| Subject: The Consp----- Journal. Part 9 of 9. |
| From: "John Winston" <johnfw@mlode.com> |
| Date: 18/05/2012, 15:28 |
| Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy.area51 |
Subject: The Consp----- Journal. Part 9 of 9. May
17, 2012.
This part concludes the discussion of Bigfoot.
I went with my son fishing at Pincress, Lake. I cought three nice
sized Rainbow trout. On the way back I stopped by to see a lady
called Connie at Sierra, Village which is near Mi-Yuk, Calif. on
hyway 108 about 12 miles east of Sonora, Calif. I told her that
i had brought a lot of table scraps to feed Bigfoot. She asked me
what I wanted her to do. I suggested to her that she put about
one sackfull of the table scraps each evening about dusk so the
birds will be in their trees for the night and won't eat the food all
up. I then loaned her my nice binoculars to use for about a year.
They are pretty difficult to operate because you need first to
adjust the eye pieces so that both eyes can look though them
at the same time. Next you focus them using the right eye and
next you focus the left eye piece for the left eye. I was surprised
when she took the binoculars out of the case and adjusted every
without being told to do it. She will use them while look from
her window of her trailer as the Bigfoot eat.
I also have another lady who has very good camera equipment
and is able to take pictures from a distance. I was amazed how
people people are showing us to help me in this project.
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An exotic animal is an animal that is non-indigenous to Texas.
Unless the exotic is an endangered species then exotics may be
hunted on private property with landowner consent. A hunting
license is required. This does not include the dangerous wild
animals that have been held in captivity and released for the
purpose of hunting, which is commonly referred to as a "canned
hunt".
So apparently, as long as you hunt Bigfoot on private property
with the permission of the property holder, you are allowed to
k-ll it. I'm a bit surprised, however, that spotting a
previously undocumented animal doesn't automatically transform
it from a nonexistent animal into an endangered one. Then again,
I suppose rare evidence isn't evidence of rarity.
Given that Bigfoot is generally considered a Pacific
Northwestern cryptid, however, I'm much more interested to hear
what Oregon or Washington have to say on the matter. Do their
game and wildlife statutes similarly allow you to shoot non-game
animals that aren't recognized as existent?
-----
Betsy P-illips of the 'Nashville Scene' saw that Texas has
officially declared that the law does allow people to ki-l
Bigfoot in Texas, if they want, if they happen to find one.
So, she asked herself, "Hmm, I wonder if I could legally hunt
Bigfoot in Tennessee?" And, yes, perhaps I'm not the best person
to answer this question, since I don't hunt. But I set out to
find an answer.
In short, the answer is "no." In Texas, they have a sweeping
"non-protected, non-game species" category of animals, and any
animal that falls into this category - like Bigfoot, should it
exist - you can hunt any time as long as you're on private
property and have permission of the owner.
Tennessee's hunting laws, which are so Byzantine that it seems
like every hunter needs to be an amateur lawyer to figure out
what he can shoot when, seem to operate under the opposite
philosophy. Whereas Texas is, "if we haven't told you you can't
kil- it, you can," Tennessee is all, "if we haven't told you you
can hunt it, you can't."
It seems that Bigfoot would be protected by the same rules the
Tennessee Wildlife Resource Agency has for alligators. Much like
Bigfoot, some folks are certain alligators have made their way
into Tennessee, even though sightings of them are still very
rare. About alligators, the TWRA says:
There is evidence that alligator populations are expanding
north along the Mississippi River into Tennessee. Species which
expand their ranges into Tennessee (such as alligators) are
protected and may not be taken until a hunting season is
proclaimed.
That's pretty clear. No shooting at things until the state has
had a chance to rule on whether you can hunt it.
But there's a further bummer sentence for amateur Bigfoot
hunters - "The taking, ki-ling and/or illegal possession of
hawks, owls, songbirds, endangered species or any other species
for which a season is not set (e.g. snakes) is prohibited."
Since we have no Bigfoot season and won't have a ruling on
whether there will be one until Bigfoots are proved to exist,
not only can't you kil- a Bigfoot legally in Tennessee, you
can't capture one and try to bring it back alive (unless you're
a scientist).
This is quite the conundrum for Bigfoot hunters. You can't
legally capture or shoot a Bigfoot in order to bring the carcass
back and prove it exists until someone has proved it exists and
they decide if there's a Bigfoot season.
I guess you'll just have to stick to blurry photographs and
grainy video. Just be careful when you go into the swamps to get
those images. Apparently there are alligators lurking.
Source: Phantoms and Monsters
http://naturalplane.blogspot.com/2012/05/killing-bigfoot-texas-yestennessee.html
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Part 9 of 9.
John Winston/ johnfw@mlode.com