rockinkt
Master Poster
- Joined
- May 20, 2008
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He has a formHis grad student has a form, and it takes a certain amount of time to mix, pour, and retrieve the casting.
ftfy
Last edited:
He has a formHis grad student has a form, and it takes a certain amount of time to mix, pour, and retrieve the casting.
But is there a way to actually prove it's real? Someone here claimed they can't trust any photos because of today's technology for making things look realistic.
http://i47.tinypic.com/2u6nukw.jpg
I realized last week that no amount of close up photos would be enough. At the very least it would have to be video that's even closer than what Roger Patterson got.
But is there a way to actually prove it's real? Someone here claimed they can't trust any photos because of today's technology for making things look realistic.
http://i47.tinypic.com/2u6nukw.jpg
I realized last week that no amount of close up photos would be enough. At the very least it would have to be video that's even closer than what Roger Patterson got.
25 pounds of Plaster of Paris at Home Depot - $16.00
Produces approximately 12 casts
Cost per cast = $1.33
Signature - priceless
I know for certain you have been shown that that picture is a hoax.
The photo hasn't been proven as a hoax.
The photo hasn't been proven as a hoax.
Plaster cast of a real animal print 24 hours in the woods , yes. That is about right depending on humidity and the temperature, precipitation. In your basement under a heating lamp with multiple fake print templates to produce those things ? Get out the Sharpies ?!!!$$$$$$$$$$$$$
When my kids were small we would make cast prints of all the animal prints we would find on our Canadian fishing and camping trips.
What was always fun about them was that all of those animals left a hair sample for us.. It would get embeded in the earth and the plaster would pick them up. The guys got a kick out of taking them to school and pointing this out especially with the larger bear casts (hind paw). Also, it is really hard and really would not be something you would bother with.. but it is difficult to make such a cast without pulling up all that stuff.. some leaf litter.. stone impressions.. whatever was between the animal and the earth.
Now that I think about it.. someone wanting to mass produce these things without the original organic material could do so in the oven at a lower temp. Not that the track had any original organic material to begin with ?
Just to get an idea of some of the casts being sold and the price for them, I have found 2 websites with some for sale
http://www.bigfootcasts.com/
http://www.bigfootresearchcenter.com/BRC_casts.html
I love how varied the prints are. You'd think there were dozens of species roaming the woods.
Well supposedly there is evidence present that mere mortals aren't privy to so it's possible that hair was in some or all tracks found. But none? wouldn't a hoaxer leave his hair in the track? We loose up to 100 hairs per day. Are they wearing hair nets?
Human hair in figboot prints proves figboot is human
Hair Nets ? Now that is funny !!
Anyway.. When you cast an animal print within 24 hrs.. Well.. there is hair.
Caveat: Except when they are magical animals that do not exist. They dont leave hair. They leave .. hoax.
I would agree.