This is getting close to me. I live in Oklahoma.
Wonder what they are, really.
We have quite a few trees and small forests here. My farm, (about half a mile from my house in town*) is heavily wooded, in the pasture portion, and up until his death a few years ago, my uncle sold firewood from my place, so in creek beds and slopes, there are a lot of small forests and groves here. As to their providing habitat I don't know why not.How extensive are the Oklahoma woods/forests?
Could they be capable of providing a viable habitat for a hominid whether of the Wolfman or Apeman variety?
We have quite a few trees and small forests here. My farm, (about half a mile from my house in town*) is heavily wooded, in the pasture portion, and up until his death a few years ago, my uncle sold firewood from my place, so in creek beds and slopes, there are a lot of small forests and groves here. As to their providing habitat I don't know why not.
And FWIW, there have been credible cryptid reports on my farm, and in other places in this county. They happened about ten or more years ago and one of the people who saw something was my cousin, the son of the uncle mentioned a moment ago. Not wolf-creatures, but hominids.
*Such as it is. The population is around 20.
got a soft spot for giant invertebrate cryptids.Never heard of this one before: the Oklahoma Octopus.
http://cryptidz.wikia.com/wiki/Oklahoma_Octopus
Something to think about.Have you considered getting a Trail camera?
As do the invertebrates.I've come across it a few tmes in the past. I've
got a soft spot for giant invertebrate cryptids.
I'm sure I've said it before but whenever I see this charming picture I imagine some of them getting sandwiches out of lunchboxes while others puff on cigarettes.Maurice Sand, Werewolves leaning against the wall of a cemetery at night, 1858.