While using this webshop cookies are used to store your webshop data temporarily on your computer. Cookies are not used for any other purpose.
V4.06 release 1 October 2025
Development Kit
CodeVisionAVR Advanced - LCD module with ATXMega A4U and a 2.4" or 9.0" LCD with Touchscreen - Optional AVR ICE
ChipBlasterAVR
Universal In-System Programming Software for the Microchip AVR family of microcontrollers
Support Extension
CodeVisionAVR includes 1 year of free updates and e-mail technical support. After this period purchase a support package to continue this service.
Quick order
Click on the blue buttons to quickly add a product to your cart.
You can choose to kill Bigfoot to stop his "knocking" ability—a long-distance communication sound that can be heard throughout the area. Upon reaching zero health, he will collapse in defeat.
Is there a 500-pound, screaming ape living in the swamp south of Houston? The rational mind says no. Texas is heavily surveyed by aerial drones, pipeline workers, and fishermen. Something that large should have been hit by a truck on Highway 35 by now.
In the 1960s, residents of the Mattole Valley reported a wave of sightings involving a large, hair-covered creature. Unlike the friendly giant often portrayed in popular media, this creature—sometimes called the "Mattole Beast"—was described as aggressive and territorial. Local newspapers reported accounts of livestock being harassed and strange, guttural screams echoing through the river canyons at night.
However, in 2019, a team of researchers from the Texas Bigfoot Research Organization (TBRO) conducted an investigation on Mad Island. They set up camera traps and collected hair samples, which were later analyzed. While the results were inconclusive, the team reported that they did find some unusual hair samples that did not match any known animal in the area.
Often conflated with the general Bigfoot phenomenon, the specific sightings in and around the Mad River basin—sometimes locally referred to as the "Mad Island" area due to the region's isolated geography—offer a unique case study in cryptid lore. This paper explores the history of sightings in the region, the intersection of local Native American mythology, and the scientific skepticism surrounding the creature known as the Mattole Beast or the Humboldt Bigfoot.
Yet, for over 50 years, a tiny, uninhabited patch of land near Matagorda Bay—known as —has been the epicenter of one of the most bizarre and compelling Sasquatch mysteries in the American South.
You can choose to kill Bigfoot to stop his "knocking" ability—a long-distance communication sound that can be heard throughout the area. Upon reaching zero health, he will collapse in defeat.
Is there a 500-pound, screaming ape living in the swamp south of Houston? The rational mind says no. Texas is heavily surveyed by aerial drones, pipeline workers, and fishermen. Something that large should have been hit by a truck on Highway 35 by now.
In the 1960s, residents of the Mattole Valley reported a wave of sightings involving a large, hair-covered creature. Unlike the friendly giant often portrayed in popular media, this creature—sometimes called the "Mattole Beast"—was described as aggressive and territorial. Local newspapers reported accounts of livestock being harassed and strange, guttural screams echoing through the river canyons at night.
However, in 2019, a team of researchers from the Texas Bigfoot Research Organization (TBRO) conducted an investigation on Mad Island. They set up camera traps and collected hair samples, which were later analyzed. While the results were inconclusive, the team reported that they did find some unusual hair samples that did not match any known animal in the area.
Often conflated with the general Bigfoot phenomenon, the specific sightings in and around the Mad River basin—sometimes locally referred to as the "Mad Island" area due to the region's isolated geography—offer a unique case study in cryptid lore. This paper explores the history of sightings in the region, the intersection of local Native American mythology, and the scientific skepticism surrounding the creature known as the Mattole Beast or the Humboldt Bigfoot.
Yet, for over 50 years, a tiny, uninhabited patch of land near Matagorda Bay—known as —has been the epicenter of one of the most bizarre and compelling Sasquatch mysteries in the American South.
A Universal In-System Programming Software for the Microchip AVR family of microcontrollers
This is a download only product, nothing will be shipped to you. A free evaluation version is available. mad island bigfoot
ChipBlasterAVR is (C) Copyright 1998-2020 by HP InfoTech S.R.L., All Rights Reserved. You can choose to kill Bigfoot to stop
Fill in the Form - Check Your Cart - Pay - Enjoy CodeVisionAVR
| Total: |
|---|
| Shipping: |
| Total incl. VAT: |
Lets get in touch. Send us a message.