Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/25/2023 in all areas

  1. It IS true and you are right to defend it. What I've said is also true, even including the part where announcements that were made concerning degraded Human DNA found at the nest sites, worded as they were, were grossly ill defined and misleading.
    1 point
  2. 1 point
  3. Hello, I'm a retired LEO transplanted to N.C. from Md. I'm 68 years old living in Jacksonville N.C. I am extremely interested in Bigfoot research. Stay safe!
    1 point
  4. It's never been about the money. It's actually way to late to be about the money. It's about the results. It's about holding back on truth. It's about ham stringing the community. But this thread proves that the other issue is people that have heard the truth but will do and say anything but admit it. So on that, it's about members that refuse to help and respect the BF community enough to make sure they don't get bogged down with things that are only meant to bog them down. But I think what's most important is that this thread has exposed an obvious agenda by a member that consisted of a series of intentional roadblocks and distractions that have permeated this thread at every turn. A push back so typical of what happens here when anyone pulls the curtain back on the true workings of the ones control the narrative, information, and what passes for accepted truth in all its contrived ambiguities. And it's truly amazing how many in the public eye are in on a scam meant to divert the truth of this subject into perpetuity, and convert it into conferences, museums, and billions in profits. The scientists involved with finding answers to the Sasquatch issue have failed miserably, not because they are incompetent for they are anything but incompetent. They have failed for other reasons that we aren't allowed to know about. But I have a pretty good guess.
    1 point
  5. Mike Dodge is a pretty piss poor specimen of the genus Homo. He behaves more like a Raphus cucullatus.
    1 point
  6. Sorry @hiflier that I upset your book of the month club selection and your readability level wasn't up to snuff. Those two fellas mentioned would be the absolute "last" people on Earth I'd ask for a definitive answer about anything Sasquatch or DNA related but are probably both really nice people (at least I know one of them is).
    1 point
  7. Are we talking singular DNA from "one" nest or plural DNA from "multiple" nests in the same infestation of nests or nestation? Enquiring scientists and new members are spending their whole day wanting to know.
    1 point
  8. Tele-plays such as this are word salads, devoid of useful information. Many dressings are applied including snake oil, but at the end of the day, they are not palatable. Playing the girly card never works. The case of the inverted trees was presented in the book "Raincoast Sasquatch" by J Robert Alley. They are east of Klawock Lake, Prince of Wales Island in Alaska. Local hunters were known to have seen the inverted trees back in the 1940's or 1950's. The hunters believed that the 'big black gorillas' marked their territorial boundaries with the inverted trees. Logging roads went in during the late 1980's. The trees are about 30 feet off of a logging spur. Not exactly a hardcore expedition to look at the upside down trees. Means and methods of installation are still unknown. No sign of rigging marks on the trees. No roads. Helicopter logging did not exist at that time period.
    1 point
  9. My friend has done just that. He claims to have some limited success. I’ve seen a couple pics, but I don’t hound him about them at all.
    1 point
  10. We have sunny, unseasonably hot weather here in BC right now, so I took advantage and got out for some exploration today. Earlier in this thread there was mention of Ruby and Garnet creeks, which triggered me to head that way today. I had some honey-do chores this AM, so didn't get away till about 2, and the temp was up to 31 C (90 F), about 15 C higher than average for this time of year. I took lots of water and soft drinks, and had the AC turned up all the way out there, but had to turn it off on the steep logging road up Ruby Creek drainage, as the H3 overheated, and I had to pull over, open the hood, and turn on the heater to get it cooled down again. It didn't lose any coolant, but stayed on the high side all the rest of the trip, so I may need a new thermostat. The joys of driving a 17 year old 4x4 ! I checked out many of the off shoots of the main FSR, most of which ended in washouts or at giant powerline towers, as there are 3 major lines that cross these mountains parallel to each other. I only met 2 other trucks on these trails, one stopped for a picnic, and the other looking for a route to nearby Deer Lake, in Sasquatch Provincial Park. I had to tell that couple that although the lake is visible in the valley we were in, the route to the lake was cut off by a washed out bridge, and the only access was via Harrison Hot Springs, about 30 km back around the mountains on the highway. I came back out the valley on an alternate trail, rough and overgrown, but a fun descent through the old forest. Once back on the highway, I went a few km further east, to the Garnet Creek FSR, which had been severely damaged back in 2021 in our November storms, which flooded a huge portion of Sumas Prairie and caused terrible damage to major highways, rail lines, and of course many logging roads. I arrived at the washout site to find that it had been "sort of" repaired, making it passable to 4x4s, but not logging traffic. My target was to climb the pass near the headwaters to cross over to American Creek, and return to the highway on the east side of Hope. I made it up to the pass at 800m (2600') to find a deep snow patch right at the summit, next to a lovely little alpine lake, so I had to turn around and retrace my path back to pavement. In this watershed I never saw another vehicle anywhere, and also failed to see any wildlife, or even signs of critters, No tracks, no droppings, nothing at all. I did take a few pictures to share, and a couple of very brief videos showing Garnet Creek in full freshet from snowmelt. IMG_1380.MOV IMG_1381.MOV
    1 point
  11. I’ve had it! It reminds me a lot of our Scottish Highland meat we raise.
    1 point
  12. Another month of wet weekends, family obligations, and a 10 day nasty chest cold kept me out of the woods for a while, but today weather and circumstances allowed a day long get away. I went to the valley where I had my sighting and trackway find about 45 years ago, as it's only 45 minutes from my door. I first went to the top of the peak at the mouth of the valley, which has a great lookout at a rustic hikers cabin overlooking the Fraser Valley. On the way up I spotted a large hawk circling overhead, and when I parked at the trail to the cabin, I could hear several grouse doing their whoop call in the timber. I met 2 couples at the lookout who had never been there before, so I was able to point out landmarks visible from there to them. After a pleasant 1/2 hour chatting, they continued further along the ridgeline, while I went back down the very steep grade to the main FSR leading further back into the watershed. On the way down I heard a very noticeable noise from the area of the left front wheel, which I assume to be either the brake wear indicator tab, or I somehow got a rock between the brake rotor and the stone guard. I'll have to get that checked out this week, before I do any more trips with the H3. Once back on the main road up the valley, I was watching for a mine adit that I had spotted years ago, just up the bank off the roadside, but I couldn't spot it. As I explored the side branches off the main FSR, I found that most led to snow patches in the shaded areas that can be vey easy to get stuck in when the spring melt makes snow heavy and wet, so I didn't push my luck on those. I did check for tracks in those areas, but found only boots, dogs, and tires had left their marks. After meeting several more people out there enjoying the better weather, I headed back out towards pavement, still watching for that mine adit, and finally located it. This time I pinned it on Gaia, so I can find it again, when I bring the right footwear and lighting to go more than a few feet into it. I got back home in time to fire up the BBQ for the family for the first time this year. A good day all around.
    1 point
  13. Went for a hike today up at McCroskey State Park on the border of Idaho and Washington. I took my new dog with me, Arlo. I adopted him from my daughter last month as he grew too big for the house and drove the cat nuts. They got him during Covid, so he has never been in the woods, never been around people, and never been in public. Today was his first time in the woods and he loved it! I was going to go to a spot I found hunting for mushrooms last year that had what looked like a bed made from pine boughs, but, the road was snowed shut a couple of miles before that spot. Backtracked to an interesting trail that went up a mountain and hiked it a couple of miles until it hit the deep snow and was impassable on foot... Bunches of elk and deer sign in this area, along with lots of wolf sign. Biggest wolf scat I have run across... No BF sign, however. No weird tree structures or bedding, no tracks, no wood knocks, and no vocalizations. I did find a couple of tracks that were interesting. Pretty sure this is a bear hind footprint... But no idea what this is. If it's a wolf, it's massive and heavy. Wasn't defined enough to tell, but it was deep and big. No BF sign, but still a great hike.
    1 point
This leaderboard is set to New York/GMT-05:00
×
×
  • Create New...