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Post by shatnerswig on Mar 7, 2010 18:36:41 GMT 10
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2010 18:39:36 GMT 10
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Post by brillbilly on Mar 8, 2010 21:50:46 GMT 10
probly fake but i wish them to be real as i do believe that some so called pre historic creatures still live today
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2010 22:31:51 GMT 10
Would not surprise me in the least Brill.
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Post by blacky on Mar 8, 2010 23:00:40 GMT 10
the thunder birds one I would like to believe as being real! there have been reports of them for hundreds of years up until this day!
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Post by shatnerswig on Mar 9, 2010 5:41:57 GMT 10
big d you thing these awsome pics are FAKE? why is that ?
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Post by brillbilly on Mar 9, 2010 5:47:48 GMT 10
this is what i think wiggle,just my opinion this picture out of all of them i can state is fake 100% i think this picture is a fake copy of the bottom picture as the posses are very similer but this picture could be real or looks more authentic
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Post by shatnerswig on Mar 9, 2010 6:49:32 GMT 10
interesting observations brill ...... yea the last one if its fake looks thebest maybe they made the fake ones to discredit the real ones those fukkin bastards! or maybe there all fugazi but I do think there is something to the thunderbird legend either way i like the account where one tried to snatch up that kid out west in the 70 's pretty cool.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2010 7:11:54 GMT 10
I ask the question, if that photo is real, what happened to it, surely this would have been before the current conspiracy to hide shit, wouldnt it? That 70s story with the kid always intrigued me, if it wasnt a terrasaur, it may have been a huge, very rare eagle, much like the Haast eagle in NZ.
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Post by brillbilly on Mar 9, 2010 8:00:21 GMT 10
Lawndale’s big bird returns – in print
by Erin Clark The Lincoln (Illinois) Courier
Lawndale resident Marlon Lowe traveled nearly 40 yards – by bird.
The then 10-year-old was picked up in giant talons and nearly carried away 29 years ago today.
According to The Courier’s account from July 26, 1977, two birds with wingspans of 4 to 6 feet attacked Lowe, and one of them caught the boy by the shirt and lifted him about a foot into the air.
"He’s probably the luckiest kid in the world" that the bird only grabbed onto his shirt and not his flesh, said John Walker, a Danville resident who told The Courier Monday he also saw the bird.
Marlon’s mother told The Courier at the time that the 65-pound boy screamed and punched at the bird until it dropped him. She and other adults who witnessed the attack said the birds were black with bands of white around their necks and long, curved beaks.
She said local law enforcement agents didn’t believe her after she called them out to investigate.
Several other sightings of a pair of giant birds occurred in the area over the next few days. A Tuscola man, "Texas" John Huffer, even captured a giant bird on film as he fished at Lake Shelbyville five days after the Lawndale attack. A still frame from the film ran in the Tuscola Journal Aug. 2 of that year.
"These birds are a very prehistoric-looking bird," said Walker, who spotted one in 1972. "You’re absolutely not believing what you’re seeing because of what you’ve been taught about evolution."
Walker was hunting with a friend one afternoon in 1972 near Danville. As they walked along the railroad tracks in the still afternoon air, the giant bird floated on the breeze ahead of them.
"There was no mistaking what we saw," Walker said. "The bird that I saw, the wing was so wide it blended in with the tail feathers."
A "giant eagle" was the closest Walker could relate the creature to a known species.
"This is just the most bizarre thing that ever happened to me in my life," he said.
Walker has copyrighted a drawing of the bird, and he’s also in the process of writing a book about them.
Walker said he and his friend didn’t tell anyone about the giant bird they saw at first. They were teenagers at the time, and he said they didn’t think anyone would believe them.
"The only reason I’ve come out with this story now is I believe I have all the facts," Walker said. "I’ve had some health problems over the last few years and I thought, ‘I’m not going to be around forever and people need to know about this.’"
Walker said the giant birds migrate to this area from South America in the fall of the year, and people should be careful letting small children play outside at this time.
Source: Lincoln Courier, July 24, 2006, Lincoln, Illinois.
;D is this that story daz
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