ChrisBFRPKY
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2012
- Messages
- 4,449
That would be correct on my assessment of this site which has appox. 5 million visitors yearly and a very active local population.
Of all locations similar to it that I have visited it is uniquely unremote. It has a tremendous amount of local traffic through it on a daily basis and its local population is very active hunting the edges and fishing in the interior. It's geography divides it in half as well which concentrates even more scrutiny in a smaller area.
During the season this location has numerous guided tours, by foot and boat traversing all areas of this location. Also worth mentioning.. some of its fauna is so unique to this location that its scrutiny keeps many trained professionals in the field on a regular basis.
I did spend sometime in the Brownsvilles area and found nothing complelling other than some beautiful countryside and friendly people.
I spent almost a week in this area two nights on an island and one night in the "backcountry" which may as well have been camping in your backyard.
As an example of how utilized this area is in our rush to get out before dark (yes Chris is afraid to stay out in the woods after dark) we encountered a complete family unit......of people hiking in to have a cookout. IMO this area has zero possibility of having any undiscovered anything over 1lbs.
Some of Chris's behavior during our time together would indicate to me his confirmation bias is off the scale and he could mistake virtually anything in the woods for Bigfoot.
That's a great very specific, highly detailed, description of the area I took you through. First, let me say the decision of "where" we could go was highly limited due to you showing up on the opening day of deer season. For safety reasons and since this was the shortest trek to get to where I wanted to go, (an easy 6 miles total) this was obviously the best choice. Also, it was the location of the Hillside Bigfoot Family group video with available identifying markers from the video that could be witnessed and easily identified by you by simple comparison with the video. In retrospect, I'm certainly glad the choice of places to go was limited due to deer season. As you certainly made it well known. It seems my trust has been misplaced.
For some reason, you and others here seem to try and paint me as claiming I have some sort of highly remote area where no humans ever previously trekked before. This is ridiculous and highly dishonest of you. I have not and do not claim any such thing. I have said previously I study the Green River corridor at least 2 miles away from the nearest road. That's all that is required for a good chance at a sighting.
Yes the greater area has field Biologists but they're normally not sponsered or paid, most are either student volunteers from WKU or transient students seeking one of various degrees in biology. The best of of those focus on biological life in Karst formations IMO. There are a few medial programs available but most are overseen by WKU staff. I would tell you how I know but at this point your ability to keep anything confidential is certainly unworthy of the information.
Above you say: "Some of Chris's behavior during our time together would indicate to me his confirmation bias is off the scale and he could mistake virtually anything in the woods for Bigfoot"
Let's reflect a bit. I have no confirmation bias, what I have is a highly tuned ability to spot small movements and odd shapes in the woods. Do you remember the deer? Who saw his movement first? That's right, I did. After stopping in our tracks for the movement I spotted, you then spotted the buck after roughly 1 minute of scanning the area where I specified there was movement. Did I try to claim it was Bigfoot? Obviously not. What does this say about me? I'll give you a hint. You would have walked right up on that deer without seeing it beforehand and only learned of its presence when you watched it run away. I had time to observe. See how that works? I'm sure you're thinking of the tree stump now. Yes, while talking with you and being distracted from my task, I stopped when I caught a glimpse of a large dark object in my peripheral vision. Why? Because it was big and dark, kinda like what we were looking for. Of course the moment I turned my head I realized it was only a tree stump I chuckled and we moved on. Did I make it out to be anything it wasn't? Obviously not. How you get from that to "He could mistake virtually anything in the woods for Bigfoot" is beyond me and beyond reason.
You were being evaluated as well. I hope you were kidding when you asked what that deer scrape was. I also hope you were kidding when you snatched up that turkey feather and said it was from a red tailed hawk. Of course you didn't argue the point when I informed you it was actually a turkey feather. I knew you wanted to though. I didn't go into it then but I'll cover it now to ease your mind. In your defense nontheless. You see the reason for your mistake was largely due to the coloration of the feather. Aside from the massive difference of the shaft sizes which also made the ID simple at a glance, the two would have been of a similar color (so no points off there). The reason being is that the turkeys here are a mix. The population has a strong mixture of the Bronze breed bloodline with the wild turkey bloodline. This was largely due to the fact that some repopulated birds in the area came from farms. The Bronze breed is larger with a slightly different coloration. When the two are mixed sometimes that coloration comes out more in some birds than in others.
Again with the "Chris is afraid of the dark" thing. Please, I've probably spent more time in the woods without a light than you have with one. Getting out of the woods before dark is a safety issue. It is nonproductive to look for Bigfoot at night, bang on trees etc. The only thing that is good for is TV shows where you can pan the camera around to the faces of the individuals so they can ask "What was that?" while they portray a "pee in the pants" look. Nonsense.
Chris B.