← Back

Below you will find links to some very cool web pages that I have found and am continuing to find over the years and I hope you will enjoy them just as much as I have.  

Bigfoot:

Bigooft Buzz - A fantastic website which was run by one Mr. Chuck Prahl (R.I.P.) of Cambridge, Maryland, who, along with Mr. Tim Stover aka Tcsjrbigfoot, another Bigfoot researcher, ran what was formerly Bigfoot Busters Radio, which ran from 2008 - 2010.  It continued on as The Bigfoot Tonight Show (Mr. Prahl and Mr. Stacey Hostdtleller) until Mr. Prahl's passing in 2014 and is sadly no longer on the air.  

It also continued in another form as Ohio Bigfoot Hunters Radio (Mr. Stover and other guests), and both guys were/are tremendous guys and I sorely miss Mr. Prahl's insights and hope he now has the answers to the mysteries he was searching for in real life.  His main website, which I linked to before, seems to be down now and can only be accessed via the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, but I hope that his memory may be kept alive among the pantheon of researchers out there for many more years to come.  He was also a freelance photographer, and his work can be found on his website, Chesapeake Life.    

Bigfoot Encounters - Formerly run by one Ms. Bobbie Short, a fantastic researcher who is sorely missed and passed away in the same year as Mr. Prahl.  Her website is an exhaustive compendium of Bigfoot sightings and analysis, and I hope her insights and memory may be kept alive for years to come.  A truly inspiring woman and one whose voice is missed in the Bigfoot community.  

Web Developers and Designers:

Jonathan Bylsma

Sacha Corazzi

Twitch

Squirrel TV.  

Time:

The Long Now - A fascinating foundation which aims to encourage long-term thinking, a kind of anthesis to the "now, now, now" mentality that I find permeates much of social media now.  It has a variety of different projects, but the one that fascinates me the most of the 10,000 Year Clock, an active project which involves the construction of a clock which will permanently exist in the Texan landscape as a measure of time and our interaction with it.  I encourage anyone with an interest in projects like this to pay a visit and see what it's all about.