georgerm Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago There seems to be a fair quantity of bigfoots in the mountains north of Coquille that is east of Coos Bay. I will say more about this once I can get this to post.
georgerm Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago My daughter's boyfriend, Ray, was walking down a deer trail next to a small creek in the hills of southwest Oregon where the mountains are steep and covered with tall Douglas Fir timber trees and brush. He parked his truck on the side hill along a dirt logging road. He decided to walk downhill along a deer trail and noticed an animal watching him from behind a tree. He kept walking downhill and the creature began to follow him about 100 yards behind him. Now Ray kept looking back, and it turned out to be a Sasquatch that was trailing him which horrified him and to this day he refuses to hike in the area. This went on for 30 minutes and Ray started up the steep hill towards the logging road where his truck was parked. The creature kept following him until he got in his truck and drove off. I'm going to see if he will take me to the location again because he has refused to go back there.
georgerm Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago My post could have been more clear since it's not just a bigfoot sighting post, but a post that makes the point that bigfoots are still existing but rarely seen. We have new primatologist on the block, and they are stiring up public interest "Several women are actively involved in Bigfoot research. One prominent example is Dr. Mireya Mayor, a primatologist, explorer, and science communicator who has participated in expeditions like Expedition Bigfoot. Another notable figure is Mary Fabian, who is the founder of the Pennsylvania Bigfoot Project and the Monkey Wench Investigations, an all-female Bigfoot research team. The SheSquatchers, another all-female team, are also actively involved in searching for Bigfoot." Since the Patterson - Gimlin film, why haven't we had more evidence in the way of close-up films or bigfoot remains to keep the public and primatologist interested? It's great to have a new surge in primatologist who are interested in bigfoots. They may discover if bigfoots are gradually perishing due to growing human populations that drive Sasquatches into lands where they can't sustain a population. Have bigfoot populations always been so low that changes in their wild environments caused by humans causes their habitats to be unlivable? This question and others will be answered by new primatologist on the bigfoot scene.
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