Post by 1SK8pdFrmALab on Feb 22, 2022 14:45:49 GMT
Years ago, another investigator and I heard about the potential interest that the Kentucky Wildman, Florida Skunk Ape and a sasquatch type cryptid in Georgia were demonstrating stalking children. The reports we got placed them around parks, playgrounds and family events in campsites. After a little digging, we figured out a theory that the sounds of children would draw these things from the deep woods and behave in creepy ways, watching, maybe thinking of ambushing. A contact in a lion park said that lions act in similar ways when they hear the cries of young springbok, oryx and other prey - they get close by hiding in the grass, and observe for long periods before they ambush.
Our plan was to play recordings of kids at play, like a school yard, out in the areas reported to have high activity, then let the trail cams do their work, plus gather hairs, prints or casts. Maybe further action, if we could lure them to us while we were present. A few times we set up blinds and shooting lanes, and were armed with .270 and 7mm Mag.
Problem is, it attracted a number of hikers, hunters and passersby, who would always tamper with our gear, call the police or otherwise interfere with the experiment.
But I am convinced there is a sound basis behind this. When the rabbit screams, the fox comes a-runnin’. But not to help.
There are numerous accounts concerning these stalking behaviors; one sad story from a Presbyterian minister who watched his two young sons get ambushed by a pair of hairy men which ran out of the tree line, straight across a wheat field, grab his sons and return the same way they came. A posse formed, found the kids remains miles away, lodged high in a tree, torn and eaten.
(The Traveller’s Diary, Reinhardt Geffe, Bigfoot, Terror in the Woods, Vol 1. W.J. Sheehan).
Anyone today reporting such a thing would be ridiculed, locked up or discredited. There are things out there eating people.
Also - regarding lions again.
In the late 1800’s (88-98?) the Brits were building bridges in Africa to access ivory for trade; an Army engineer named Patterson was sent to do this job, in a place called Tsavo.
Two male lions killed over 130 of his workers.
Some they ate, but most were killed for sheer pleasure. Normally when lions kill, they do so quickly, and eat in place. These two creepers would drag off their kills into a cave, like a trophy room. There are books and documentaries on this, plus a movie called The Ghost and the Darkness, with Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas.
My point is, while these were normal lions, something was definitely evil about them. They enjoyed killing, taking and storing trophy corpses, stalking, and in general, causing a lot of death, for thrill of it. These lions loved to kill, more than any other lion ever encountered since. Where did they learn this? How did they become this blood thirsty? Why would two males forsake their normal genetic roles, to become rogue mankillers? Because they wanted to, because they liked it.
If lions can do this…
I don’t need to mention the chimp attacks here in the US, or the reservation dog pack killings?
Nuff said.
Watch your six, young people. Wilderness tracking beacon, worn out in the bush. Armed adults on station, alert. Put your phones down and watch your kids. There is definitely history to support your observations, sir. Good work connecting the dots.
Our plan was to play recordings of kids at play, like a school yard, out in the areas reported to have high activity, then let the trail cams do their work, plus gather hairs, prints or casts. Maybe further action, if we could lure them to us while we were present. A few times we set up blinds and shooting lanes, and were armed with .270 and 7mm Mag.
Problem is, it attracted a number of hikers, hunters and passersby, who would always tamper with our gear, call the police or otherwise interfere with the experiment.
But I am convinced there is a sound basis behind this. When the rabbit screams, the fox comes a-runnin’. But not to help.
There are numerous accounts concerning these stalking behaviors; one sad story from a Presbyterian minister who watched his two young sons get ambushed by a pair of hairy men which ran out of the tree line, straight across a wheat field, grab his sons and return the same way they came. A posse formed, found the kids remains miles away, lodged high in a tree, torn and eaten.
(The Traveller’s Diary, Reinhardt Geffe, Bigfoot, Terror in the Woods, Vol 1. W.J. Sheehan).
Anyone today reporting such a thing would be ridiculed, locked up or discredited. There are things out there eating people.
Also - regarding lions again.
In the late 1800’s (88-98?) the Brits were building bridges in Africa to access ivory for trade; an Army engineer named Patterson was sent to do this job, in a place called Tsavo.
Two male lions killed over 130 of his workers.
Some they ate, but most were killed for sheer pleasure. Normally when lions kill, they do so quickly, and eat in place. These two creepers would drag off their kills into a cave, like a trophy room. There are books and documentaries on this, plus a movie called The Ghost and the Darkness, with Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas.
My point is, while these were normal lions, something was definitely evil about them. They enjoyed killing, taking and storing trophy corpses, stalking, and in general, causing a lot of death, for thrill of it. These lions loved to kill, more than any other lion ever encountered since. Where did they learn this? How did they become this blood thirsty? Why would two males forsake their normal genetic roles, to become rogue mankillers? Because they wanted to, because they liked it.
If lions can do this…
I don’t need to mention the chimp attacks here in the US, or the reservation dog pack killings?
Nuff said.
Watch your six, young people. Wilderness tracking beacon, worn out in the bush. Armed adults on station, alert. Put your phones down and watch your kids. There is definitely history to support your observations, sir. Good work connecting the dots.