tube
Muse
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2005
- Messages
- 917
Some time back when I made several large test casts and two pairs of fake feet I noticed something. I found that rather unintentionally my foot shapes were rather similar. In fact, some poster on Bigfoot Forums commented on that, by suggesting that the heel on my fake track was too big. Indeed, he was correct, my fake-heels were kind of big, at least compared to the stereotypical foot shape.
So eventually it started dawning on me that a certain "style" was popping up in other tracks and casts I would see. For some, talking about Ray Wallace is beating a dead horse, but I continue to be fascinated by his "bunkum", if you will.
So take a careful look at these three photos. The one with Ray in the middle has the legend "All casts fake, RD" which I believe is Rene' Dahinden's handwriting.
Well, to play the devil's advocate here, why? Why are they fake? What criterion did Dahinden employ to make this determination? My guess would be the same one I would employ, they are simply too "cartoonish". The small ones on the right especially, have really exaggerated bulges. Perhaps they look too symmetrical?
But now compare the biggest ones in the Dahinden photo with the famous "Jerry Crew" cast. Are they that much different? Hard to tell, the Crew cast might have a tad less medial "double ball". Yet the Crew cast is defended vitriolically by the advocates as being real!
Then compare the "double ball" print from Blue Creek Mountain. Why is this double ball less cartoonish than those in the Dahinden photo?
Personally, they all look like variations on a simple theme to me.
So in a valiant attempt to stay "on message"; this is obviously part of the "challenge" for Bigfoot advocates; what are the objective criteria that differentiate "real" tracks from hoax tracks? Frankly, I don't think there are any yet...
So eventually it started dawning on me that a certain "style" was popping up in other tracks and casts I would see. For some, talking about Ray Wallace is beating a dead horse, but I continue to be fascinated by his "bunkum", if you will.
So take a careful look at these three photos. The one with Ray in the middle has the legend "All casts fake, RD" which I believe is Rene' Dahinden's handwriting.
Well, to play the devil's advocate here, why? Why are they fake? What criterion did Dahinden employ to make this determination? My guess would be the same one I would employ, they are simply too "cartoonish". The small ones on the right especially, have really exaggerated bulges. Perhaps they look too symmetrical?
But now compare the biggest ones in the Dahinden photo with the famous "Jerry Crew" cast. Are they that much different? Hard to tell, the Crew cast might have a tad less medial "double ball". Yet the Crew cast is defended vitriolically by the advocates as being real!
Then compare the "double ball" print from Blue Creek Mountain. Why is this double ball less cartoonish than those in the Dahinden photo?
Personally, they all look like variations on a simple theme to me.
So in a valiant attempt to stay "on message"; this is obviously part of the "challenge" for Bigfoot advocates; what are the objective criteria that differentiate "real" tracks from hoax tracks? Frankly, I don't think there are any yet...
