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Here is a deer that was killed by a bow hunter. This is what he said about the carcass:
I took the hams, shoulders and tenderloins and even left the guts inside the carcass. Finished skinning it around 9pm and fed the carcass to the Monsters.
The next day this is what the carcass looked like... No varmints, no buzzards... Even the eyeballs were plucked out but the ears were not chewed on. Coyote, fox, coon, possum, anything else would have chewed the ears and got after the meat on the neck under the hide I left....nothing...
This is the way a Monster will leave a carcass... Picked clean and no bones chewed on.
A well respected man and war hero who aged over fifty went back into the Vietnam war as a pilot..unknown facts to movie fans about Jimmy.
Archive > Milestones
Jimmy Stewart and the Yeti
Actor Jimmy Stewart, who starred in such classic films as "You Can't Take It With You," "Mr. Smith Goes To Washington" and "It's A Wonderful Life," died on July 2, 1997. He was 89.
Little known to the general public, Jimmy Stewart was a major player in past cryptozoological projects. Being a hunting buddy and friend of F. Kirk Johnson, Stewart was a hidden partner behind the 1950s' Slick-Johnson expeditions in search of abominable snowmen.
Over the years, Stewart became a friend of Peter Bryne and got interested in Bigfoot pursuits. Stewart and Bryne were involved in the important Pangboche yeti hand incident of 1959. "Unsolved Mysteries" did a 1991 show on the Pangboche specimen's journey to Osman-Hill in London for analysis. Peter Byrne was a focus, but the program refused to credit Jimmy Stewart's signficant role in placing the yeti hand evidence in his luggage and flying it to London. I was a consultant to that segment and fought for Stewart's inclusion, to no avail. Stewart was too famous to be tied, in the public's mind, to yetis. Too bad.
Jimmy Stewart, a mosly secret supporter of cryptozoology, will be missed.
Last edited by dizzybint; 05-24-2013 at 12:16 PM..
Location: Butler County Ohio and Winters in Florida
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I admit I enjoy watching the TV shows about Bigfoot. The show Finding Bigfoot has grown old, and even though I watch it, I don't really enjoy it anymore. A few weeks ago I watched Survivorman Bigfoot. I enjoyed Les Stroud's point of view.
I thought both episodes were good. Les's expert Todd Standing had a few interesting views. He says the Finding Bigfoot crew will never find them do to the big film crew. He sneaks up them wearing a ghillie suit. My wife and kids think I am nuts for enjoying these shows. What is your take on survivorman bigfoot?
Finding Bigfoot has turned into Ghost Hunters for me. Both shows started out well but eventually jump the shark or plain old got tired. I do not believe in
the paranormal. I believe in disproving paranormal which was one of the reasons I enjoyed GH early on. The show has just become silly and I stopped watching years ago. I believe that bigfoot may actually exist as an unidentified species. Unfortunately I'm beginning to lose faith in this as well. With the advances in technology and the interest in discovering and proving the existence of this species I really think we should have found some undeniable evidence. If we do not discover anything substantial within the next 5 years I think I'm gonna hafta call bigfoot a big bust. If Finding Bigfoot keeps proding along the way it has I will stop watching.
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