The Warner Amazon Expedition is making a plea for donation dollars so they can go back to the site of what they claim to be the domain of a giant snake living in the Peruvian Amazon Basin. Many questions are left in the open unanswered about their claims. NatGeo even decline to help them out. Now a film compnay that will go to Texas and do an hour long documentary on what the CFZ was trying to pass off as a Chupacabra, or "Blue Dog" turns down an chance to expose what Mike Warner claims as the biggest scientific find of the 21 century....well let's just say that either NatGeo knows people are tired of the MonsterQuest, or Destination Truth style programming, or they know that the Warner foundation is just exploiting a fictional creature.
Their web site is loaded with fake photos and interviews with people who have never seen the huge snake, but darn it.......they just "know" it's there cause they felt the ground move. Never mind that a snake of the size that they claim that it is, would need to eat the equivalent of 3 - 4 human sized prey a week just to maintain a body the size they claim it to be. Also they show photos of what they call a path or trench dug through the ground that carries NO characteristics of being made by a snake.
At 5 meters, or 20 feet wide and an unknown length, this animal would weigh an excess of 2 tons............and no one saw it. I guess they have never seen or experience a flash flood as well. Well here it is.....you decide for yourself if you want to send your hard earn pesco's to support another hair brained expedition.
Here their letter of declination from NatGeo:
Re: Yacumama & the South American Dragon Submission
From:
Mark xxxx (mxxxxx@ngs.org)
Sent:
30 March 2010 19:12:17
To:
G Warner (warnergreg@xxxxxxxx.com)
Cc:
Dear Greg,
Sorry for the delay in getting back to you on this but we reviewed the materials from Firecracker Films regarding Yacumama. It is an exciting and intriguing story for sure. While we did like the father/son dynamic, NGCI...feel that there is a bit of risk associated with a program of this nature.
Also, upon further evaluation of our current and future programming, we don't have a strong need for a one-off of this nature at this time. Our primary need is for series.
That being said, we'd be happy to take a look once again when the project is completed.
All the best in your journey to find the Yacumama!
Best Regards,
Mark
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