LAL
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2005
- Messages
- 3,255
LTC8K6 said:Hey, I would love for Bigfoot to be real. It would be the find of the century. A primate that can throw a full 55 gallon drum would be cool and terrifying at the same time. You'd need a heck of a cage at the zoo to hold one.
When you ride around the woods in a loud, 6 wheeled vehicle, you just aren't going to attract many animals to you.
I just don't think that marching into the woods with 15 or 20 people in loud vehicles, planting human tainted food, electronics, and pheromone baits all over the place, blasting god knows what sounds into the air, and standing around talking in the dark is ever going to work.
Byrne said something like that about the Slick expedition in search of Yeti. They had 250 Sherpas, as I recall, plus campfires. Bryne said no self-respecting Yeti would have come anywhere near them.
The Skookum Meadows expedition came the closest yet with broadcasting calls, bait and equipment. Presumably they didn't do much talking after they went to their tents at 3:30 A.M. and the quarry showed up.
They probably need to get one person to stay by themselves in the woods for a couple months. One person every so many square miles to stay in the woods for a long time and get the smell of the city off of them. Give each person a good still and video camera and make sure they know how to use them.
Forget about footprints. Forget about hair unless it has the follicle attached. Forget about photos and video unless they are clear.
Even so, we are going to need a body or part of one.
From the BFRO:
" The BFRO frequently receives offers of assistance from people who want to help the effort in some way. We are offered various things -- equipment, free lodging in sighting areas, technical expertise on GIS mapping, etc. We are always impressed and moved by these offers of assistance, and we'd like to accept assistance when it matches some of our current needs.
This page will serve as a wish-list for things we need or could use at present or in the near future.
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Seeking support for a project to obtain close-range video footage.
The BFRO is seeking an individual interested in supporting a breakthrough project to obtain close-range video footage of one or more sasquatches.
We know how this footage can be obtained. The main barrier is the expense of the equipment needed.
Close-range footage will eliminate the need to kill one of these animals in order to break the log jam of resistance to this subject.
The BFRO's expeditions have allowed us to learn about these animals and their habitats in significant steps, and shown a process for bringing observers to places where these animals live and can be seen and heard at night, after only a few days of persistence and bravery.
It becomes obvious to anyone within a few days that these animals do exist in some areas, and therefore likely in many other areas as well. It also becomes obvious that they can be documented on camera, but only with a combination of human efforts, and an ingenious utilization of small surveillance technologies.
It cannot be done cheaply, unfortunately, but it can be done.
Close-range daylight footage will be worth far more than the investment required to obtain it. We'll be happy to discuss the numbers with the right person.
Compare this prospect to a shipwreck treasure hunt, where you can be searching for a long, long time without knowing if the treasure is even there.
With this project, you will hear and see the "treasure" from the early stages. But it will only be reeled in with a combination of behavioral understanding, engineering, and clever deployment of surveillance devices in specific areas.
Consequences : Will it be bad for sasquatches?
Sasquatches have survived through the most environmentally destructive period in American history. The decimation of U.S. forests in general, reached its peak in the 1950's and 1960's.
In many places the forests have grown back and created super rich habitat areas, especially in the Midwest and eastern states. These habitat areas give rise to near plague levels of deer. They may also harbor more bands of nocturnal sasquatches, collectively, than in the Pacific Northwest.
The impact of close-range footage will not, even in the most epic scenarios, create anywhere near the amount of pressure they have already experienced, survived and adapted to. Whereas, the benefits of the footage will be rapidly self-evident after the first broadcast.
http://www.bfro.net/NEWS/needed.asp
Tom Slick would have funded this in a heartbeat.