And his hair was perfect.. Great Line!! I know I got it.:)
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And his hair was perfect.. Great Line!! I know I got it.:)
This should get it out of everybody's system;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIPvljWfH00
"Draw blood!"
A pina colada at trader vicks sounds good about now. Ah hoooooo.
Lawyers, guns and money!
I figured out the mystery...
Simple wolf/dog hybrid in which someone took an Irish Wolfhound and bred it with a wolf...
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Idaho45guy, I think that's a pretty good possibility.
Pic of the black wolf reminds me of our 2nd wolfdog, Smokey; the origin of my screen name.
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Being a religious listener of Coast to Coast AM, I concur with the dogman theory, in which, it came out a portal too
Good looking Pup!
Ha! I just heard a snippet of a show the other day in which the guest was talking about how some alien named "Zorg" used a portal to "import" around 24k bigfoots to the US in order to rescue them from their dying planet.
Some of the crackpots on there are hilarious!
There is one guest that is actually credible and fascinating. He's the guy that wrote the Missing 411 books which detail odd and widespread disappearances in National parks...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_...es#Missing_411
Following his work on Bigfoot, Paulides' next project was Missing 411, a series of self-published books,[15][16] and a documentary,[17][18] documenting unsolved cases of people who have gone missing in national parks and elsewhere.
According to Paulides, his work on this subject began when he was doing research in a national park when an off-duty park ranger found him and expressed concern about the questionable nature of some of the missing person cases which occurred in the parks. The ranger knew Paulides' background and requested that he research the issue.[citation needed] Paulides obliged, and asserts that he uncovered multiple lines of evidence suggesting negligence on the part of the park service in failing to locate the missing people.[citation needed] He broadened his investigation to include missing people from across the world, and this led to his belief that he has uncovered a mysterious series of worldwide disappearances defying logical and conventional explanations.[19][20][21][22]
As of 2017, Paulides has written six books on this topic. According to A Sobering Coincidence, he does not yet have a theory on what is causing the disappearances, although he indicates the "field of suspects is narrowing." Paulides advised that his readers go outside of their normal comfort zone to determine who (or what) is the culprit.[23][24]
The interest in the book series prompted the creation of a documentary based on the Missing 411 books; this film was released in 2017.[17][18]
The best Coast 2 Coast show was the one where they interviewed the person with 3 heads.
#1 was a white female, #2 was a white male, and #3 was a blk male.
It was hilarious! :)
The Irish wolfhound is a synthetic breed, recreated from the Scottish deerhound, Great Dane and various other breeds when it was at the very least nearly extinct. The significance of this is that mental and physical characteristics stay in the breed a lot less reliably than they do with the much longer process of natural selection, a bit like beer keeps its bubbles longer than soda. I've seen a collie-whippet outrun an Irish wolfhound without even having to try manoeuvrability, and Lanty Hanlon the Irish terrier regularly looks for trouble with one not over four times his weight. It's nothing very serious - just "I don't threaten dogs smaller than me, no matter what they do, so shall I explain why you don't either?" The wolfhound looks extremely threatening as he stands six and a half feet high against his garden railings, themselves well above street level, and Lanty can't see the poor misunderstood brute's tail wagging behind the flowerbed.
Hybridisation is notoriously uncertain, even leaving out of it the eventual union of two parents with the same dormant gene. I've mentioned lion-tiger hybrids, in which the lioness carries a growth limitation gene, but the tigress, which doesn't, can produce offspring more than double the weight of either species. Things like that may apply to many other combinations too. Some hybrids may be extremely rare in one direction, common in the other. So it isn't impossible that some long-vanished gene may resurface.
In Russian fur-farms they have found something which for me, defies all explanation. Nothing much can hybridise with the arctic fox, and there is no reason for fur-farmers to allow it. But foxes isolated and used to human company for many generations frequently have non-erect ears. I've seen a lop-eared dog come running from another room when he hears, quite literally, a pin drop. I don't think superior hearing in the wild would make erect ears indispensable in that timespan. We don't know all about how animals change.
I haven't seen this in the media lately, has it been resolved?
The last thing I saw on this story is that the remains were sent to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Forensics Laboratory in Ashland Oregon. I have not seen any results from their findings.
Just go to you tube and type in George knapp + David paulietes.Quote:
Any idea when this was? I'm a coast insider and would search the archives for it!
Knapp did most of the interviews.