Saturday, December 8, 2012

M K Davis discusses the bulge on the leg of the Patterson subject
Is the bulge on the leg a film artifact, or is it part of the event?

MK Davis discusses the foot dynamics of the Patterson film

by Greenwave2010fb15 hours ago20 views
of the Sasquatch? ... Greenwave 2010 fb ... "Bigfoot foot" "Patterson film foot \dynamics" Bigfoot Sasquatch MKDavis "Karl ...
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Saturday, December 1, 2012

M K Davis discusses the Patterson film illluminated

9 views The Patterson film in unprecedented clarity. This

Friday, November 2, 2012


The Most AWESOME collection of Digital Stabilizataion in 1080p without commentary.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

M K Davis discusses frame 362 of the Patterson film
How to get at the obscure information in an image. This is a discussion of techniques to get at this information and why it's important.

Thursday, October 25, 2012


M K Davis discusses frames 61 and 72 of the Patterson film
The information contained in only two clear frames from the Patterson film, compels a person to ask "could this be real?"

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

M.K.Davis discusses the best images from the first walk sequence of the Patterson film
The very best from the first "Walk Sequence" of the Patterson film. Footprints in the sand, fat on the back, glut muscles, falling over etc. Lots of action in this obscure part of the famous film.

Bluff Creek Bobo/Daniel Perez Kodak camera test

Bigfoot Evidence: "One minute to film, 45 years to explain: The Patterson Gimlin Film"

film" "Roger Patterson" "Bob Gimlin" Patty Sasquatch Bigfoot Best film "You are Sasquatch" "MK Davis" proof awesome "real bigfoot film" " ...
 
14 hours ago  1,316 views
 
 
 

2nd Draft: "One minute to film, 45 years to explain: The Patterson Gimlin Film"

film" "Roger Patterson" "Bob Gimlin" Patty Sasquatch Bigfoot Best film "You are Sasquatch" "MK Davis" proof awesome "real bigfoot film" " ...
 
16 hours ago  320 views
 

Separated at Birth?

Tuesday, October 23, 2012


Bigfoot Discovery Day V


One minute to film - 45 years to explain - The Patterson Gimlin Film, by FB/FB



One Minute to Film - 45 Years to Explain

This is a compilation of the best digitalizations and research since the film was taken October 20th, 1967. The images were so unbelievable that it was greeted with fascination but not accepted because it did not fit with the current versions of mans' development. The advent of the social network, and many fantastic fossil and genetic discoveries since 1967, now show that the images make perfect and complete sense. "Patty" shows us what a Sasquatch looks like. Pendulous breasts, long spine, human-shaped arms, legs, feet and hands, slope to back, heavy brow, sloping forehead, pads on the bottom of the feet and a mid-tarsal hinge that causes a rise and fall to the step. The conclusion is obvious and unmistakable. Sasquatch expand throughout North America, competing as individuals for territory causing extreme intelligence and size. All humans are descended from this strategically smarter and larger human-shaped ape. If you are interested in the complete explanation please read "You are Sasquatch" by Barnes, Anderson and Noel"
PG Film 45th Anniversary - Bigfoot Discovery Day V...

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Well the Bigfoot Discovery Project was a great...
PattyDiscovery MuseumFoot4:21pm Oct 21
Well the Bigfoot Discovery Project was a great success yesterday with wonderful presentations by Mike Rugg, Dr. Meldrum, Bill Munns and Bart Cutino! Stay tuned for a picture slide show and video of the event coming Soooooooon! But first I need to take a nap because we were up VERY late and would like to thank Tom Yamarone for the wonderful campfire singalong which everyone can soon watch on YouTube, including yours truly singing backup!

Here is a sneak peak of Bill Munns talking about how he has recreated the Patty "Suit" according to Bob Heironimus's description proving once and for all that the suit he described could never have been used for the Patty Footage! You can watch his whole presentation and data, including some x-rated models recreating the Patty "Bounce" on the soon to be released Bigfoot Discovery Days V DVD! STAY TUNED!

Nadia
M.K.Davis discusses the size of the Patterson subject

Saturday, October 20, 2012

The Patterson/Gimlin Film: 45 Years Later

(Some of the information in this article has been graciously provided to me by Roger Knights, which I deeply appreciate, to correct some of the items I had put into the article I wrote 5 years ago. Thank you, Roger!!!)

Sources of information are Sasquatch: The Apes Among Us by John Green; Bigfoot Film Journal by Christopher L. Murphy; Know The Sasquatch/Bigfoot by Christopher L. Murphy; Bigfoot At Bluff Creek by Daniel Perez; Big Footage: A History of Claims for the Sasquatch on Film by Mike Quast; personal testimony by Bob Gimlin; and Roger Knights

45 years ago today, Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin, a rodeo rider and rancher from Yakima, Washington, rode out from their remote camp in the Six Rivers National Forest in Del Norte County, California. Roger and Bob had been in the Bluff Creek area for several weeks beforehand searching for footprints which Al Hodgson had reported to Roger's wife Patricia, who passed along a message to her husband about the tracks. Unfortunately, the footprints that the two did see were nothing more than globs in the mud. After Bob had rode into various areas in the forest that morning, then returning to camp to tack a horseshoe on tighter, he noticed Roger had left while he was gone. Roger returned to camp and asked Bob where he had gone and Bob told him, and Roger suggested they go into that area again just to see what could be there, if anything. At around 1:15 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, the two men rode around a room-high tree and root system and came across what appeared to be a dark, bipedal, manlike creature crouching at the edge of the creek, possibly washing its feet. When it saw the two men, it took off for high timber, looking back at the two men once before Roger was able to get his rented (and overdue) 16 MM movie camera out of his saddlebag after the horse fell sideways onto his leg, temporarily pinning him to the ground. When he extricated himself, he saw the creature walking away, giving him a look which he described as, "You know how it is when the umpire tells you 'One more word and you're out of the game?' Well, that's the way it felt." (He described that to John Green who wrote it in his book Sasquatch: The Apes Among Us) When he got his bearings about him, he started filming, running and jumping and stumbling as he ran. Bob, still on horseback, rode across the creek, which prompted the creature to look back at him as he did this. He stepped down off his horse, rifle in hand, but did not bring it up to his shoulder to aim it, only holding it at the ready. When the creature looked back, the two men noticed she had very matronly large naked but hairy breasts, making her obviously a female. Roger had lost his horse, as had Bob eventually, as well as the packhorse. The creature had looked back at them twice (the first time was not filmed) as she fled. Eventually, Roger ran out of film after a little over a minute, and was not even sure if he had gotten aything good on film. Bob had wanted to follow after the creature, but Roger called him back, not wanting to be left alone in case there were others in the area. So, when they retrieved the horses, Roger, under a poncho as to not expose the film in the camera, removed that film and reloaded the camera, then used that second roll of film to film the tracks left behind by the creature. They then followed the tracks on horseback for a few miles but lost the trail when the creature presumably went up a mountainside where there were rocks. They had also retrieved plaster to cast two of the tracks, one of which was filmed as the plaster was setting. Then, after Roger was filmed holding the two cured tracks, they headed back to camp and then to town to try and get a hold of the Eureka Times-Standard, where Roger told his tale to Al Tostado, who wrote up the story to be seen in the paper the next day the 21st. Roger also called Al Hodgson, who came and met the two at his variety store, and he and Bob told Al what they had done, Roger telling Al "I got a picture of the son-of-a-buck." They then went on to one of the local airports to have the film flown back to Yakima to Roger's wealthy brother-in-law Al DeAtley, who would presumably drive the film to Seattle to have it developed (there is still controversy even to this day as to the timeline of film development). After this, Roger and Bob returned to their camp to eat dinner and discuss the events of the day, which were quite exciting to both of them. Then they turned in, but around midnight, it began raining, and neither of them wanted to be stuck in that area with the potential of flooding and mudslides, so Bob went to get some cardboard pieces to go and cover the tracks, but they were soaked through, so he pulled bark off some trees and covered the remaining tracks that had not been cast. Then they quickly got in Bob's truck and drove out of there around 6:00 A.M., driving straight through to Yakima, a 14-hour journey over treacherous mountain roads, where they nearly drove off the road and had to borrow a backhoe to pull themselves out of the mud. When they arrived back at Yakima around 8:00 P.M. that Saturday night, Bob went straight to bed, sick from the exposure to the heavy rain. Roger then arranged with DeAtley to have the film shown in DeAtley's basement the following day, inviting John Green, Rene Dahinden and Jim McClarin to come to see the film. McClarin and Dahinden had been in Willow Creek when they heard about the filming and they quickly drove to Yakima to see the film. When the three saw the film, they were duly impressed, but were cautiously optimistic about how scientists would view it. That Monday the 23rd, Lyle Laverty, on his first workday with the Forest Service, went to the site and took four photos, most famously of the footprint which had the pronounced mid-tarsal break in it. On October 29th, after hearing of the filming, local taxidermist and Bigfoot hunter Bob Titmus went to the site and cast some of the best examples of footprints left covered by Gimlin, ten tracks, including the one with the mid-tarsal break. Few scientists actually looked at the film, with the ones who did either rejecting the film as a hoax or at least being a bit cautious about it, not really saying anything pro or con about it. After 45 years, there have been several who have done analysis on the film, most notably the late Dr. Grover Krantz, the late Rene Dahinden, who took the film to England and Russia to have it examined (the British were cautious in their assessment, but did not call the film an out and out hoax, while the Russians said that the gait of the creature was different from modern man, even going so far as to have one of their top biomechanics experts, Dmitri Donskoy, examine the film and declare it basically authentic); Dr. Jeff Meldrum, Christopher L. Murphy, M.K. Davis, Daniel Perez, John Green, North American Science Institute with Jeff Glickman and more recently, Bill Munns, all of which declared the film authentic or at least could not find any evidence of hoaxing. After 45 years, the fact that this film has yet to be conclusively proved a hoax, despite some claims from some individuals over the years, is a testament to the authenticity of the film. I say cheers to this film and its lasting impact.
 


Friday, October 19, 2012


BIGFOOT'S bLOG: New 2012 Maps of the Bluff Creek Patterson-Gimlin Film Site
bigfootbooksblog.blogspot.com
Cryptic News from the Willow Creek View. Transhuman Sasquatch Strangeness from the Middle of Nowhere...

PGF Music Videos


Patty, Roger and Me by Lenny Green

Video slideshow of a song by Lenny Green
2 years ago  378 views




Patterson-Gimlin bigfoot film tribute song

there is of a bigfoot or sasquatch! Roger and Bob (Rode Out That Day) Words and Music by Tom Yamarone Roger and Bob rode out that day, Till that ...
4 years ago  1,026 views