We have heard that bigfoot will climb a tree but it is rare as these animals like their cover. So what is also odd here is this behavior. It could well be curiosity at work. Anyway we have way too much leg for a bear and i suspect way too much leg for a Bigfoot. The leanness is also suspect.
I think that we can safely add in the Giant Sloth as a prospect. In fact the color matches another suspected case in California.
I wish that the observer had simply set up to observe until the creature moved out of the tree. That would have separated the two. He had the safety of his car at hand in order to do this safely. It would be way too dangerous otherwise. Do not do this if you lack a secure refuge like a car. Houses are vulnerable as a Giant Sloth can tear its way through.
A Bigfoot is safe to be around, but a giant sloth is not at all and i suspect any number of missing hunters have fallen victim over the years...
The next day: After thinking about this picture, i woke up to what was completely wrong. No primate will hold his legs in the manner shown while up a tree. In fact this is how a giant sloth would position itself because it is gripping the trunk with its claws. This allows the animal to throw itself out horizontally to grasp an adjacent trunk or limb ten feet away, or to rotate downward to drop quickly from the tree in an ambush.
This is the picture of a giant sloth and it is also consistent with the other Californian example reported. The coloration is jet black in contrast to the Eastern version which runs from black through light brown. Again this is one scary and seriously dangerous creature that will tear you apart.
.
.
Photos: Bigfoot Climbing Trees?
BFRO Report:
NEAREST TOWN: Pollock Pines?
NEAREST ROAD: Hwy 50
http://www.phantomsandmonsters.com/2015/05/daily-2-cents-are-we-virtual-reality.html
OBSERVED: I live in the "Bay Area" of California. My visual sighting is
at the bottom of this report. I have photos of that I want to send. I
enjoy hiking and camping on a regular basis year round. I have been
considering submitting a report for my encounter over the last few
months and finally I am doing it. My encounter happened about 4 months
ago in July. My girlfriend and I were "dispersed camping" (which is
where campers can legally set up a tent in the national forest for free
for up to 14 days) in El Dorado National Forest off of Hwy 50, about 6
miles east of Bridal Veil Falls. We have a secluded spot we always
return to on the bank of a 10-15 foot wide, 4-5 feet deep (at the
deepest) river.
Some time in the night, probably 1-4 AM, my girlfriend woke me up saying
she heard someone jumping into the river about 50 feet away, and it
sounded like the person's legs were sloshing against the water the way
it would sound if you were walking fast through thigh-deep water. Sure
enough, a few seconds after she whispered this to me, I heard the noise
too. She was accurate in her description of the sound. I guess my
protective instincts kicked in because without hesitation I unzipped the
tent with my large mag-light in hand, (the type police officers use)
and stood outside my tent, spotlighting the river bank and the forest
around us. I saw nothing, so I called out that there were people and
please go the other way, still heard nothing. After that we didn't hear
any more unusual sounds. What struck me as odd was, why would anyone be
walking in FREEZING cold (likely glacier run-off) water in the dark
morning hours, not anywhere near any trails, and not anywhere near any
roads...? (We had to hike to this spot and it's a mile from our car,
down a very steep heavily forested hillside full of underbrush, which is
why this spot was so hard to find and it was an accidental find, and
why it stays secluded.)
It had me pondering for the last few months and even brought me to
considering maybe it was a bigfoot because it sounded like two legs, not
the way a bear would sound trudging through the water. Plus, there was
nothing in the river I could see so whoever or whatever would've had to
be farther than we thought and therefor very large to make sound seem so
close...
The next morning we went for a long hike as it was our last day camping.
We had just gotten back to the car when I looked back at the treeline
we had just came out of a, sort of, for a last glance, I will miss you,
type of look, and I saw what I first thought was a black bear in the
very top (the literal tip) of a 60-70 foot pine tree, it was staying
still but I could see it was wiggling a little, almost like it was
positioning itself comfortably, and it looked like it was hugging the
tree like a bear. But then I saw the second "bear" in the SAME spot as
this one in a tree right next to it. At this point I'm about 500 feet
from these things and the trees they were in. I was able to take many
photos of these "bears" and I have them on my phone and will send them
to anyone who wants to see. On closer inspection, these were not bears. I
showed a few friends and family and they all see what I see, it appears
there is a UNIFORM Jet Black sillouette of a large, lean human man.
When you see these pictures you will get an off/odd feeling. I know they
weren't bears and I know they weren't humans. I'm not sure what they
were, but I know what they were not. After viewing them for about a
minute my girlfriend began to get a bit worried they might come down, so
we left. And we didn't talk about it much as she isn't interested in
the subject. However I cannot forget this, or write it off.
ALSO NOTICED: Yes, I have had many strange occurrences in different parts of California.
I decided to call the us forest service and spoke to a woman answering
phones for El Dorado national park, when I asked if anyone had reported
anything in relation to bigfoot, she chuckled and said, "yes, but not at
this low elevation."
I will never forgot the way she said that, and I can reply in my mind to this day.
OTHER WITNESSES: One, my girlfriend.
OTHER STORIES: Yes. From tv shows and movies, and my own experiences.
TIME AND CONDITIONS: First incident- calm clear and cold summer night.
Second, clear sunny day.
ENVIRONMENT: Mixed pine, white fir and cedar.
No comments:
Post a Comment