Bigfoot Type Women Roam Northern Caucasus Region
Posted: Monday, February 09, 2009
by Joel Hendon
http://hebronics.org/index.html
Northeast from Turkey, there is a region called the Greater Caucasus, a geopolitical populace which is between Russia and Asia. It includes several small countries, for instance Chechnya, portions of Georgia and other former Soviet Union states, the northern portion of this region is called the Northern Caucasus. Much of the region is very mountainous which is the basis for the name. This is the large Caucasus Mountain range which has one point considered the highest in the European area.
Here is a couple of paragraphs taken from some of the local residents:
"A yeti female looks like a gorilla, of course, but she can definitely tempt a man," one of the elders, Kazi Khajiyev said. "The Almasty can bewitch a man. They say that a man, whom a wild woman tries to seduce, sees not the hairy ape-like creature, but the woman that he wants to see. It is something like hypnosis," the man said. (Pravda 12/17/2008 Weird hairy females seduce hot-blooded Caucasian men)
"A wild human being is a human being, that is why we try to get along with them. My grandfather used to tell me that the Almasty have always lived here. They increased their population after the Balkars deserted their villages. The Almasty took their homes, that's why they let humans see them so often nowadays," Adilgery Tilov said. (Pravda 12/17/2008 Weird hairy females seduce hot-blooded Caucasian men)
Then we have other information taken from another source:
"The Almastys are like people; they have arms and legs like people, except that they are covered with hair. The hair is like that of a bear, and dark. I always saw them without clothing . . . they do not know how to speak; they only mumble or bellow. They are not afraid of people, only of dogs. They run very fast."
That is how 67-year-old Koumykov Feitsa, from the village of Kurkujm, deep in the Caucasus Mountains, described the Almastys he used to see as a youth in the 1930s. Such man-like, hair-covered creatures have been known to rural people of the Caucasus - 750-mile-long range shared by several former Soviet republics - since time immemorial. (This creature is also known, but by other names, all the way to Mongolia, where it is called the Almas.) Feitsa is simply one of more than 500 witnesses in the Caucasus who have been interviewed by an intrepid 73-year-old investigator, a French-Russian woman named Dr Marie-Jeanne Koffmann (Bigfoot, Fact or Fantasy-BBC Wildlife 1993)
This Dr. Koffmann was born in 1919 and has spent years researching this phenomenon and was able to secure over 500 reports from individuals who claimed to have seen these yeti and gave remarkably similar stories as to their appearance and actions.
These stories have been around for many years. Scientific expeditions have been made to the area and all find the same claims of sightings by the native people yet no reliable evidence for the existence of the yeti has yet been found. One article which might be of interest to readers is "In Search Of The Yeti" which can be accessed here: http://web.ncf.ca/bz050/HomePage.yeti.html

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