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                    August 2004 Expedition 
                    in the Olympic Rain Forest Region (Northwest WA State): 
                     
                     
                  Number of participants on the trip: 
                    30  
                     
                    Number of participants who say they observed a sasquatch 
                    during the trip: 7  
                     
                    Number of people who say they heard sasquatch sounds (screams, 
                    howls, knocks, chattering, etc.) during the trip: 21  
                     
                    Number of scats found: 1 possible scat.  
                     
                    Number of tracks impressions found that were generally 
                    concluded to be sasquatch tracks: 6 
                     
                    One cast was made. The footprint was in gravel ladden soil 
                    and has no dermal detail. Five other tracks were found at 
                    different locations, in watery mud, with no dermal detail 
                    or distinctive toe detail.  
                     
                    The encounters that happened : 
                     
                    There were three incidents, with at least two visual witnesses 
                    during each incident. 
                     
                    First incident: Two participants said they observed three 
                    sasquatches at ~150 feet, walking along a logging road at 
                    night.  
                     
                    Second incident: Three participants said they observed a sasquatch 
                    at ~40 feet, looking out from behind a tree along a logging 
                    road at night. 
                  Third incident: Two participants said 
                    they observed one at an undetermined distance crossing a road 
                    at night. 
                     
                    Four (4) inter-related reasons why no video footage or 
                    photos of sasquatches were obtained: 
                     
                    1) The expedition participants were interested in seeing 
                    a sasquatch, rather than photographing one. Everyone knew 
                    that any sightings would likely be brief. This made most participants 
                    more intent to quietly watch, and not try to fiddle with cameras 
                    during their big moment.  
                     
                    2) All of the witnesses were wearing nightvision goggles 
                    at the time of their observations. The goggles were on loan 
                    to the BFRO. Nightvision goggles do not allow you to record 
                    what you are seeing, unfortunately..  
                     
                    3) Participants had to bring their own camera gear. Most 
                    lacked the expensive nightvision-camcorder combos necessary 
                    for videotaping at night without illumination..  
                  4) The BFRO did have one expensive 
                    thermal (body heat) camcorder on the trip -- a camera that 
                    can videotape in complete darkness. That single unit could 
                    not be everywhere at once, so it was parked at a central point 
                    and dispatched to where it was needed when it was requested 
                    by a given team. Because of that limitation, the thermal unit 
                    was never delivered in time for the reported fleeting encounters. 
                     
                    The great value of this exercise, with respect to video documentation, 
                    was that it allowed us to determine the right equipment for 
                    getting video footage in these environments.  
                     
                    The right equipment is several sets of thermal (body heat) 
                    nightvision goggles that can output to video recorders. Nightvision 
                    scopes coupled with camcorders are not as effective in these 
                    situations. They're difficult to hold up continuously for 
                    hours while walking around in a dark forerst, but that's what 
                    it takes, according to the eyewitnesses who finally caught 
                    a glimpse of one while using nightvision goggles. If the goggles 
                    used in August had been able to record to video, we would 
                    have come back with several pieces of footage from that trip. 
                  There's only one type of device with 
                    all of the features necessary to get footage -- See the description 
                    for the TAG-7. These video-enabled goggles cost $15,000 
                    each. We hope to test a few on the upcoming expedition. 
                     
                     
                  Notes from Various Participants 
                     
                  
                    
                    
                     
                   
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