balzaccom wrote:
Mine is the mountain biker...
What's your beef against mountain bikers????
balzaccom wrote:
Mine is the mountain biker...
Beef?cmon4day wrote:balzaccom wrote:
Mine is the mountain biker...
What's your beef against mountain bikers????
Thank you Russ for taking the time to load that up and check it out for me. My friends actually run that site. I hope there were no hard feelings about my frustration.rlown wrote:ok.. so you can actually see the mapping of the "sightings" or reports, I found the KMZ maps for Google Earth.
http://www.bfro.net/news/google_earth.asp" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Feel free to load the KMZ. I haven't yet. I had it once and read some of the reports linked in. It works a lot like links to photos and other such stuff in GE.
Anyway.
Russ
I didn't know it is rare to see porcupines. Here is one found two years ago here. Sorry for a blurry photo (appropriately for this topic), that's all I managed in the dark forest in a hurry (0.5s exposure).AlmostThere wrote:Even porcupines, which no one ever seems to see either.
In the sense that you can't prove a negative, you're right. However, the number of people telling you they've never seen, heard of, or come across evidence of a large and otherwise unidentified critter that might go by the name of bigfoot is worth respecting. That's, cumulatively, decades of backcountry travel and observation by the members of this community. I'll add my own: over 40 years as a backcountry ranger, snow surveyor (where, presumably, it would be easy to see bigfoot tracks in winter) and ski ranger. That's probably 20 years of cumulative time spent entirely in the backcountry. Not a single instance of anything I couldn't otherwise explain or understand from known species existing in the Sierra.Bigfoot can't exist because you say they can't and have never seen any evidence to that point. You've also never heard any stories or seen any evidence so there isn't any. Thanks for setting me straight and saving me from untold hours of futile searching and embarrassment.
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