(Before It's News)
Copyright 2017, InterAmerica, Inc.
My pal Nick Redfern sent me a link to a review he’s done for a book that delves into the smelly aspects of Big Foot:
(That Sasquatch would stink isn’t surprising considering the stench of some CBS Survivor contestants after a month of so stuck on an island without soap.)
But Nick’s review brings to my mind how many UFO reports contain witness accounts of smells and odors that they experienced during their alleged encounters with the enigmatic phenomenon: sulfur, rotten eggs, burnt rubber, hot metal, et cetera.
Here are a few links to sites that detail the smell/odor element in UFO tales:
What’s interesting to me is that (haptic) hallucinations often incur or contain odorous intrusions, called hallucinosis (acute, alcoholic, diabetic).
A person under the influence of alcohol (or various kinds of drugs) will often have an hallucination that evokes odors or many kinds.
And since I think that many UFO accounts are hallucinatory in nature, I assume that those with odors of a pronounced kind confirm the etiological explanation that the person experiencing a UFO or UFOs has had, in effect, an hallucination, not a bona fide observation of an actual thing in the sky or on the ground (sometimes with accompanying entities).
My previous post about the nurse Kendall case in 1970 (posted February 19
th, 2017) would fall into the category outlined here.
(Terry the Censor took another view.)
As for Sasquatch, does that creature really care how it smells?
(Sasquatch soap is sold at Amazon, from which the image at top comes.)
RR
http://ufocon.blogspot.com – The UFO Iconoclast(s)
Source:
http://ufocon.blogspot.com/2017/02/ufo-odors-and-stinky-sasquatch.html
I thought that the “Stinky Sasquatch” was supposed to be Mikeshell Obama !!!
How is the smell of Sasquatch worse than the smell of Washington DC?