking . The region's deer went unharmed, the grouse were depleted by 7, and the squatches remained elusive. The photos are on the Trapper Lake trail, about 6200' el., and the view is SW from the trail, looking into the Pasayten watershed.
    2 points
  2. Red Cedar from the Tongess National Forest area.
    1 point
  3. The forests of Endor? That would be much more exotic. Next guess is New Zealand.
    1 point
  4. I'm thinking as few as 1,500 period anywhere. They simple can't multiply in large numbers so that is one thing that keeps the population down. I don't subscribe to the unsubstantiated claims by people over social media and public reports by some places. From what I've seen they mostly live in vast national and state parks. There are some that lives around people that live way out in the boonies sure, but not in suburban areas. The suburban Bigfoot is all good for a few likes on facebook, but so far no evidence of them being that close other than hearsay. And if they were, it would be all over the news already with videos. The government has no way of keeping anything like that a secret now days. But they don't live in everyone's backyard as current word salad states. They might migrate in certain areas like some of the upper western states and into Canada. And that can really mess up population reports. People in one county will see one or two passing through their woods, and then others will see the same one or two in the next county and so on. And then when they migrate back to their original spots, they are liable to be seen again in the same areas and counted as even more Bigfoot when it's the same ones passing through different times of the year when migrating in those really cold states. Population reports are basically useless. However, down south, they don't migrate at all. There is simply no reason to migrate down here and we've never seen any evidence that they do migrate in the southern states. Plenty of food, vegetable or meat, all year long regardless of season. Just not cold enough to migrate. Here they stay in the same areas all year long. The deer and other animals doesn't migrate here so why would Bigfoot. They are all over the place, but not a lot of them is all over the place.
    1 point
  5. Giant cedar in the Kootenais?
    1 point
  6. We just doubled the odds, Norse! That would be my plan almost exactly. We would explore the southern Alexander Archipeligo in a nice, big yacht year round, and Bigfoot Forum hunters would fly in on chartered float planes as their time allowed for cheap blacktail deer, black bear, and sasquatch mixed bag hunts. Salmon, halibut, and rockfish fishing and butter clam beach parties would round out the events. Everybody who boards would would be required to sign non-disclosure agreements and agree to gift the one and only bagged sasquatch to Dr. Meldrum. I would arrange the carcass smuggling.
    1 point
  7. Still out there, no real danger of extinction. Just way, way above human beings in their own domain.
    1 point
  8. They exist! Higher population of them then what most believe there is, much higher.
    1 point
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