Titla wrote: Wed Sep 04, 2019 4:46 pm
Hey Craig it's nice to hear from you and a pleasant surprise the hear you've got a background on the subject.
I wanted to ask you a question about your Watagans trip. When you said you had a "walk-by" and other walking around your camp, could you tell whether they were biped, and were you able to see whether these walkers were navigating with a torch?
If they're biped but are walking around the bush in the middle of night without lights, that could rule out humans and point to yowies. Particularly when combined with the vocalizations you caught on film, which if they are indeed yowie vocalizations, would have to be among the best and clearest audio we have of them. A real gem.
Mate i wont lie, it was over a year ago and i dont recall it precisely well, however i will recount what i recall.
The walk-bys were in the dead of night, no torches used. Near enough for me to clearly hear them, but far enough away that i didnt see anything. i didnt pull my torch out to try and see what they were. In my opinion, i could not place if bipedal or not but i remember they moved rather quickly, walked past my site at a steady rate. Not running but a brisk pace. I would imagine Yowies would sound heavier than these but having never experienced the real thing, who knows!
I wander... is there any way to 'invite' or 'welcome' them in? I would love to establish myself as friendly and a non-threat. Though given the amount of times ive camped there, they would already know this i guess.
quote=Titla post_id=55367 time=1567579603 user_id=42643]
I just spent two nights at Olney Headquarters campground which is just around the corner from The Pines Campground. I'm sure you know it. I checked out all four campgrounds and my favourites were Turpentine and Casurina, particularly Casurina. However I didn't have the nuts to camp in those campgrounds as there was no-one else there and I'm now a bit chicken camping in the bush lol. However I hope to work into those campgrounds in time as I think they're in the best positions for yowie investigations.
There were a couple of other campers at Olney Headquarters so I camped there but back 50 metres into the bush. On the first night after I went to bed I was a bit paranoid about yowies doing walk-bys lol.
Spent a lot of yesterday hiking around Howes Road, going down game trails, bushbashing here and there, but unfortunately came across zero field evidence.
Later on that day back at camp I was taking a whiz just outside my camp when my eyes went up and looked straight at into two absolute plumb tree breaks side by side. I had been hiking all over the place looking for sign when it turned out the only sign was 10 metres from my tent lol. I'm glad I took a whiz in that spot as I wasn't looking for sign around my camp and could easily have missed it.
The thicker tree has a 2 inch diameter and is broken 6'10" off the ground. The smaller tree is 1.75 inch diameter and is broken 6'3" off the ground.
I did my own break of a skinny 1 inch tree and determined a break occurs about forehead height.
Therefore if they are yowie tree breaks, then the yowie that broke the thicker tree would have to be around 7-foot or a little taller. As for the thinner tree, a yowie would have to be no shorter than 6'6" to break that. There is no chance of a human breaking either of those two trees, I had a pull on them and they're nowhere near within human capability. They weren't done by cutting blade either, they've been snapped manually.
I think these breaks are good candidates for yowie tree breaks, the heights and diameters fit nicely, and they seem too clean to be natural. And both trees point together as they meet the ground.
I know I'm making a big deal out of a little sign but I'm stoked as this is the first potential sign I've found in the.
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They are nice breaks and near identical to one near my site. Same height, same tree width, etc. The tree near my site was rotted somewhat and didnt seem to have been felled by another tree falling on it as it was still hung up in the canopy.
The way your trees are placed looks quite intentional - really interesting! Hope sone other more knowledgable members can come on and check them out, they look quite unnatural.
Hope you enjoyed your campout. Im very familar with those sites you mentioned, but never camp in them - i hate camping near people. If i can be seen or heard then its a bad spot lol. BTW how bad is the road in lately lol?! Needs to be graded desperately