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@TetZoo The skepticism of “horned lake and river monsters” goes back at least as far as Michel Meurger’s & Claude Gagnon’s Monstres Des Lacs Du Québec (1982, in Fr; greatly rev., in Eng as Lake Monster Traditions, 1989), which I read after obtaining in Quebec, late in 1981. @CryptoLoren
@TetZoo Portland, as in Oregon. If you were in the first Portland, as in Maine, I’d make certain you were a guest of honor at the International Cryptozoology Museum, and have you’d see some of the North Woods’ ravens, fish crows, and common crows too! And blue jays! ~ @CryptoLoren
The covers of @ParanormalityM (by artist @Sam_Shearon) are wonderful windows into celebrating cryptozoology. Paintings, not photographs. @CryptoLoren #InternationalCryptozoologyMuseum @CliffBarackman @FindingBigfoot @NABigfootCenter #DougHajicek @Monster_Quest @ken_gerhard
100 years ago! First discovered by the West in 1912, and then formally verified in 2013: The fifth species of tapir. Thank you Teddy Roosevelt and the indigenous Amazonian people who already knew the Kabomani tapirs were out there. @CryptoLoren https://t.co/CsMeSHR5Wx
@Sam_Shearon Your art gives a sense of feeling splashing water on one’s face. I actually searched the Oscar Fulk farm’s seven acre lake where the sightings of a giant turtle took place, at the informally called Fulk Pond, near Churubusco, Indiana. #BeastofBusco @CryptoLoren @Sam_Shearon
How can a cryptozoologist pick their favorite, @Sam_Shearon?
They all are outstanding, for a variety of reasons. Certain ones do have special meanings, like the Dover Demon, the Lawndale Thunderbird, and any of the Bigfoot. But for unique action and art, the Beast of Busco wins!
Note the Yeti art used in Bernard Heuvelmans’ Spanish ed of On The Track Of Unknown Animals (1955) is different than the one in the English ed (1958). The change was the incorporation of the “domed” skullcap appearance of the late 1950s’ expeditions’ pursuits. @CryptoLoren
@bucketofmystery My obituary of Bernard Heuvelmans was published online by “Milestones” of @anomalistnews and used by the @LondonTimes and others to detail the Cryptozoologist’s August 22, 2001 death. https://t.co/hzFZz8zKYA
@CryptoLoren
@TheLimpingMerc The discomposing raccoon carcass caused the coloration of the fur to vanish and the skin/hair to slough off the body. When the fantastic legend-making becomes bigger than the reality, people generally remember the monster myth. #MontaukMonster @CryptoLoren
@WriterVisionary Yes, of course.
Contact @CryptoLoren via email cryptocoleman @ gmail (dot) com