Wednesday, January 5, 2011
How to Search for Bigfoot
Illustration by Linda Newton-Perry
"How to Search for Bigfoot" is an informative and entertaing article you are sure to enjoy. Please return to Bigfoot Ballyhoo and comment on the article. Click the following link ... http://www.thetravelinsider.info/destinations/pacificnorthwest/howtosearchforbigfoot.htm
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A word from Marcy:
If I were younger, and able-bodied, that article would have convinced me that searching for bigfoot is just too hard. There's too much "information", too many pieces of essential equipment. Most of the people who have encountered these creatures were not looking for them
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I agree, Marcy. So many of these "articles" are written so that the reader will click the links and buy things. But I thought it might be helpful and I do enjoy keeping the blog furnished with fresh reading material, even if it isn't my own writing. Marcy, please feel free to contribute articles to Ballyhoo. I wish I could stomp around in the forest looking for this being but my husband works days, and I don't believe it would be wise of me to go looking on my own. We enjoy finding places bigfoot has been spotted, as time allows. Thanks Marcy. ... Linda Newton-Perry
P.S. Isn't it awful about all those flocks of birds found dead?
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Marcy has left a new comment on your post "How to Search for Bigfoot":
On the subject of the dead birds and fish: do you remember the Charlie Brown cartoons about little soccer players? The cartoonist showed a mass, with little feet sticking out the bottom, and heads sticking out the top: and the whole mass moved together as a unit. That's the way I see "the media" now. Until the baffling rain of birds in Beebe, Arkansas, they paid no attention. Once the story was picked up by the news agencies, the whole mass of running players focused on these kind of events.
It's winter time. All over the northern hemisphere, the harsh weather conditions are putting wildlife at risk. These winter kills have happened before, and they'll happen again. But the clusters of 'reporters' don't know how to think their way to a logical conclusion. So they search out every mention of these kills. And blame everything from HAARP to Pres. Obama for the fact that living creatures die when conditions are too harsh.
But I'm smiling to think that the focus of our studies here, the big hairy giants, are probably hibernating in caves somewhere. They're smarter than blackbirds or fish!
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Thank you, Marcy. Well said. ... Linda Newton-Perry
"How to Search for Bigfoot" is an informative and entertaing article you are sure to enjoy. Please return to Bigfoot Ballyhoo and comment on the article. Click the following link ... http://www.thetravelinsider.info/destinations/pacificnorthwest/howtosearchforbigfoot.htm
____________
A word from Marcy:
If I were younger, and able-bodied, that article would have convinced me that searching for bigfoot is just too hard. There's too much "information", too many pieces of essential equipment. Most of the people who have encountered these creatures were not looking for them
____________
I agree, Marcy. So many of these "articles" are written so that the reader will click the links and buy things. But I thought it might be helpful and I do enjoy keeping the blog furnished with fresh reading material, even if it isn't my own writing. Marcy, please feel free to contribute articles to Ballyhoo. I wish I could stomp around in the forest looking for this being but my husband works days, and I don't believe it would be wise of me to go looking on my own. We enjoy finding places bigfoot has been spotted, as time allows. Thanks Marcy. ... Linda Newton-Perry
P.S. Isn't it awful about all those flocks of birds found dead?
____________
Marcy has left a new comment on your post "How to Search for Bigfoot":
On the subject of the dead birds and fish: do you remember the Charlie Brown cartoons about little soccer players? The cartoonist showed a mass, with little feet sticking out the bottom, and heads sticking out the top: and the whole mass moved together as a unit. That's the way I see "the media" now. Until the baffling rain of birds in Beebe, Arkansas, they paid no attention. Once the story was picked up by the news agencies, the whole mass of running players focused on these kind of events.
It's winter time. All over the northern hemisphere, the harsh weather conditions are putting wildlife at risk. These winter kills have happened before, and they'll happen again. But the clusters of 'reporters' don't know how to think their way to a logical conclusion. So they search out every mention of these kills. And blame everything from HAARP to Pres. Obama for the fact that living creatures die when conditions are too harsh.
But I'm smiling to think that the focus of our studies here, the big hairy giants, are probably hibernating in caves somewhere. They're smarter than blackbirds or fish!
____________
Thank you, Marcy. Well said. ... Linda Newton-Perry
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