Stetson and Shannon Parker, recently took a trip down from Wyoming to celebrate their 10th anniversary. They boarded the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, a historic train that travels along the Animas river. But what the Parkers saw from the last car of that train wasn’t advertised. The couple believe they spotted the most elusive of creature to roam North America Bigfoot.
Bigfoot, also known as a Sasquatch or a Yeti. Is a mythical ape-like, creature, who wanders through the mountain ranges. Who, according to some, definitely exists. And according to most everyone else, definitely came about from all the high hippies back in the day. The most recent spotting, captured rom that train in, adds to the growing catalog of sightings that have kept the myth alive amid a lack of what some might call verifiable proof.
Stetson Parker stands behind the video, stating that his is, “Definitely a d believer now”. The video, which was taken by a fellow passenger and posted online by Mr. Parker. The allege Sasquatch is tall, brownish creature walking and squatting, before it blends into its surroundings. The footage is zoomed in making for a very grainy video. To Stetson the creature didn’t look like a human.“It didn’t move like a person,” he said. “It looked more like an ape but didn’t walk like an ape so much.” He added that the creature’s arms seemed too long to be human, with hands reaching down to its knees. “It didn’t look like anything I’ve ever seen before,” Mr. Parker said. “I don’t think it was a hoax. And if it was, it was a really good one.”
Other possible explanations emerged as the video drew the attention of media around the world. Maybe it was a bear. Or, the most common one, maybe it was a man wearing a ghillie suit, the camouflage clothing that helps outdoorsmen disappear into their backgrounds. But why, Mr. Parker asked, would anyone be in a ghillie suit in the middle of elk hunting season? That’s a surefire way for any hunter to get shot. And it wasn’t holding a weapon.The Internet nowadays is packed with hoax and misinformation, and we can not ever really be conclusive on whether the beast is real. But it remains a fun conversation starter and folklore, to add whims to forrest.