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Showing posts from June, 2015

The Urban Sasquatch Journal: Training For Cameras

This is the reporting by a Bigfoot researcher of an ongoing study in the Southern part of the United States in a very large park area near homes and urban setting. Prior installments #1 What is Urban Sasquatch? #2  "The Original Experiment" #3  "The Urban Study Begins" #4 "Signatures and Signs"  #5   "Mixing It Up" #6   "Neglected and Discouraged"   #7   "Adding Complexities" #8   "Stunning Interactions" #9   "Showing My Intent" #10   "I'm Being Directed" #11   "New Team Member" #12   " Working It Vigorously " #13  "Curious Interactions" #14   "New Season Begins"   #15   "Answering My Thoughts?" #16  Trail Cam Sham  June 14, 2015  Visit #8 Temp: 84 degrees, humid, rain clouds w/ sprinkles I arrived at the trail bridge approximately 2:30 p.m. I walked to the old fire pit and took a rock to place at site 1B. Each future visit to the site, I will

Are You A Superhero and Don't Know It?

If you were a superhero, what would your talent be? I think I might go for a healer. Be able to touch people or think about them and create a healthy balance and healing process. Movies like "Unbreakable" make us wonder how we, as just regular Joe's and Jane's might handle finding out we have a life and death power. Have you ever spent an evening testing your super powers? Why not? You might be a hero and didn't even know it! Let's test your psychic capabilities and compare with others -  http://www.gotpsi.org/html/gotpsi.htm Let's test your mind skills - https://www.testmybrain.org/ Can you move an object with your mind? http://www.psychicscience.org/pk1.aspx Test your strength - http://www.active.com/…/articl…/7-ways-to-test-your-strength Let's have a look at some superheroes who weren't born with unusual skills from other planets and science experiments, but ones who were ordinary people who found extraordinary ways of developing skills and too

It's a New Age: Faith, Hope, Belief and Creating Your Reality

Dreams versus reality. When I was a kid, we had a wrecked 1940s car in the pasture near our barn. It was beat to hell, all the parts removed and strewn around the field by my brother who was a grease-monkey-wannabe. I spent an entire summer when I was about 12, polishing parts, plotting and planning, trying to figure out how to reinsert them, and sitting behind the wheel, envisioning me getting it running and driving to California when I got my license. I could feel it and taste it with the am radio sitting on the dashboard playing Elton John and Gordon Lightfoot. I was going to drive to the promiseland and see amazing sights, be a real grownup, swim in the Pacific, learn to surf like I skateboarded. I ate lunches in it, napped in the back seat, went to the library to check out books on how to upholster and the manual for the car. Of course, summer ended and the car was never up and running again. I was not driving to California when I turned 16, but for one entire summer, I was in the

Ground Zero UFO Campout July 18th!

July 18th there will be a UFO watch/campout at Mt. Adams this summer. Now if any event sounds like a must-go one, this is a win/win - camping and UFO watching!  Ground Zero seriously knows how to run a para geek's dream event! Check into it HERE . I've been wanting for years to do one in the desert here in Arizona. Perhaps we can entice Ground Zero to do a watch here at Painted Rock outside Gila Bend. Ideal location with camping/RV facilities, no lights, and tons of sightings. 

Top 5 Destination Truth Episodes Ever!

"Ghosts of Antarctica"  Episode 13, Season 4. This was my favorite and I think it was a combination of things. It was filmed to feel a lot like the movie "The Thing" and was one location for an entire episode which I really appreciate to get into the mood, it's a place rarely filmed, and surely haunted. It was unsettling, creepy, and just plain amazingly beautiful and isolated. After traveling from Los Angeles all the way south to Argentina (and surviving Ryder's taunts about his new beard), Josh packs the team into a van and drives 200 kilometers south, to the departure point for most Antarctic expeditions. But first, they must buy suitable attire so they can withstand the freezing temperatures to come. After stocking up on sub-zero clothing, the team conducts their first interview with a local historian. Even though the historian warns Josh that the area he's headed to is, "not a friendly place," he presses on, hiring a 54 foot sailboat to fe