Bigfoot Language: Sierra Sounds and Early 2000s Texas Vocals Skip to main content Ghost Hunting Theories Search Search This Blog Bigfoot Language: Sierra Sounds and Early 2000s Texas Vocals on June 06, 2020 Get link Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Other Apps If you are interested in Bigfoot language, I suggest you read my rather extensive post on the subject - LINK. I was listening to the famous 1970s Sierra Sounds audio taken by Ron Morehead and his friends. This was recorded on audio tape while out in the wilds of the Sierras in California. It sounds rather crude and some call it Samurai chatter. When slowed down, language becomes more discernible. As we all speak the same language, our dialects are born from influences in the local areas we grow up in. The needs of communication in a mountainous remote area would differ from a swamp area if we were living as feral beings. One thing that does seem consistent in their language is the "jibber jabber" sound like chipmunks that when slowed down reveals a true language. Why do they speak in such speeds? Perhaps for a hidden people, it's critical to get the message across quickly and masked - this could be sounds of birds or forest creatures. That also means they can speak it and understand it at this pace. The first video below is of the Sierra Sounds. If you haven't followed Ron Morehead's contribution to research, you might want to get his books! When I put together my post on Bigfoot language, this video compilation (below) done by expert MK Davis, was a good sampling of the audio I studied when learning more about their communication. It comes from Texas in the early 2000s. You will hear some similar sounds to the 1970s Sierra recordings. This last video (below) shows a good example of the fast chatter when slowed down. This was worked on by MK Davis and was high strangeness studied with an objective mind. We should be very appreciative of the massive amount of field work, audio, video, and deep study of Native Culture and historic sites, as it comes together in some of the most prolific studies in the subject of Bigfoot. The range of Bigfoot vocals runs the gamut very quickly, sometimes sounding like chatter, gorillas, horns, language, and very imitative. To remain hidden in the forest, they must both sound like the forest and send sound over long distances. Their range of vocals is off the charts amazing! MK Davis BLOG MK Davis YouTube Get link Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Other Apps Comments Post a Comment Popular Posts Desert Submarine Base? The town of Hawthorne, Nevada harbors a big 18-mile x 8-mile lake called Walker Lake. It also houses a guarded "Naval Undersea Warfare Center." This amazing lake has not one structure to support the locals enjoying a swim or some fishing, but does have some kind of base along its western edge. It has also been associated with some pretty amazing conjecture. Haunted Caves and Scary Cave Finds! Caves are more than the sites of mines and ancient hieroglyphs, the burial places of giants, and homes for bats. They can also be haunted. And, why not? In desperate times, caves were utilized for sanctuary and sometimes standoffs and, given the geology, they seem like ideal vessels in a feng shui sort of way, to retain and hold a kind of amplified haunting that is held captive in a cul-du-sac formation. I am utterly fascinated with the haunted cave phenomena. I cannot think of a better spirit vessel. Let's have a look at some more infamous haunted caves.... Haunted Lakes Haunted lakes are a chilling scenario. Sure, haunted houses, haunted railroad tracks, haunted forests, but haunted lakes can add a pallor over any fishing trip or summer getaway. Why would a lake be haunted? Well, let's look at some that claim to be - Powered by Blogger Theme images by Dizzo