WSDOT finds “Bigfoot” Sherman Pass sighting was cutout placed on tree0
- Earth Mysteries, From Around the Web
- February 29, 2020
The recent “Bigfoot” sighting on Sherman Pass has officially been debunked, but you can still believe if you’d like.
The recent “Bigfoot” sighting on Sherman Pass has officially been debunked, but you can still believe if you’d like.
Is that…Bigfoot? Someone at the Washington State Department of Transportation certainly thinks there’s a chance.
Bigfoot sightings used to be the province of obsessive loners who spent a lot of time in the woods.
While you were sleeping off your first hangover of the year, Washington State transportation workers were sifting through heaps of tumbleweeds.
An extremely compelling unidentified flying object incident occurred over Washington, D.C., in 1952. Did another UFO pay a visit to D.C. on Tuesday?
In what could be a precursor to further stunning developments, the U.S. Navy has publicly acknowledged that the advanced aircraft depicted in several recently declassified gun-camera videos are UFOs, or what the Navy prefers to call “Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon” (UAPs).
For every 100,000 people in the state of Washington, some 78 have reported seeing a UFO. That works out to 5,894 UFO sightings in the state.
Washington, Montana and Vermont are at the top of a new list for having the most UFO sightings in the U.S.
UFO reports in the capital’s air space set headlines blaring across the nation about ‘disks’ and ‘whatzits’ and mysterious lights.
Some 160 UFO sightings were reported in Washington state last year – about one every 55 hours on average, according to the National UFO Reporting Center.