Saturday, November 29, 2014

Yeti Bigfoot Exhibits At Nepal International Mountain Museum

Yeti Bigfoot Exhibits At Nepal International Mountain Museum

Source :

http://www.tsemrinpoche.com/tsem-tulku-rinpoche/paranormal/creatures-and-monsters/tale-of-the-yeti.html

Below are photos from the International Mountain Museum (IMM) in Pokhara, Nepal, iN ONE OF THE SECTIONS OF THE MUSEUM HALL IS A SMALL EXHIBITION ON YETIS!

Yeti sightings were so common amongst mountaineers that the NMA decided to collect all the information on Yetis from Himalayan mountaineers and compile them into a short display. The display tells stories about the thoughts and beliefs of famous researchers and writers, and the remarks of the local people who had encountered Yetis.

The Monk and the Yeti


Ang Dawa, Gyalzen Norbu, and Peter Byrne found a set of deep Yeti footprints at about 10,000 feet during the 1957 Slick Yeti Reconnaissance

Tom Slick discovered this Nepalese Yeti footprint measuring ten by seven inches in the mud during the 1957

Location Map of Tom Slick Yeti Expedition


Sir E. Hillary showed the sketch of Yeti based on eyewitness account. The sketch was adapted from one of Heuvelmans' One the Track of Unknown Animals

Bryan Byrne examines Yeti tracks found at 10,000 feet in the Arun Valley of the Himalayas in March during 1959

Hand of Yeti: in Pamboche, 1959. Photographed by Prof. Teizo Ogawa

Hand of Yeti: in Panboche, 1958. Photographed by Slick Johnson Snowman

The footprint of Yeti


Yeti: Footprints

Area of the Yeti Sightings


Shipton's party found fresh tracks providing evidence of the existence of the Yeti

Nanda Devi, 1934 at Satopanth Glacier. They saw one bear close-to, and the Sherpa's were terrified, thinking it was a Yeti

Everest from the South, 1951. They found the creature's foot in the Menlung Glacier

Footprints of Yeti, found in 1951 on Menlung Glacier, West of Everest by E. Shipton

Two men holding a stuffed chemo near a monastery


The footprint that started Reinhold Messner on his quest for the Yeti

A chemo paw


A so-called Yeti scalp from the monastery of Pangboche

A stamp of the Kingdom of Bhutan, depicting the Yeti as a kind of Himalayan King Kong

A fresh footprint in the mud next to young barley plants


In a ritual dance, the stuffed chemo becomes the Yeti

Conclusion Display 1

Conclusion Display 2

Conclusion Display 3


Brown bear ? lol