Andrey Lyubchenko, who says the abominable snowman even gave him an autograph, admits people may well think he's "insane" when he describes the brief encounter

A Russian man claims he met an abominable snowman and the mythical beast even posed for a picture with him.
Andrey Lyubchenko, who says the yeti even gave him an autograph, admits people may well think he's "insane" when he describes the brief encounter.
The artist says he met the fabled creature in the remote mountains of the Kemerovo region, in Russia.
"It happened so unexpectedly and fast that I had no time to get scared," he said.
"There was a clear feeling that this was a thinking creature, I felt he was trying to 'talk' to me.

"The Yeti was about two and a half metres tall, with thick dark brown hair like a bear's - but a lot softer.
"He was holding a wooden stick, with bits of hair wrapped around it.
"But the main thing was his eyes, they were just like light-coloured human eyes."
The alleged sighting was soon after dawn on July 27 in a remote spot in mountainous Kemerovo region, famed for claims that it has a Yeti population.
"I went out onto a small open patch, and there I felt the Yeti's presence," he was quoted as saying by The Siberian Times .
"I turned back and saw him standing up, deeper in the woods, not going away and trying to communicate
MORE: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/i-met-yeti-posed-picture-6288716
Replies
Ok so he gets to take a picture of himself with a drawing, but not a picture of himself with a Yeti... LOL :)))
Interesting, but not at all surprising. Salories and pensions for Russian citizens have been seriously curtailed for a while since Russia is busy to pay for a war that they're apparently not having, whereas its citizens have to grasp at every straw of opportunity or scam there is to grasp in order to survive.
Andrey Lyubchenko, call me when your scam fails, and we can discuss other ways of getting asylum outside of Russia..
asylum, you said?
seems to be good solution for some people, hahaha
enjoy your (in)sanity
Perhaps a sanatorium would be a better place for Andrey Lyubchenko, but we still come back to the problem of Russia, since there are no mental asylums in Russia that can be graded "humane" by western standards. ;)
We have witnessed western "humane" standards, unfortunatelly
On some areas it lacks quality, but on most areas it does not.
At least not like the lack we can see in Russia.
In Russia, it's still possible for child sex-traders to BUY babies from desperate teenage mothers. Few european countries have a social climate that has gone so far down so that That would be possible. We usually only see these climates in and around former Soviet-colonies.