Great week's worth of weirdness again! I'll have to say that I do think Bob Heironimus gave enough information in his "confession" to make me feel comfortable believing he was indeed the guy in the Bigfoot suit. Is his story 100% evidence and proof? No, but it's so much more credible to me than the seven decades worth of other crap that says it was a real creature. I enjoyed Greg Long's book, "The Making of Bigfoot", and think he did due diligence with his interviews with Heironimus. Just one person's opinion.
I'm not saying that this is necessarily true, but i've read an account that that Mola was the largest bony fish on record, not just one of the largest. They are laterally flattened, by the way, not dorso-ventrally flattened.
Melanistic Bobcats have been documented from Florida as well as from Canada. I've examined a specimen from Canada. It was from New Brunswick and that may be, as far as I know, the only province a melanistic Bobcat has been recorded from. It was published on from there and the occurrence (occurrences?) from Florida have been published on as well.
One could quibble that viruses released from melting glaciers are old rather than new, though perhaps new to mankind. It brings to mind Cambell's classic science fiction story "Who goes there?", the basis for John Carpenter's "The Thing" movies. In it, scientists meddling with forces they don't understand (a common theme in 1950s SF) thaw out a frozen spaceship embedded in the antarctic ice, releasing a very unpleasant "passenger". It is badly over-written, but has a memorable phrase that has stuck with me since I read it as a teenager: "the dead immensity of a planet's natural forces".
With all the trail cams scattered around the place by now – by hunters and biologists I assume – I'm surprised that Bigfoot hasn't been sighted numerous times. Whenever I "discuss" this with Bigfoot believers I always cite the fact that a field biologist has never spotted one – and they know their ursine from their elbow.
Hi Sharon! Great reading, as usual! I'm in Las Vegas for CsiCon, waiting to hear the first talk of the day, by Richard Wiseman. I wish you were here!
Great week's worth of weirdness again! I'll have to say that I do think Bob Heironimus gave enough information in his "confession" to make me feel comfortable believing he was indeed the guy in the Bigfoot suit. Is his story 100% evidence and proof? No, but it's so much more credible to me than the seven decades worth of other crap that says it was a real creature. I enjoyed Greg Long's book, "The Making of Bigfoot", and think he did due diligence with his interviews with Heironimus. Just one person's opinion.
I'm not saying that this is necessarily true, but i've read an account that that Mola was the largest bony fish on record, not just one of the largest. They are laterally flattened, by the way, not dorso-ventrally flattened.
I'm surprised that no one anywhere near that snake on the plane had the sense to know what it was and grab it and tell everyone that it was harmless.
Melanistic Bobcats have been documented from Florida as well as from Canada. I've examined a specimen from Canada. It was from New Brunswick and that may be, as far as I know, the only province a melanistic Bobcat has been recorded from. It was published on from there and the occurrence (occurrences?) from Florida have been published on as well.
One could quibble that viruses released from melting glaciers are old rather than new, though perhaps new to mankind. It brings to mind Cambell's classic science fiction story "Who goes there?", the basis for John Carpenter's "The Thing" movies. In it, scientists meddling with forces they don't understand (a common theme in 1950s SF) thaw out a frozen spaceship embedded in the antarctic ice, releasing a very unpleasant "passenger". It is badly over-written, but has a memorable phrase that has stuck with me since I read it as a teenager: "the dead immensity of a planet's natural forces".
With all the trail cams scattered around the place by now – by hunters and biologists I assume – I'm surprised that Bigfoot hasn't been sighted numerous times. Whenever I "discuss" this with Bigfoot believers I always cite the fact that a field biologist has never spotted one – and they know their ursine from their elbow.