lundi 23 mars 2015

Why wouldn't bigfoot hunt humans?

Bigfoot reportedly hunts large mammals, up to the size of bears.



What is keeping bigfoot from picking off humans such as solitary hikers? Or stealing the occasional child who gets away from a family of campers?



It would be such an easy meal for a creature that is much larger, stronger, faster than humans, and apparently nearly undetectable by humans.



Also apparently nearly unkillable, even with our smoke poles.



They are clearly not afraid to sneak up close to humans, even groups of humans.



So what has kept bigfoot from eating this other weak mammal?




Quote:








Diet and Digestion



The sasquatch is an omnivore with a substantial carnivorous component to its diet. They have been observed directly to eat leaves, berries, fruits, roots, aquatic plants and other vegetable matter, catch fish, dig up clams or ground squirrels, and prey on poultry, deer, elk and bear. In addition, they eat other odd items, such as young evergreen shoots, crayfish, road kill, meat or fish from human storage sites, hunter-killed game animals (these sometimes snatched in front of the hunter), and occasional garbage. They take an occasional livestock animal, but not with sufficient frequency as to produce organized persecution.



They appear to kill large prey animals by a blow with the fist, rock or stick or by twisting their necks, sometimes to the point of decapitation. Liver and other internal organs are their first targets. The remaining meat is sometimes stored on the ground under a haphazard shelter of sticks or lifted into tree forks above ground. No compelling evidence exists that they store food in any substantial way beyond this; only rarely has a sasquatch been observed carrying a fish some distance from its origin, or a deer, presumably into hiding.



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