Originally posted by sonhouseMy friends and i went out one night and witnessed the "Belawbees"
Anyone out in the forest lately see anything that could be like
the Bigfoot legend? I used to live in Alaska and the only thing
I saw was hair/fur on a tree which turned out to be a moose
rubbing its sides. Just curious.
We were pretty drunk . . .
Originally posted by sonhouseI need some help. I read your profile. I did some maths.
Anyone out in the forest lately see anything that could be like
the Bigfoot legend? I used to live in Alaska and the only thing
I saw was hair/fur on a tree which turned out to be a moose
rubbing its sides. Just curious.
But I get stuck.
I got to 3.141592653589796238462643383279 then I get stuck on the next digit. Any ideas?
Originally posted by mikelomThis somehow has something to do with Yeti? You like my motto?
I need some help. I read your profile. I did some maths.
But I get stuck.
I got to 3.141592653589796238462643383279 then I get stuck on the next digit. Any ideas?
If Pi were = 2, this sentence would not be possible?
My best guess is it would be a number between 0 and 9.
All that I have seen during my hunts late at night are pixie fires. I hunt from about 11pm - 3am running dogs. I hunt in a very secluded area about 10 miles outside of a town up north all by my lonesome.
Stranges thing, you can hear jingling and see a fire from a long distance, but it goes out when you aproach only to pop up somewhere else.
RTh
Originally posted by RingtailhunterHmm, sure you aren't looking at fireflies?
All that I have seen during my hunts late at night are pixie fires. I hunt from about 11pm - 3am running dogs. I hunt in a very secluded area about 10 miles outside of a town up north all by my lonesome.
Stranges thing, you can hear jingling and see a fire from a long distance, but it goes out when you aproach only to pop up somewhere else.
RTh
It also may be in direct proportion to how many sacred cactii you
consumed.
Originally posted by sonhouseHmmm, the cactii up here have four legs and we call them porcupines...and if yer gonna eat em you better have a really long knife and fork, and fireflies don't come out too much when it's winter in Minnesota.
Hmm, sure you aren't looking at fireflies?
It also may be in direct proportion to how many sacred cactii you
consumed.
RTh
Originally posted by sonhouseyeah but the most advanced super-computers are on this formula and it takes years to get a new number. For every decimal place they discover, the next one usually takes longer to discover. The formula is a big as the number itself
There is a formula for that you know, plug in the place number
and Boing out pops the next number. Google it out.
But back to the topic of this thread, if we see a yeti in Canada, it is probably the Himalayan's cousin. We'll let you know if that is the case