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So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas?
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Caff 10/16/2004 12:46 AM Report abusive post | So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas?
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[link to www.earthfiles.com]
Have you looked at these pictures and read the interviews? One shot in May 2004, one just shot last week, Oct.8.
Really freaky. My X-Files/Stephen King influenced mind is conjuring up some sort of genetic experiment gone awry, escaped from a lab. Or alien creatures that accidentally got loose from an alien ship? Slipped into our dimension through a stargate? Heh. Look at these little fuckers and tell me they look like something that belongs here.
"I put on some gloves and picked the animal up by its ears so I could take some better pictures of it and when they did, its ear broke off like a cookie, a piece of a cookie. It just snapped and broke off. This animal had been alive only an hour or so earlier. So, thereīs no plausible excuse for it being in this condition. No blood again where the ear broke off, I guess because the animal was dead. I took a lot of pictures of it and am still totally dumbfounded...
"I took a stick and scraped its skin. The skin was like powder. It had no elasticity to it. The skin was just dead. It was real emaciated. I mean, really starved. It had claws instead of toenails because a dog or canine has a quick. You can see the quick when you go to clip their toenails. This had no quick. Its claws were probably an inch and a half to two inches long and in very excellent condition not worn down from walking on the ground or rocks or anything like that. They were just perfect."
And to me, the creepiest of creepy things about this creature:
"WHAT HAS HAPPENED TO THE BODY?
The body was put in the woods, but so many people have been down there to see it that yesterday (Wednesday, Oct. 13), we moved it and there are no vultures at all eating this body. I noticed that yesterday. Itīs been five days, six days, and thereīs not a vulture that touched it. So, I moved the body yesterday because people keep wanting to get pieces of it so they couldnīt get it. And Iīm going back this afternoon to get the head." *shudder*
link to www.godlikeproductions.com] alt=' '> looking over its shoulder nervously... |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | It looked like a long-dead fawn. |
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DC - Incorporeal 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Has anyone seen my pet Dingo? |
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Caff 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Maybe a chupa ate your dingo, DC!
As far as "long dead," it was shot less than an hour prior to the series of photos.
The more I look at these I think they look sort of rat like. |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | RAT LIKE? I think they are called texans.
Itīs ok they live there. |
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ShadowDancer 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Until I figure it out I will call it Marsupial Rodenticus Extremus. someone on another thread yesterday thought radiated fox. I disagree. I do not vote for fox. The tail is too long and the front extremities are shorter than they would be. Radiation is likely and also genetic mutations that have been created. The teeth are canine, but it is not readily idīed. I am awaiting DNA tags. My son says thylacine, I havenīt seen enough of them to determine.
It does not have hooves. I wish I could see the īpawī better.  |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Look at those fingers, I mean paws.
Some genetic experiment? |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | |
Caff 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | I found an interesting thread at Cryptozoology.com:
>>>The experts say it is just a coyote with mange. I agree, mange can mess up an animal pretty bad, but the thing is coyote size, has coyote ears, and has the typical "trangle head" of the coyote.
>>>If its a dog then why are the hind legs too long, and claws modified, and why do the two sides of the mandibles not fuse together? Why are its canines so pronounced? It is odd, and its diseased too,, very badly diseased. Something here needs explaining. Did the disease contribute to the unusual morphology?
>>>I think the claws are long from emaciation; the flesh shrinks away and can make the teeth look longer as well. Tuberculosis does the same thing to humans, and in the old days people with TB were often mistaken for vampires.
What gets me about this creature is:
1. There was another one
2. They both had abnormal jaws.
Why do both animals have almost identical afflictions? Could they be siblings?
>>>I wonder with so many sigtings of these animals from all over the US, perhaps they are a sub-specias of coyote? If the animals have mange, and manage to survive with it, perhaps they can pass it on to their unborn? Or hairlessness could become natural to the offspring???
Or, perhaps itīs a National plague ravishing the US coyote populations?? I dont recall hearing about these animals in the past, so maybe itīs a vary recent thing?? Like an outbreak or something?
My idea that maybe the "mange" look is becoming a natural state for these animals is partly bases on the abnormalities asociated with the animals, like the overbite, the gray skin and hairlessness.
What I found interesting is that a Vet said the animal shed vary little blood from the wound, looked like an animal that had been dead for a while, itīs ears were brittle and broke in their hands when handled? Perhaps itīs a new disease? Keeping these animals alive long after they should have passed on??
I hope an autopsy will be performed to verify what this animal is, and what it suffered from.
[link to www.cryptozoology.com]
HOWEVER, theyīre not addressing some of the things mentioned at least in Linda Moulton Howeīs article that indicate there may be a population of these creatures:
"About one-quarter mile from my motherīs house, I had to hit my breaks because an animal crossed the road in front of me and it was running with its head down and its tail down and it did not have any hair. It was a strange looking sight and my daughter-in-law was with me and she wanted to know if it was a wolf. I told her it wasnīt a wolf and it was too large for a fox.
So, we went on to my motherīs house and went around to the back and there was the same animal an animal identical to what ran across the road."
and
"I had a man call me last night and he said he killed one several years ago that looked almost identical to it and he has some pictures of it and he wanted me to have them and I had a message on my machine just a few minutes ago that he has the pictures. He says heīs seen them in groups of three." |
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~Ankhy~ 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | That is really really strange. |
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Melody 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Wonder if all the nukes the US set off in the late forties early fifties (about 160 in the US I believe) caused a series of genetic mutations to animals in the region? |
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Soakingood 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Freaky strange. Iīll have my ear up for the DNA reports. I think I read 2-3 weeks. |
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Caff 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | I also thought that these creatures eating mulberries and pears was sorta weird considering the tusks/fangs they have. Then again, bears have some pretty nasty teeth and they eat fruit to supplement their diet. Maybe theyīre true omnivores? But then they shouldnīt be so emaciated...I hope we see the results of the DNA testing and autopsies and thereīs no cover-up. |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Only coyotes have small front paws and large rear paws, just like this thing. More rat like in many ways, the teeth are possem like. Weird to say the least. |
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~Ankhy~ 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Hey Melody, have you ever seen "Chernobyl Heart?" Itīs a documentary about the aftermath of the Chernobyl disaster in Russia. The genetic mutations of the people in the effected area are hideous and frightening.
It aired on HBO last month. I recommend it to anyone who has an opportunity to see it. |
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DC - Incorporeal 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Marty? |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | ZetaTalk: Chupacabra Remnants
written Oct 15, 2004
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We have stated when the Chupacabra reports first emerged that these creatures were Akin to the dragons or vampire bats of old, brought to Earth to terrify humans by those in the Service-to-Self, looking to increase their harvest of recruits. Fear, terror, increase a self focus, and thus is a tool used by those in the Service-to-Self to drive young souls in this direction. In the past dumb creatures used to this end, brought to Earth and unleashed on villages, eventually died out, as they are not native to the Earth and suffer from infections and inadequate nutrition. What does the recent discovery of dead Chupacabra, young and starving, in Maryland and Texas, mean? It means their handlers have fled, and are no longer attempting to capture the continent of S. America, as was the case when the Chupacabra episode began. The Council of Worlds required that the handlers, the Service-to-Self aliens unleashing them, ensure that humans not be harmed by the Chupacabra unless in essence giving permission, the human always in control of the situation. Thus, these aliens attended their dogs of war faithfully, as failure to do so would send them packing, forced to leave the Earth for failure to abide by the rules. But if leaving anyway, the Service-to-Self, not known for their concern for the environment or having any sense of responsibility, would scarcely scout about to collect all the young their charges might have spawned. Thus they show up, infected and suffering from malnutrition, unidentifiable as a known species on Earth, puzzling those who come upon their remains.
Brazil, Aug. 3, 1997
Curiously enough, all of the attacks took place in barns or sheds or pens that were securely locked.
Puerto Rico, 1999
The enigmatic creature can best be described as a cross between one of the"Grey" aliens and a terrestrial animal such as a porcupine or a kangaroo due to the presence of quill-like appendages running down its back and enormously powerful hind legs which enable it to leap over trees in a single bound.
Chille, May 11, 2000
It stood about 1.5 meters (four feet) tall, like a big monkey, with long clawed arms, enormous fangs protruding from its mouth, as well as a pair of wings.
Nicaragua, 2000
The dog-sized creature had a bull-like head and small feet. Gioconda Chevez, a zoologist who examined it, told the newspapers that the creature had smooth skin like that of a bat, long claws and a crocodile-like crest running down its back.
Sign 1178
Another Texas Chupacabra? [Oct 14] īLocal animal experts are having a hard time identifying a strange looking animal killed in Angelina County on Friday - an animal that looks eerily similar to the as yet unidentified Elmendorf Beast killed near San Antonio earlier this year. The animalīs blue-grey skin is almost hairless and appears to be covered with mange. A closer look at the animalīs jaw line reveals a serious overbite and four huge canine teeth, and a long, rat-like tail curls behind the animalīs emaciated frame. It had no hair, a severe overbite and its claws were entirely too long for a dog. The animalīs front legs were much smaller than itīs hind legs. WOAI-TV in San Antonio has aired several stories on the so-called "Elmendorf Beast" since a nearby rancher shot and killed one earlier this year. The animal depicted on the stationīs Web site, at www.woai.com, looks eerily similar to the one discovered in Pollok. The rancher from Elmendorf, located southeast of San Antonio, killed the animal after 35 of his chickens disappeared in one day. The animal was also almost hairless, with blue-grey coloring and four large "fangs." The station reported that tissue from the animal has been sent for DNA testing, and that it will be several more weeks before the tests are completed. Sightings of similar animals have been reported across the country, from California to Maryland.ī
Anonymous Coward
10/15/2004
11:43 pm EDT Re: Here is the real "Chupacapra Remnants Thread" by Nancy Lieder that coffee pot Nancy buried New Zetatalk 10/15/04
[link to zetatalk.com]
Anonymous Coward
10/15/2004
11:46 pm EDT Re: Here is the real "Chupacapra Remnants Thread" by Nancy Lieder that coffee pot Nancy buried New Zetatalk 10/15/04
see link for several photos of chupacapras found recently |
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Melody 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Ankhy no I havenīt seen it but I have read about effets suffered by the locals near Chernobyl. I was watching the documentary "The Fog of War" last week and was really surprised about how many nukes the US government set off in the western states of the US before they realised that there was a eral long lasting radiation damage issue. If another nation attacked you 160 nukes the people would be shocked for decades, but the US government has already done it. There just have to be some creatures out there with genetic mutations as a reult. Donīt know if this is one, but it is worth considering I think. |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | before they realised that there was a eral long īlasting radiation damage issue.ī
Not true, they already knew the effects of radiation, but felt the looses were worth the testing. They have used the same logic many times to test things on the sheeple, the loss of the few is justified buy the long term bennies. |
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Melody 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Sorry, my bad. I should have said, before they īadmittedī they knew... |
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Parinthian 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | DNA results still pending, looks like a giant rat |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Escaped GLP trolls?? |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Pigs are omnivores and some of them have huge tusks. |
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Insider 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | I suggest itīs a thylacine (Tasmanian Devil), thought officially to be now extinct but occasionally still sighted by people in the Australian outback. See the very similar images in a Google search of īthylacine.ī How did it get to Texas? It didnīt, of course. I suggest some biology lab has been conducting cloning experiments on cells taken from the few dead bodies of thylacines that have been preserved and then, after they had been reared in a laboratory, the thylacines escaped or were released. The possibility of their cloning is real. See:
[link to www.abc.net.au]
This may sound far-fetched. But it does fit the facts. And cloning/hybridisation experiments are now going on in biology labs. |
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sam 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | itīs called a hybrid u sheep, itīs public the nwo genetic scientists have mixed goat DNA with Spider DNA among many other fucked up creations, this stuff is PUBLIC.
imagine whats NOT public.
this is a kangaroo/rat/dog hybrid that escaped from a lab.
dinos will roam our great land soon.
as per when rep humanoids rule rep mind pattern produces dinos as per humans mind pattern produce mammals in surrounding environment |
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CuriousNature 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | "I suggest itīs a thylacine (Tasmanian Devil)"
Thylacineīs and Tasmanian Devils are two completely different creatures. And yes, the Thylacine IS thought to be extinct.
[link to www.naturalworlds.org]
[link to www.dpiwe.tas.gov.au]
(Iīm not trying to be an ass, just wanted to clear that up.) |
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Melody 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | You know it does remind me a little of a thylacine, or Tasmanian Tiger. However it is not as BIG as a thylacine, but certainly there haveb een attempts in recent years to clone these animals (although many who live in the silds of tasmania say there are still tassie tigers out there). |
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Budman 2 Da Rescue 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | I think it has something to do with Dubya, Sheep & Crawford, Texas. "Whereīd ya get them Velcro gloves, George?" |
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J 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Just some critters that escaped from the morph.
Poor things. |
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Heaven´s Saber 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | Itīs a dog with the T-Virus |
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Anonymous Coward 12/8/2005 10:18 AM | | Re: So, what do we think those weird grey-blue creatures are in Texas? | Quote | looks like a fox to me. maybe fox greyhound cross? the hind quarters are not to long to be a dog/cyote/fox,they look longer than they are because of the state of malnutrition,this thing was bony. |
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