Thanks to the internet, this type of information is no0 longer lost
and unsurprisingly, people are now becoming braver in making their
reports.
Also I think the steady drop off in human hunting generally is
allowing a generation of these creatures to become less wary of us
and more inclined to encroach. It is not yet at the point of a
interactive comfortable relationship in which communication becomes
possible but I suspect the trend is there.
Somehow I suspect that a Sasquatch walking into a campsite would
still empty the site. It would take the right person to stand his
ground and actually wait to attempt anything. Jane Goodall would be
a great start and until she showed up we had trouble believing her
targets even existed.
I have personally have become comfortable with both the intent and
intelligence of the Sasquatch, but who else has? This could never be
true with a bear of any kind and any other carnivore.
Underestimating their intent is and has been proven suicidal.
'They just rushed
away, all in fur, walking on two legs': Three yeti 'sightings' in
Siberia in a week
By WILL STEWART
IN MOSCOW'
PUBLISHED: 16:28
GMT, 24 September 2012
Three separate
'sightings' of yetis have been made in Siberia in recent weeks, say
fishermen and an official in Russia.
All were in the remote
Kemerovo region, where around 30 'abominable snowmen' live, according
to the country's leading researcher on the creatures.
In one previously
undisclosed case last month near Myski village, fishermen in a boat
on a river initially mistook distant figures first for bears and then
people, said the Siberian Times
'We shouted to them -
do you need help?,' said fisherman Vitaly Vershinin.
'They just rushed
away, all in fur, walking on two legs, making their way through the
bushes and with two other limbs, straight up the hill.'
He said: "What
did we think? It could not be bears, as the bear walks on all-fours,
and they ran on two.... so then they were gone.'
On a second sighting
on the bank of the Mras-Su River several days later, an unnamed
fisherman was quoted saying: 'We saw some tall animals looking like
people.'
He added: 'Our
binoculars were broken and did not let us see them sharply. We waved
at the animals but they did not respond, then quickly ran back into
the forest, walking on two legs.
'We realised that they
were not in dark clothes but covered by dark fur. They did walk like
people.'
In a further
case this month, an unnamed forestry inspector had encountered a
'yeti' Shorsky National Park, according to local government official
Sergei Adlyakov.
'The creature did not
look like a bear and quickly disappeared after breaking some branches
of the bushes,' he said.
This case was in
Tashtagolski district, close to the border with Khakassia. No images
have appeared from the alleged sightings.
Russia's leading 'yeti' expert Igor Burtsev, head of the International Centre of Hominology, claimed that Myski will next month host an international conference and expedition in search of the yeti.
He said the 'sighting'
was 'significant' though he was unaware of the later National Shorsky
Park case.
He added: 'We shall
explore new areas, to the north from the usual places yetis have been
seen previously. The conference will start in Moscow and then we will
travel with our guests to Kemerovo region.'
At a similar
expedition last year, he claimed to have found yeti hair though no
DNA findings have been released.
He claims the creature
- also known as Bigfoot and Sasquatch - is the missing link between
Neanderthal man and modern human beings.
Burtsev has previously
claimed a population of around 30 yetis are living in Kemerovo
region.
'We have good evidence
of the yeti living in our region, and we have heard convincing
details from experts elsewhere in Russia and in the US and Canada,'
he said.
'The description of
the habits of the Abominable Snowmen are similar from all over the
world.'
Last November hunters
claimed they had discovered the nest of a legendary Yeti in the same
area of Siberia.
Experts stumbled
across trees, twisted by force to form an arch, in the area which is
famed for sightings of the wildman.
Biologist John Bindernagel, 69, said: 'We didn't feel like the trees we saw in Siberia had been done by a man or another mammal.
'Twisted trees like
this have also been observed in North America and they could fit in
with the theory that Bigfoot makes nests.'
Sightings of the Yeti
have been reported in France, North America and the Himalayas but Dr
Bindernagel said these are mainly ignored by scientists who are put
off by 'jokes and taboos.'
Mr Burtsev has
previously strongly denied accusations that yeti 'sightings' are a
bizarre ruse to attract tourists to the far-flung region.
Reports say the
two-legged creatures are heavy-set, more around 7ft tall and resemble
bears.
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