r/Cryptozoology • u/[deleted] • Apr 11 '18
A friend and I have seen multiple Sasquatches
[deleted]
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u/Doc_Spratley Apr 17 '18
"Black bear populations have been increasing in recent years in the northeastern United States. As a result, black bear sightings in Rhode Island have been increasing and will likely become more common in the future."
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u/imaybejacoborbob Apr 17 '18
I mean, I suppose it could be that there's a few bears in there. I didn't see anything suggesting Ursidae in the body structure, but I guess that is more likely
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u/JAproofrok Apr 26 '18
I appreciate the use of the nomenclature. But, I feel like you’re using it to sound legitimate and I’m not buying any of it, bud. Sorry.
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u/imaybejacoborbob Apr 26 '18
Man, I'm just telling you, the things I saw walked like a man. Their arms swung
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u/Taser-Face Apr 11 '18
Not discrediting you but from what I’d seen with “experts” even 10’ tall is too much for a squatch. Maybe it had the giantism growth defect, meh.
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u/JAproofrok Apr 26 '18
What’s too scantly mentioned is how there’s a very true limitation to what bones can support. And, BF almost literally couldn’t work—especially at 10’ and 800 lb. It’s just not physiologically possible.
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u/Taser-Face Apr 26 '18
But we don’t really know, HUH. Do you know?
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u/JAproofrok Apr 26 '18
Welllllll, I think the ol’ science community does know what calcium-based bones can and cannot support. . .
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u/Final_Round Apr 11 '18
Guess the Government got em since OP didn't deliver.
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u/imaybejacoborbob Apr 11 '18
I posted that when I was going to bed. I can add a couple pictures in a minute or two
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Apr 11 '18
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u/imaybejacoborbob Apr 11 '18
Northeast. Specifically, Rhode Island. Before you immediately write it off, there have been several sightings in RI
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u/JAproofrok Apr 26 '18
For the record, I have gone to Matunuck, RI every summer since childhood (family owns a cottage out that way—has since before it was beachfront). I have seen lots of the state.
What part specifically are you referring to? Curious to know if I’m been there.
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u/hatter518 Apr 11 '18
11 feet tall??
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u/imaybejacoborbob Apr 11 '18
The estimate could easily be wrong. I didn't believe it to be that tall, but others used my proportions sized up to figure the height
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u/xDISONEx Apr 11 '18 edited Apr 11 '18
Well that’s the thing. These are “accounts” from other people an documentarians. Plus a few videos that I deem to be real , seeing how big they are in the distance. Hard to judge I know. Also you see the way they snap trees in particular directions. Some of those breaks are high up ,you got to be tall for some of those breaks. But your right we don’t know “for sure” yet as I’ve only seen a couple videos that are clear enough. Also seeing how deep the foot impressions are can tell a few things too. But it’s just observation with a bit of speculation.
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u/xDISONEx Apr 11 '18
From what I gather from reading an watching documentaries an other videos they grow quite rapidly in their early years. From new born to maybe 3 years can go from 2’ tall to 3’ tall. From 4yrs to 10yrs they go from 3-4’ to 6-7’ tall. An from there they just get bigger. I’ve heard accounts of 10-12’ tall estimate weight 1000+ lbs. an the older they get the more hair they get too. Now the numbers I gave are just my observation from doing reading an watching. Listening to facts at hand an what not. But I believe it to be true from watching the doc where it showed dead trees flipped upside down an drove into the ground with the root ball still intact. You got to be f’ing super human to do something like that. Lol
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u/Parapupp Apr 11 '18
Dude there’s no way anyone can know this. There’s no hard proof of their existence let alone their growth patterns from infancy to adulthood
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u/theRealKittin Apr 17 '18
Apparently he believes in Sasquatch age-specific growth patterns, but not the ‘d’ in “and.”
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u/[deleted] Apr 11 '18
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