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The Complete Guide To Mysterious Beings - Galaksija

The Complete Guide To Mysterious Beings - Galaksija

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Sylvestris ”used to inhabit inelegant subterranean hovels, lived on vegetables, and refused to have<br />

anything to do with other humans... However kindly they were treated, it was impossible to civilize<br />

them, because they refused to recognize law and order... <strong>The</strong>re were an almost infinite number of<br />

them in Ireland.”<br />

In the early literature the European ”Wild Men” purportedly had a lustful nature and would accost<br />

lone human females passing through the forests, forcibly engaging them in sexual intercourse.<br />

Perhaps these tales are the basis for the Satyr legends, and artists and Playboy cartoonists have<br />

misrepresented the Satyrs by giving them cloven hooves. Since the American Indians have similar<br />

stories it is possible that there is some fact to the tales.<br />

Isolated tribes in South America also have legends of racial intermixing with the hairy ones. Some<br />

nonscientific speculators have even suggested that the creatures can only reproduce through human<br />

females. However, we have yet to uncover a claim that anyone was raped by a hairy monster,<br />

although if such claims were ever made it is unlikely that they would get into print.<br />

Even more incredible is the steadily accumulating evidence which strongly suggests that the hairy<br />

ABSMs are connected in some peculiar way with the phenomenon of unidentified flying objects.<br />

We will examine this material in another chapter. <strong>The</strong> funny flying saucers have produced all kinds<br />

of intriguing monster reports, and we were not being entirely facetious when we proposed in<br />

Chapter Six that a Patagonian giant might have been transplanted in Michigan in 1897. It almost<br />

seems as if anomalous earthly creatures have somehow been enlisted (or drafted) into service by the<br />

saucers to carry out some mysterious missions. <strong>The</strong> UFO evidence, which is now almost<br />

overwhelming, indicates that the entire flying saucer phenomenon is an outrageous enterprise that<br />

preys upon our gullibility and is meant to inspire a totally false belief in extraterrestrial<br />

(interplanetary) visitants.<br />

One of America's leading UFOlogists is Brad Steiger, author of many books on the subject. Mr.<br />

Steiger has received an astonishing journal from James C. Wyatt of Memphis, Tennessee. <strong>The</strong><br />

journal was purportedly written by Mr. Wyatt's grandfather and discusses in detail an experience<br />

with a ”Crazy Bear” in the year 1888. An Indian is supposed to have led Grandfather Wyatt to a<br />

hidden cave in Tennessee where a hairy man-like creature was concealed. <strong>The</strong> Indians fed the<br />

”Crazy Bear” at regular intervals, asserting that such creatures were ejected from ”moons” which<br />

landed periodically in the valley.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Indians told him that over the years there had been many ”Crazy Bears” left in the woods, and<br />

many of their people had seen the ”skymen” put their ”Crazy Bears” out of their ”moons.”<br />

So there is one solution to our mystery. <strong>The</strong> flying saucers are dumping hairy monsters all over the<br />

landscape! Wyatt's ”Crazy Bear” is described as a short-necked, long-armed creature covered with<br />

glossy black hair.<br />

It is a curious fact that flying saucers have been repeatedly seen in ABSM-infested territories. A<br />

mountain-climbing expedition to Everest in 1923-24, headed by General Bruce, not only came<br />

across the classic giant footprints of the ABSM, but also reportedly saw ”a great, hairy, naked man<br />

running across a snow-field below” at around seventeen thousand feet. Subsequent expeditions had<br />

further encounters with the creature. During the 1933 Everest attempt, mountaineer F. S. Smythe<br />

was climbing alone when he observed ”two curious-looking objects floating in the sky.” <strong>The</strong>y<br />

hovered motionless and seemed to pulsate slowly. Other Himalayan expeditions in the 1920s and<br />

'30s reported variously seeing ”giant silver disks” and ”a flying teakettle.” <strong>The</strong> UFO controversy<br />

did not exist in those days so most Type B scientists regarded these stories as hallucinations created<br />

by the high altitude. Although the natives had plenty to say about the ABSM, or Yeti, they shrugged<br />

off the aerial objects as religious manifestations. <strong>The</strong> disks had always flown regular routes over the<br />

mountains. <strong>The</strong>y belonged there, like the clouds, the natives explained to early explorers.<br />

We visited India and the Himalayas in 1955-56 and heard many Yeti stories from the natives. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

mysterious animals are an accepted fact in the lives of the mountain people in the same way that<br />

deer are an accepted fact to us. At the time of our visit only about four hundred white men had<br />

visited those regions in all of history. Most of these had been religious missionaries more intent on<br />

saving souls than chasing monsters. In many remote villages we were the very first white men ever

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