Taken from JRE #1395 w/Glenn Villeneuve:
https://youtu.be/PNocQzhPyac
Video Source
42 Comments
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Taken from JRE #1395 w/Glenn Villeneuve:
https://youtu.be/PNocQzhPyac
Video Source
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Les Stroud, were some of my favorite episodes. That's too bad you can't even find those episodes anymore.
Two things are true here.
1. Les Stroud was the most legit survival expert on TV doing an authentic survival show. He was very brave, skilled as a director and was the real deal.
2. Les Stroud is on some dummy shit with the Bigfoot stuff. He hung out with total scammers and dummies, it tarnished his image a lot.
Glen is awesome. But global warming is a natural acurance. Warming. Followed bye cooling .and ice age.
I used to watch les stroud, then I remember one episode he was literally 10 miles from a ranger station in yosemite national park. Kinda lame in my book
I very much enjoy watching Les Stroud, he is so incredible and teaches so many incredible survival skills
I'm an avid hiker and spend quite a bit of time in the Canadian Rockies and I have had numerous
encounters with all sorts of wildlife, including Grizzly, Black Bear and wolves as well as moose, elk ,Deer ,Coyote
I have never seen anything in the back country that made me ever think there could be a large primate
living in the mountains, and even if say there were, they would have to have a large enough population to breed and maintain a healthy
group of primates and I question how much food a healthy group of 9 to 10 foot five hundred to say six hundred maybe six hundred and fifty pound
animals would need to eat to survive, and wouldn't a large group of a primates that size put a significant dent in other animal species
that live in the mountain parks, I think they would eat their way through the deer and elk populations pretty quickly and I would think primates
would come into direct conflict with bears for different types of berries that bears depend on each year.
I think there are to many variables that work against a large primate living in North America also how would a primate like a big foot survive -30 to 35 degrees below zero winters
that occur in the mountain parks.