Part 2: Elk Hunter Meets Non-Human

“He (entity) just pointed his arm at the pickup, his right arm, and the pickup disappeared.”

- Carl Higdon, his 1974 abduction, along with 5 elk

Return to Part 1

October 10, 2007  Laramie, Wyoming - On Sunday, November 17, 1974, Leo Sprinkle, Ph.D., then Prof. of Psychology and Director of the Division of Counseling and Testing at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, Wyoming, conducted an interview and hypnosis session with Carl Higdon. The goal was to understand more about Carl's encounter with a non-human entity around 4 p.m. after he shot at an elk and saw the bullet drop to the ground on October 25, 1974, in the Medicine Bow National Forest.

Margery Higdon wrote on back of 1974 photograph she took: "Meadow (where) elk were when Carl shot at (one). (Ink circle marks) where Carl was standing." Photograph in 1974 by Margery Higdon.
Margery Higdon wrote on back of 1974 photograph she took: "Meadow (where) elk were when Carl shot at (one). (Ink circle marks) where Carl was standing." Photograph in 1974 by Margery Higdon.

 

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Now Bumblebees Are Disappearing, Too. 

"Without bumblebees, I would be out of business. I don't think I could hand-pollinate all these plants."

- Tony Davis, Quail Run Farm, Grants Pass, Oregon

UC-Davis Professor Emeritus Robbin Thorp, Ph.D., holds a Franklin's bumblebee queen in his office at the university's Bee Biology Department on Thursday, August 16, 2007. Prof. Thorp is afraid the Franklin's Bumblebee is now extinct and no one knows why. Image © 2007 by Steve Yeater/AP.
UC-Davis Professor Emeritus Robbin Thorp, Ph.D., holds a Franklin's bumblebee queen in his office at the university's Bee Biology Department on Thursday, August 16, 2007. Prof. Thorp is afraid the Franklin's Bumblebee is now extinct and no one knows why. Image © 2007 by Steve Yeater/AP.

October 13, 2007  Davis, California - Another scientific mystery is expanding: the disappearance of pollinators in North America. First, it was the massive disappearance of at least 25% of all the honey bees in the United States and Canada this past year in what is called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). Now it is the severe decline of four bumblebee species that used to be prevalent on the West and East coasts of the U. S. and Canada – but now scientists can’t find them. In fact, one species known as Bombus franklini – or Franklin’s Bumblebee – might be extinct. And it’s all happened since 1994.

 

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Part 1: Elk Hunter Meets Non-Human

“I raised my rifle and fired, but the bullet only went about 50 feet and dropped (straight down). I looked over to my right and there in the shadow was this sort of man standing there.”

- Carl Higdon, Wyoming elk hunter, October 25, 1974

Rawlins, Wyoming is more than a mile high in the Rocky Mountains north of the Medicine Bow National Forest and northwest of Laramie and Cheyenne.
Rawlins, Wyoming is more than a mile high in the Rocky Mountains north of the Medicine Bow National Forest and northwest of Laramie and Cheyenne.

October 8, 2007  Laramie, Wyoming -  Thirty-three years ago this month, a highly strange case in the modern history of human and UFO encounters occurred at the northern boundary of the Medicine Bow National Forest south of Rawlins, Wyoming. Leo Sprinkle, Ph.D., was Prof. of Psychology and Director of the Division of Counseling and Testing at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, Wyoming, on October 29, 1974, when he received phone calls about an elk hunter's UFO encounter four days earlier on Friday, October 25, 1974. The story broke in the Rawlins Daily Times on Tuesday, October 29, 1974, in an article by Sue Taylor.

 

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Earlier, Faster and Deeper Arctic Ice Melt Down

“As longtime Arctic residents, they told me they had never seen open water so early before - which was late May 2007.”

- Scott Lamoureux, Ph.D., Queen's University

Red circle marks Melville Island between Alaska and Greenland near the Arctic Circle, the site of ice melt studies between 2002 and 2005 by Queen's University geography team.
Red circle marks Melville Island between Alaska and Greenland near the Arctic Circle, the site of ice melt studies between 2002 and 2005 by Queen's University geography team.
 August 2007, Arctic Ocean, open water and ice seen from an icebreaker research vessel. Image by Andy Armstrong, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
August 2007, Arctic Ocean, open water and ice seen from an icebreaker research vessel. Image by Andy Armstrong, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

October 5 , 2007  Kingston, Ontario , Canada - The United Nations International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has had to revise upward its estimates of possible temperature increases over this century. Now, the numbers say that in another 90 years, Earth could be as much as 11 degrees F. warmer than it was at the beginning of the 21st Century. Compare 11 degrees F. to only a 1 degree F. increase in the entire 20th century!

 

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070707 East Field Wheat Formation: Lab Analysis

“I’ve never seen this bimodal germination bimodal before. This is totally anomalous. ...These two entirely different populations of growth rates in these East Field seed samples indicates that there were two entirely different types of energy that hit the field at pretty much the same time.”

- W. C. Levengood, Biophysicist

 Massive pattern of circles in East Field, Alton Priors, Wiltshire, U. K. wheat, estimated to cover 96,600 square feet, or 2.25 acres, with 150 circles in a very strange design spread across 1,033 feet and 490 feet wide. Aerial images © 2007 by Lucy Pringle.  Also see:  Cropcircleconnector.com.
Massive pattern of circles in East Field, Alton Priors, Wiltshire, U. K. wheat, estimated to cover 96,600 square feet, or 2.25 acres, with 150 circles in a very strange design spread across 1,033 feet and 490 feet wide. Aerial images © 2007 by Lucy Pringle.  Also see:  Cropcircleconnector.com.

 

October 4, 2007  Grass Lake, Michigan - The most extraordinary crop formation of 2007 was discovered on Saturday, July 7th, around 3:20 AM in the East Field of Wiltshire, England, by three people on a night watch. One was researcher and photographer, Winston Keech, who had video cameras aimed at the East Field, capable of night vision and infrared. The other two eyewitnesses were Gary King and his friend, Paula Presdee-Jones, from Cardiff, Wales. Back in July, I interviewed Gary King about the fact that at approximately 3:08 AM, all three saw a great flash of bright light over the East Field. One of Winston Keech’s infra red cameras also captured the flash before the ran camera out of videotape. See 071907 Earthfiles.

 

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Earthfiles Mail About Cat Mutilations

“There was no blood, no hair in the wound on either cat half, nothing to indicate something serrated had been used. I remember saying at the time that it looked like she'd been cut with a laser because the edges of the wounds were so smooth and clean. And I just couldn't understand the lack of blood.”

- MD, Long Beach, California

Return to 092707 Earthfiles  (“Front Third of 14 Cats Found in Granbury, Texas”)

September 28, 2007  Albuquerque, New Mexico - After my Coast to Coast AM news updates on Wednesday, September 26, which included the fourteen "one-third cats" reported in Granbury, Texas, since March, I have received several other half and one-third cat reports from listeners and Earthfiles viewers.

 

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North American Honey Bees Still Weak

“The bees are in a weakened state. They’ve had a rough season, so there aren’t as many bees in the colonies as one would expect at this time of year.”

- Jerry Hayes, Chief of Apiary Section, Florida Dept. of Agriculture

Western honey bee, or European honey bee (Apis mellifera), gathering pollen from purple aster.
Western honey bee, or European honey bee (Apis mellifera), gathering pollen from purple aster.

September 26, 2007  Gainesville, Florida -  The September 7, 2007, Science Express reported the discovery of the "Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV)" in 96% of honey bees affected by Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). [ See 090707 Earthfiles.]  IAPV was first identified in Israel in 2002 to 2003 at the same time that Israeli beekeepers were struggling to cope with Asian varroa mites as North American beekeepers have since the 1980s.

 

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Meteorite Fell in Carancas, Peru – Not Satellite

Not far from Lake Titicaca and Puno in southern Peru, is the small farming town of Carancas on a high Andean plateau near the Bolivian border (pink circle below Desaguadero).
Red circle and arrow identify meteorite impact crater site in Carancas, Peru, south of Yunguyo at the southern end of Lake Titicaca. Map created by Jose Machare, Ingemmet.
Red circle and arrow identify meteorite impact crater site in Carancas, Peru, south of Yunguyo at the southern end of Lake Titicaca. Map created by Jose Machare, Ingemmet.
Red circle and arrow identify meteorite impact crater site in Carancas, Peru, south of Yunguyo at the southern end of Lake Titicaca. Map created by Jose Machare, Ingemmet.
Meteorite crater filled with ground water after 11:34 AM impact on September 15, 2007, in Carancas, Peru, south of Lake Titicaca near Bolivian border. Hole diameter measured between 7.4 to 7.8 meters (26 feet). Ring boundary of ejecta around hole measured between 13.3 to 13.8 meters in diameter. Crater depth to groundwater estimated about 2 meters.
Meteorite crater filled with ground water after 11:34 AM impact on September 15, 2007, in Carancas, Peru, south of Lake Titicaca near Bolivian border. Hole diameter measured between 7.4 to 7.8 meters (26 feet). Ring boundary of ejecta around hole measured between 13.3 to 13.8 meters in diameter. Crater depth to groundwater estimated about 2 meters.

September 26, 2007  Lima, Peru - It was 11:45 AM on Saturday, September 15, 2007, when alpaca farmer, Justina Limache, heard a “thunderous roar from the sky.” Scared, she grabbed her 8-year-old granddaughter and ran into her house. For the next few minutes, Justina heard rocks raining down on the roof so loudly that she worried her house would collapse. What 74-year-old Justina Limache did not know was that a meteorite had fallen near her Carancas, Peru, home 62 miles (100 kilometers) southeast of Puno and not far from Lake Titicaca. Carancas is a farm community of about 2,000 people who raise cows, alpacas, llamas and other animals on the high Andean plateau near the Bolivian border.

 

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Neatly Sliced Front Third of 14 Cats Found in Granbury, Texas

“Generally, the cats have been severed into one-thirds – the top one-third is left. In other words, just behind the hind legs, a clean cut and they are just severed. They don’t find the other 2/3s of the cat.”

- Bradley Davis, Granbury, Texas, Resident

Granbury in lower left corner is 32 miles southwest of Fort Worth, Texas. The other red circles in Denton and Plano are sites where half cats and missing cats have been reported in the past.
Granbury in lower left corner is 32 miles southwest of Fort Worth, Texas. The other red circles in Denton and Plano are sites where half cats and missing cats have been reported in the past.

September 26, 2007  Granbury, Texas -  It was only three weeks ago that I was reporting about half cat mutilations in Destin, Florida, and Alberta and Ontario Canada. [ See 090407 Earthfiles.] And since April of 2007, there have been other half cat mutilation reports in Waco and Corpus Christi, Texas. [ See 040907 Earthfiles.]  This cat mutilation mystery which has been reported over at least four decades in the United States, Canada, England and Australia.

 

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