Jerrymander
Muse
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2012
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Maybe the people who are looking for bigfoot should learn from the people who discovered the saola.
I bet nobody would be happier than us to eat the crow!
Maybe the people who are looking for bigfoot should learn from the people who discovered the saola.
You betcha. How I would love to see a real picture of Champ. It's been a while since I could sail on Lake Champlain, but you can bet that when I did I made sure I had a really good camera with a telephoto lens, and that I knew how to use the thing. One even half-good shot of Champ would make my day and my fortune. Alas, all I ever got was nice snapshots of the lovely scenery and the lovely wife and the like. It sure is a pity (irony likely here) that all those professional and amateur photographers, bird watchers and the like, who spend hours aiming good equipment at the lake and taking tack-sharp pictures, never see the same critters that bozos who forget how to hold a point and shoot or a phone seem to see all the time.lol, I already have fame among many of them (or from their perspective Infamy) I was called the most hated skeptic in footery on the Bigfoot Evidence Blog!!!
Though I suspect that's hyperbole
My post had a point though (aside from picking fun at footers) most of us skeptics LOVE the idea of all this neat monster stuff. Many of us fell into it when we were kids by reading books written by many of the "golden age of footery" people. But we got older, learned about stuff like the scientific method, burden of proof and evidence and we started to see that none of these cryptids passed muster. But, If proven wrong tomorrow, I bet nobody would be happier than us to eat the crow!
I shared the YouTube video above with my teenage daughter last night. As soon as Robert Stack said "the creature was seen moving back and forth between log piles" (paraphrased) she did a facepalm and figured out it was a beaver they had filmed.
The following is a Bigfoot hoax uncovered by John Green and reported in an old Bigfoot Bulletin. (August 31, 1970.) It shows how perception can get it seriously wrong when dealing with maybe monsters.
http://www.nabigfootsearch.com/albums/album_image/6905109/5477215.htm

Otters do have a serpent like swim... That is if you have no idea how a reptile is physiologically supposed to swim.
Otters swim in an up and down motion. It looks like the traditional western water monster. Reptiles move from side to side. I don't think any marine mammal swims from side to side and I don't think any reptile swims up and down. Maybe the extinct massive fish-like nightmare marine reptiles swam side to side?
One of my earliest memories is my dad taking me to the Ohio river for the white bass run. The river was full of boats for the bass, there were tons. Not just people showed up to take advantage of the numbers but otters did too. I was scared to death of them thinking they were dragons or something.
A few years ago the wife and I went floating on a beautiful Missouri Ozark river to catch some smallmouth. As we came around a corner we saw a whole group of otters, maybe about 5-6. They were the cutest little guys and they seemed pretty curious. They were on the bank and sliding down the cut and watching us approach over a log. Then, as a group and in a line they went into the river. The way they swam in an up and down fashion in a single file line and equally distant from each other made them appear to be a single animal about 12-15 feet long. The adult led the group which could lead someone to assume there was a distinctive 'head'. Combine that with an area with a reported monster and someone unfamiliar with the fauna of an area and you got yourself a monster sighting.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_3205850a0a7fd36b11.jpg[/qimg]
In the lower right is the last otter we saw. Unfortunately we didn't get a picture of them swimming in a line, we were too occupied with how gosh derned cute they were and were a little late getting the camera out of the bag. They were also a fair distance from us.
As a bowhunter I know it is tough to eyeball distance with any accuracy. Especially over water and especially if the object is at an angle or moving.
What if you see something that there is absolutely no frame of reference for? Did they truly see something unique or misidentify something?
I would suggest that if there is no frame of reference, the sighting is inherently unreliable and inherently unusable. It hardly matters what you've seen. It's an anecdote.What if you see something that there is absolutely no frame of reference for? Did they truly see something unique or misidentify something?
Do you have an example of "absolutely no frame of reference for?"