Catmandoo Posted June 15 Share Posted June 15 Sasquatch and Dog men and bear poo oh my! I never knew that Sasquatch had pets. This video is an IQ test. The areas have road access therefore any number of humans have been there. The forest is sick with many sick / dead trees falling over. The locations are high altitude with snow and wind loading. The alphabet Sasquatch have been busy making 'X's'. Forests go quiet during the day. The morning symphony of bird and animal activity occurs because the thermal upwelling of air to float avian predators does not occur until later in the day. To me, turning loose cows to graze means that the area is considered to have a low predator risk. Unfortunately, the guy could not communicate with the cows for his lack of cow-speak. The video did have some mooooving moments. In my area, lots of shallow root ball blow downs and snow load damage. An elk can severely tear up a young pine tree and make a twist snap. No mystery since elk hoof tracks are at the base of the tree. I did not notice any twist snaps in the video. I can't believe the guy has subscribers. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorCalWitness Posted June 21 Author Share Posted June 21 On 6/14/2024 at 6:46 PM, Catmandoo said: Sasquatch and Dog men and bear poo oh my! I never knew that Sasquatch had pets. This video is an IQ test. The areas have road access therefore any number of humans have been there. The forest is sick with many sick / dead trees falling over. The locations are high altitude with snow and wind loading. The alphabet Sasquatch have been busy making 'X's'. Forests go quiet during the day. The morning symphony of bird and animal activity occurs because the thermal upwelling of air to float avian predators does not occur until later in the day. To me, turning loose cows to graze means that the area is considered to have a low predator risk. Unfortunately, the guy could not communicate with the cows for his lack of cow-speak. The video did have some mooooving moments. In my area, lots of shallow root ball blow downs and snow load damage. An elk can severely tear up a young pine tree and make a twist snap. No mystery since elk hoof tracks are at the base of the tree. I did not notice any twist snaps in the video. I can't believe the guy has subscribers. As I said, he is in to the parabigfoot stuff and was only looking for feedback on the tree structures. No reason to say the video is an IQ test. Its uncalled for and rude. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catmandoo Posted June 22 Share Posted June 22 On 6/20/2024 at 8:55 PM, NorCalWitness said: As I said, he is in to the parabigfoot stuff and was only looking for feedback on the tree structures. No reason to say the video is an IQ test. Its uncalled for and rude. I gave feedback. I miss the flamethrower emoji. I have lived and worked in Alaska and Washington. I have seen a lot of damage caused by 'nature'. Natural damage in a forest does not mean anything to me. Avalanche damage leaves a trail that lasts past snow melt. The parabigfoot guy needs to up his game. He needs a magnetometer / milligauss meter and geiger counter to get a larger following. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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