Bigfoot Evidence: Photos of the day: Army Corp. Engineers Acknowledges Sasquatch, Cliff Barackman Cl
Bigfoot Evidence: Loren Coleman Resigns From TBRC Over Pro-Kill Stance, Ketchum Camp Pushes Forward.
Latest Bigfoot News | Bigfoot Lunch Club: Melba Ketchum Has a History of Failing to Deliver DNA Resu
Bigfoot Evidence: A Glimpse Into The World of One Bigfoot Habituation, Or Type-2 Bigfoot Contact
Bigfoot Evidence: Dr. Melba Ketchum Assures Followers That Her Bigfoot DNA Study Is No Hoax
Autumn Williams shares a different point of
view on Bigfoot hunting from a psychological angle, citing basic human
nature as reasons why capturing evidence of Bigfoot is so difficult. She
explains how she thinks fear and also
Psychology in Bigfooting-Control
play a big role in the pursuit of Bigfoot, and states the undeniable
fact that "You can't leave your personality at home", referring to ego
and fear. We agree. Along the same lines, Sharon Hill at CSICOP points
out the fallacy in Bigfoot "facts" and tells us
You are not entitled to your own Bigfoot facts.
Anyone can become an expert in a field with no constraints or rules,
she says. The facts published by Bigfoot hunters such as the crew of
Finding Bigfoot
are not facts in the true definition of the term as most of them do not
have evidence to back them up, only supposition. In less controversial
news today, The Portland Press Herald pays a visit to Loren Coleman's
museum in honor of Obscura Day, a day we've never heard of because it's
apparently too...obscure. Obscura Day celebrates the
Offbeat: Oddly Intriguing
and Coleman's cryptozoological museum certainly fits the bill. In the
interview, he clears up the misconception of what he does and what
cryptozoology really is. It's not the hunt for only extinct animals, but
also hidden and undiscovered animals. In a perfect example of what
Coleman refers to, Imogen Reed recounts a Gaelic mystery of
Wee Sleekit Cow'rin Tim'rous Beasties
that wander the Scottish Highlands. The elusive beast called a lavellan
resembles a shrew in size and shape but apparently that's where the
comparison stops as the lavellan can kill a cow dead from 100 feet away
via poison shot from its mouth, which is one of its more fantastic
talents. Beyond its folkloric history, the lavellan may be an actual
creature yet undiscovered but with a more likely mundane description.
And finally, Beachcombing of Strange History reports on
Fairy Shysters, individuals who had the rare talent of separating gullible people from their hard-earned
money
by claiming the missing family members of a grief-stricken family were
actually kidnapped by fairies who would return the missing folks for a
small fee.