Monday, December 22, 2014

Nepal Yeti And Snow Leopard Connection

The Nepal Yeti (Bigfoot) And The Snow Leopard Connection: Story And Analysis.
    In North America, the connection is that where there are Bears, there are Bigfoot. In Nepal, the Sherpas say that where there are Snow Leopards, there are Yeti. Not that the Sherpas are looking for Yeti for they believe that even seeing one brings bad luck. The Sherpas recognize that the fearsome Yeti is a scavenger of Snow Leopard kills. It is not known if the Yeti is like the Wolverine and will attempt to drive whoever killed the prey off the dead body. The fierce Wolverine will even attack Grizzly Bears on a kill by running up the Grizzly's back and tearing up his huge head. It sometimes works and sometimes the Grizzly has a second kill to feed on. It isn't yet known if the Yeti does try to force the beautiful Snow Leopard off his kill. That might take a Wolverine. But the Yeti does eat whatever is left after the Leopard leaves. There is even speculation that the Yeti and the Snow Leopard may work together to flush out game. That would be a video! The great professor Boris Porshnev of the Soviet Academy pointed out this relationship despite harassment by the Communist government. Communists don't like education much less advances in our knowledge. Education might make people smart enough to see the absurdity and lies of communism.  During the 1950s  Professor Porshnev headed the "Snowman" Commission that tried to find evidence of the Yeti.He learned from the Kirghiz Nomads in the Pamir Mountains that the Yeti shadowed Snow Leopards. Thirty years later Robert Hutchinson, author of "In The Tracks Of The Yeti" (1989), said he heard similar stories from the Sherpas in Nepal's Khumbu Region.
    While investigating the Black Panther or Puma in Florida, I learned that the Bobcat would shadow the Panther. He would wait until the Panther made his kill, had his fill, covered the remaining meat, and go take a nap. Then the Bobcat would sneak in for his turn at the table. The highly adaptable Coyote also does this with Wolves.

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