Monday, March 29, 2021

Is This A Bigfoot 'Kill Boneyard?'



No it is not a Bigfoot boneyard.  It is most certainly a Giant Sloth boneyard.  These creatures do take game by ambush and then carry the game off in order to lay it out at its convenince.  The pur[pose of laying it out is to turn it all into a maggot farm available for future harvesting.  That also explains the meat stink as well.

The meat stink has been associated with Big foot as well, but i suspect it is possibly mistaken although they may well eat rotting meat successgfully.  The more certain odor is crap hanging on to their fur around their rear end.

I actually think that we can create a Bigfoot bath facility and may actually attract usage with a some effort.  It needs to be combined with actual working communication.  All this is possible.

The Giant Sloth is a much different matter.  It maintains a hunting range and thus a boneyard is convenient..


Is This A Bigfoot 'Kill Boneyard?'


Thursday, March 25, 2021

Is it possible that this is a Bigfoot kill dump and/or boneyard? I know of at least one other location within New Mexico where similar activity has occurred. Your thoughts?

I received the following inquiry and images in June 2014. I would like some comments and thoughts by the readers:

MF, aka (redacted), was prospecting in the (redacted - New Mexico) late September, 2002. He told me about a strange location he stumbled onto and later showed me a few of the photos he took.






Below a steep slope on a semi-flat rocky area, strewn amongst the typical high desert trees, was a boneyard. This boneyard according to MF was over 200 feet long and many of the bones had washed into a ravine below the dump, making the number of bones even greater than what he could see. The remains were a sampling of most the mammals that live in the (redacted), such as deer, elk, bighorn sheep, bear, mountain lion, horse, cattle, etc. Antlers and horns were broken and left on partial skulls — so that ruled out poachers and trophy hunters. On some of the kills made in recent years, the hides and flesh still clung to the bones, so that ruled out meat hunters. The location is too far from a rough 4-wheel drive forest service road, for any truck to use this as a dump site. MF searched for any intact skulls that he could take home, but most were all or partially crushed. His guess is something has been dumping carcasses here for over 50 years. He returned a number of times over the years, hoping to see some evidence of what was responsible.


MF thinks the predator has to be big and powerful, either dragging the carcasses long distances through the forest or dropping the carcasses from above. An intriguing mystery.

After I return to New Mexico from (redacted), I plan to visit the site with MF in the fall of 2015. I’ll take close-up photos with a good camera.


MF doesn’t type or use a computer, so I’m sending this hoping you have some insight into what this might be. I’m attaching three photos taken from his old cell phone camera. LL

NOTE: What do you think? Lon

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