Dazed Bigfoot Crossed California Highway 101 During Fires.
The
Willits News reported there was a Bigfoot sighting on Highway 101 north
of Willits near Shimmins Ridge Road during the Mendocino Lightning
Complex fires last summer. Willits is a small town in Northern
California between the San Francisco Bay Area and Eureka.
According
to reporter Linda Williams, Chris LoPinto of Laytonville and at least
one other driver saw the creature step into the southbound lane near a
guardrail. It ran into the path of a small truck and caused LoPinto to
brake hard. The truck, which was trying to pass LoPinto’s car, managed
to avoid hitting the Bigfoot and continued on without stopping.
LoPinto
said the Bigfoot ran upright on its legs until it got to the middle of
the highway which was four lanes at that point. Then it leaned over and
ran with its arms down the rest of the way, to safety. Bigfoot
investigator Tom Yamarone told the reporter that the fact the Bigfoot
used its arms to cross the second half of the freeway was highly
unusual.
At that point some might think the creature was a
bear, but LoPinto got a good look at the face – the Bigfoot was only 25
feet away.
The description:
Estimated at seven feet tall.
It was covered with hair.
The face was completely flat, without a protruding nose.
When it turned to look at LoPinto its neck was stiff so it turned its entire body.
Its face was yellow or gold like a ripe banana.
It had a smooth, shiny forehead with ridges and no eyebrows.
The eyes glowed red, possibly as a reflection from the car’s headlights.
It had thin lips.
It had a simian face.
It appeared to be suffering from heat and heavy smoke from the fire.
LoPinto
filed reports with the Department of Fish and Game and with the
Mendocino County Sheriff’s Department. At first he didn’t realize it was
a Bigfoot. Eventually he got hold of Tom Yamarone to investigate.
(published on October 29, 2008)
(Not sure where some of this comes from, I've had it a long time, so I can't list any sources or give proper credit. Sorry)
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
First
let me start by saying that I know that some, if not most crop
circles are made by humans, but there remain some formations that have
some unexplainable facts, and one question is how can a big crop circle
be made over nite with just a couple guys with a rope and a plank?
Crop circles - Some Facts -
More
than 10,000 Crop Circle formations (Agriglyphs) have been found or cataloged worldwide. More than 6,000 crop circles have been
investigated and documented since 1980.
Crop circles are usually
not round, but slightly elliptical. In a real crop circle the plant's
shafts/stalks (mostly wheat, but also grass, barley, canola, buckwheat,
linseed, rice paddies, corn, sunflowers, blueberry bushes, trees, etc.)
are bent around an inch above soil (corn stalks are bent a couple of
inches above the soil) and the plants are laid in precise geometric
swirl patterns with little signs of physical damage. There may be light
burn marks at the base of stems, altered cellular structure and soil
chemistry, increased magnetic particle deposits, discrepancies in
background radiation, alteration of the local electromagnetic field,
depletion of the local watershed, along with long-lasting energy
patterns. Some analyzed crop circles have shown higher radiation levels.
Crop circles range in size from a few inches to hundreds of feet across
and have been as large as 200,000 sq. ft.
In real crop
circle formations the stems are not broken but bent at 90° angles about
an inch off the ground, at the plant's first node. The plants are
subjected to a short and intense burst of heat or energy that softens
the stems or stalks allowing them to be folded over onto the ground at a
90° angle. When the stems or stalks reharden into their new position,
the plants and crop are not damaged and continue to grow. This is the
method used to identify a real crop circle formation (agriglyph). The
canola oil plant has a structure like celery. If the stalk is bent more
than about 45°, the stalk will break. When crop circles are found in
canola fields, the stalks are bent 90°. Research and laboratory tests
suggest that microwave or ultrasound may be the only method capable of
producing this effect, but plant biologists are still baffled by this
phenomenon.
Stems
Crop circles are not a modern phenomenon and may have been occurring
for hundreds to thousands of years or longer. They exist in the
centuries-old folklore of South Africa and China, and are in Native
American Indian legends.
The first written account of a crop circle is from August 8, 1590 and is found in "The Natural History of Stafford-Shire",
published in 1686. There are also other references from England's 15th
century that suggest crop circle formations. In John Aubrey's "Natural History",
a 1633 school teacher seen green circles made by the spirits in the
grass. Another early historical record of a crop circle from 1678, is
the "Mowing Devil" case, where a farmer's field was believed to have
been visited by a devilish entity that trampled the crops down in a
circle. There is a wood engraving of this event. In 1686, a book
entitled "A Natural History of Staffordshire", made reference to rings, circles and other shapes found in grassy fields. The scientific journal, Nature,
decided to include in one of its issues a reference and a picture of
the June 17, 1996 DNA double helix field of barley crop formation, with
spiraling spheres of different sizes, found in Alton Barnes, England,
which was 648 feet long.
Double helix crop formation.
Man made circles -
When a man-made crop circle
is found, the grain stalks are broken, the formations are usually
jagged and the formations do not have any symmetry. Because of the
disinformation spread by the media, most people think that all crop
circles have been produced by pranksters with a plank, a garden roller,
ladders, ropes and measuring tools. The disinformation and non-media
coverage of crop circle formations actually protects the farmers and
their harvest from damage caused by researchers and the curious from
trampling their crop circle grains, harvest and lands.
Circle makers - can they make huge designs overnite?
Crop Circle Formation Designs -
the past 25
years, more than 10,000 crop circle formations have been found in more
than 29 countries: England, United States, Canada, Germany, Australia,
The Netherlands, Hungary, Japan, Wales, France, Scotland, Switzerland,
Czech Republic, Austria, Italy, New Zealand, Russia, Finland, Israel,
Poland, Brazil, Mexico, India, Sweden, Ireland, Yugoslavia, China,
Argentina, Croatia, Denmark, Peru, Romania, Siberia, Slovakia, Spain,
Turkey, Afghanistan, Bulgaria, Chile, Egypt, Isle-of-Man, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Malaysia, Nigeria, Norway, Sardinia, Tasmania, Ukraine,
Uruguay, etc. Most of the elaborate crop circles found, are found around
England's ancient and sacred site areas (Stonehenge, the earth mound of
Silbury Hill, Avebury, Cheesefoot Head, etc.). Southern England is
where around 90% of the elaborate crop circle formations and designs are
found. A majority of the world's crop circles are within a 40 mile
radius of Stonehenge. The dimensions of most of the early single crop
circles would fit inside the inner horseshoe at Stonehenge. Most crop
circles with single and double rings would fit within the inner and
outer edges of the first ring of stones at Stonehenge.
Crop circle
formations are no longer just circles, they now come in different
shapes, designs and pictograms. All real crop circle formations have
bent unbroken crop stems and interwoven stalks. The most common crop
circle is the single circle, but they also come in sets of two
(doublets), three (triplets) or four (quadruplets) and may be surrounded
by an outer ring or more circles. The stalks in a crop circle are bent
into a swirl pattern, and the swirl patterns spin clockwise or
counterclockwise or may contain two or more layers spinning in different
directions. When there is more than one circle, one circle may spin
clockwise and the other may spin counterclockwise. When looking at a
crop circle from the air, it may appear to spin clockwise, but when
looking at it on the ground the stalks will spin counterclockwise.In the
1980's and 1990's, the circles became more elaborate, producing crop
design patterns called pictograms. In the 1990s, crop circles formations
became complex patterns using intricate geometric designs and developed
exponentially in complexity. Some of the more sophisticated patterns
are based on mathematical equations.
Stonehenge circles
Crop Circle Researcher Colin Andrews -
Crop Circle Researcher Colin Andrews author of the book: "CROP CIRCLES - Signs of Contact" and co-author of the book: "Circular Evidence",
has been researching crop circles for than 20 years and has compiled
the largest database on crop circles. Colin has catalogued hundreds of
authentic and man-made crop circles in his crop research career. The
late philanthropist Laurence Rockefeller began funding Colin Andrews'
research into fake crop circles, back in 1999.
Crop Circle Plant Analysis and Research -
In
the field of Crop Circle Plant Analysis and Research (radioactivity
measurements, spectrographic analysis, magnetometer readings,
microscopic inspection, cellular plant experiments, weighing,
photographing, etc.): High-pressure infrasound is capable of boiling
water inside plant stems in one nanosecond, causing the water to steam,
and leaving tiny blowholes in the plants’ nodes. Research and laboratory
tests prove that infrasound (less than 20 Hz) is capable of producing
such an effect. This process creates surface charring along the stems.
Microwave radiation (high frequency electromagnetic waves) is also
believed to be how the stalks are bent and the plant's nodes are
swollen.
Farmers have reported that when they find a new
crop circle, they have seen steam rising into the air from within the
design. Crop circles also show the possible existence of ultrasound
also. Several people have reported hearing a trilling sound prior to
witnessing crop circles forming. They also report a total stillness in
the air (no wind) and total quiet. This trilling sound was captured on
magnetic tape and analyzed at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab as being
mechanical in nature with a frequency of 5.2kHz.
Biophysical
evidence shows the plant's nodes and stems are drastically extended,
seed embryos are altered, and their is the existence of expulsion
cavities, as if they have been heated from the inside. There is also a
reorganization of the plant’s crystalline structure. A malt fragrance
can also be smelled after cutting open a stem from a freshly made crop
circle, which means that the plant has been cooked from the inside, but
the crop remains unharmed.
Exhaustive lab analysis into hundreds
of 1991-1995 crop circles shows physical and biophysical changes to the
plants inside a crop circle. There are also alterations in the
germination, development of seed embryos, and alterations in the plant's
stem node length and circumference (up to 200% increase in one case).
The grains from crop circle plants can grow 40%-50% larger have a
stronger and larger root system with larger grains, than the grains from
the crop surrounding the crop circle. Alternatively, some crop circle
plants produce seeds that are smaller than normal plants. The reason for
the differences in the plants may be water supply available when the
formation was made, the age of the plant when the event occurs or the
type of plant. The internal structure of the plants is altered at the
cellular level. The cell pit walls of the plants are fractured and
expanded. In grain crops, there are nodes close to the ground that help
the plant grow vertically. Crop circle plants have expanded, elongated
or "blown nodes" nodes. The plants with the largest node expansion are
found in the center of a crop circle.
Crop Circle Soil Research -
Researchers
have found distinct changes in crop circle soil temperature,
composition, and crystalline structure in the soil and within the crops
inside the formations. It has been scientifically documented that soil
samples taken from within crop circles, show changes to the soil's
crystalline structure and mineral composition and the soil appears to
have been baked. Analysis concluded that a heat of 1,500°C would be
required to create such a change. Four non-naturally occurring,
short-life radioactive isotopes (vanadium, europium, tellurium and
ytterbium), that dissipate in 3-4 hours, have also been found in the
soil. Soil tests have also shown that alpha emissions are around 200%
above normal, beta emissions are around 50% above normal and the soil is
2 to 3 times as radioactive as the soil outside the crop circle.
Large
quantities of surface and subsurface water (up to millions of gallons
water) in and around a crop circle disappear. Aerial photography, using
infrared film, shows the groundwater under a crop circle is depleted for
several days to a week or more before the water table returns to
normal. The soil within a crop circle formation is generally dry,
cracked and dehydrated, even after heavy rain.
Crop Circle magnetic Fields -
The
Earth's magnetic field (energy grid) is a multi-poled magnet and the
magnetic fields connecting each pole run along what is called ley lines.
The north and south poles are the strongest poles of our multi-poled
planet. There are also secondary poles located all over our planet. The
area around Stonehenge is one of these secondary pole locations. Like
all of our planets ancient sacred sites, crop circles mostly appear at
the intersecting points of the Earth’s magnetic pathways of energy (ley
lines). The size and shape of a crop circle formation depends on the
proximity to the ley lines, magnetic node points and the water available
at that site. Measurements of the earth's magnetic field inside crop
circles, have been recorded with increases up to 120%.
Crop Circle Electromagnetic Effects -
Crop
circles alter the surrounding electromagnetic field. Electromagnetic
measurements (EM) have registered 40 to 50 nano Teslas in the middle of
some crop circles (10 times the normal radiation level). Compasses spin
erratically and can’t locate north, battery powered devices like
watches, cameras and cellular phones malfunction, brand new batteries
are drained in minutes, car batteries have been drained, overhead
helicopter and aircraft equipment are affected, radio frequencies are
different inside the crop formation, farm animals and birds are agitated
and stay away from the crop formation, and with really large crop
circle formations, entire towns have lost power.
Crop Circle Effects on Humans -
The
electromagnetic energy inside a crop circle can also interact with
human and animal brainwave patterns. Because the human and animal body
is electromagnetic in nature, being inside or near a crop circle has
been known to affect people’s biophysical rhythms. Women will also
experience menstruation cycles early. Some people experience heightened
states of awareness and healings in crop circles commonly associated
with sacred sites and holy places. Other people complain about of
headaches and unusual pleasant or unpleasant physical or mental
symptoms. People also experience dizziness, disorientation and nausea.
Prolonged exposure to infra-sound or microwaves (which interact with the
water in the body) produce the same symptoms.
Crop Circle Witnesses -
More
than 80 people have witnessed and reported seeing crop circles forming
in 15-20 seconds. They all describe seeing incandescent or brightly
colored balls of light (orbs) before and after the crop circle is
formed, proving that the orbs of light are involved in crop circle
formations. In some reports, people have seen shafts of light in a field
where the crop is swirled into a geometric shape. When farmers find new
crop circle formations, they usually see steam rising into the air from
within the design.
Conclusion -
It is easy to dismiss all
crop circles as man made and it is my guess that most circles are man
made but there remain some crop circles that appear to be different and
as of yet can not be explained. We should keep an open
mind about crop circles, maybe some day we will be able to explain what
is really making these circles...be it man, something in nature, natural
phenomena, Aliens, Angels or something as of yet to be discovered. So let just
keep on researching this until we find the final answer.
(Not sure where some of this comes from, I've had it a long time, so I can't list any sources or give proper credit. Sorry. If by chance anyone knows the original source please let me know, I would be glad to give proper credit)
Please note that some of this data may be slightly outdated.
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
I was alerted by a friend of a possible track find in London, KY. The above photo shows what appears to be a very large track. There also appears to be toes if you look closer. This along with more tracks were found only a couple days ago on 12/03/15.
Here is what the poster (Darlene) of the photo had to say:
"I just had to share this with u. Yesterday I found Bigfoot footprints in my driveway yesterday and freaked us out. Here is a picture of one of them. U can see there left and right all down my driveway and if u zoom in on this picture, U can see the toes . The prints are over 4 feet apart all the way down my driveway, plus my grass in the backyard has been wollered on and my clothes line has been torn down. Also heard grunting a few days ago. Josh is 6 foot 4 and he tried making the same steps and couldn't."
I was able to talk with Darlene via messaging and she told me her son's shoe size is a 14 wide and that it was no comparison to the foot tracks.
Darlene also posted the following picture, which I have added some red arrow to, of what appears to be multiple tracks.
I hope to have a little more information about this in the near future. Kentucky is an idea place for Bigfoot with it's abundant resources and mild winters.
A thanks goes to Darlene for messaging with me and for sharing her photos and a thanks to our friend John, who alerted us to this very recent finding.
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
Indian tribes across North America have a total of more than sixty different terms for the Sasquatch.
"Bigfoot"
was a journalistic term generated in the middle of the last century
during a rash of sightings in Northern California. The word has come to
be recognized widely.
Many different terms have been used
by pioneers and later non-native inhabitants of North America, including
"skookums" and "mountain devils".
The description given
here is derived from a compilation of thousands of eye witness reports
from the entire continent, some of astounding length, detail, and
corroborative evidence; the Patterson movie, taken in 1967, and a recent
computer-based image analysis of it; and statistical analysis of a
large database accumulated over the last fifty years, primarily by John
Green.
W. H. Fahrenbach
(Source: W.H. Fahrenback)
I personally prefer the term Bigfoot...I really don't know why.
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
The Jersey Devil, sometimes called the Leeds Devil, is a legendary
creature or cryptid said to inhabit the Pine Barrens of Southern New
Jersey. The creature is often described as a flying biped with hooves,
but there are many variations. The Jersey Devil has worked its way into
the pop culture of the area, even lending its name to New Jersey's team
in the National Hockey League.
Most accounts of the Jersey
Devil legend attribute the creature to a "Mother Leeds", a supposed
witch, although the tale has many variations. According to one version,
she invoked the devil while giving birth to her 13th child, and when the
baby was born, it either immediately or soon afterwards transformed
into a devil like creature and flew off into the surrounding pines.
According
to legend, while visiting the Hanover Mill Works to inspect his
cannonballs being forged, Commodore Stephen Decatur sighted a flying
creature flapping its wings and fired a cannonball directly upon it to
no effect. Joseph Bonaparte, eldest brother of Emperor Napoleon, is also
said to have witnessed the Jersey Devil while hunting on his
Bordentown, New Jersey estate around 1820. Throughout the 1800s, the
Jersey Devil was blamed for livestock killings, strange tracks, and
reported sounds. In the early 1900s, a number of people in New Jersey
and neighboring states claimed to witness the Jersey Devil or see its
tracks. Claims of a corpse matching the Jersey Devil's description arose
in 1957. In 1960, the merchants around Camden offered a $10,000 reward
for the capture of the Jersey Devil, even offering to build a private
zoo to house the creature if captured.
MORE DETAIL ABOUT THE JERSEY DEVIL
THE JERSEY DEVIL Without a doubt, New Jersey’s oldest, most enduring,
and important pieces of folklore is the tale of the infamous Jersey
Devil. For close to three hundred years now, Jerseyans have told tales
of this mythical beast which stalks the Pine Barrens and terrorizes
local residents. The recurring nature of this story begs a few of
questions: Why have New Jerseyans embraced this legend so steadfastly,
and above all others? Is there actually some sort of creature roaming
the Pine Barrens of Southern NJ? And if so, what in God’s name is it?
Legend
has it that in 1735, a Pines resident known as Mother Leeds found
herself pregnant for the thirteenth time. (Leeds is the name of one of
New Jersey’s earliest settlers, and many descendants of the Leeds family
can still be found throughout NJ to this day.) Mother Leeds was not
living a wealthy lifestyle by any means. Her husband was a drunkard who
made few efforts to provide for his wife and twelve children. Reaching
the point of absolute exasperation upon learning of her thirteenth
child’s forthcoming, she raised her hands to the heavens and proclaimed
“Let this one be a devil!”
She went into labor a few
months later, on a tumultuously stormy night, no longer mindful of the
curse she had utter previously regarding her unborn child. Her children
and husband huddled together in one room of their Leeds’ Point home
while local midwives gathered to deliver the baby in another. By all
accounts the birth went routinely, and the thirteenth Leeds child was a
seemingly normal baby boy.
Within minutes however, Mother
Leeds’ unholy wish of months before began to come to fruition. The baby
started to change, and metamorphosed right before her very eyes. Within
moments it transformed from a beautiful newborn baby into a hideous
creature unlike anything the world had ever seen.
The
wailing infant began growing at an incredible rate. It sprouted horns
from the top of its head and talon-like claws tore through the tips of
its fingers. Leathery bat-like wings unfurled from its back, and hair
and feathers sprouted all over the child’s body. Its eyes began glowing
bright red as they grew larger in the monster’s gnarled and snarling
face. The creature savagely attacked its own mother, killing her, then
turned its attention to the rest of the horrified onlookers who
witnessed its tempestuous transformation. It flew at them, clawing and
biting, voicing unearthly shrieks the entire time. It tore the midwives
limb from limb, maiming some and killing others.
The
monster then knocked down the door to the next room where its own father
and siblings cowered in fear and attacked them all, killing as many as
it could. Those who survived to tell the tale then watched in horror as
the rotten beast sprinted to the chimney and flew up it, destroying it
on the way and leaving a pile of rubble in its wake. The creature then
made good its escape into the darkness and desolation of the Pines,
where it has lived ever since. To this day the creature, known varyingly
as the Leeds Devil and the Jersey Devil, claims the Pines as its own,
and terrorizes any who are unfortunate enough to encounter it.
In
18th and 19th centuries the Jersey Devil was spotted sporadically
throughout the Pine Barrens region, frightening local residents and any
of those brave enough to traverse the vast undeveloped expanses of New
Jersey’s southern reaches. Unearthly wails were often reported emanating
from the dark forests and swampy bogs, and the slaughter of
domesticated animals would invariably be attributed to the Phantom of
the Pines. Over the years the legend of the Leeds Devil grew,
occasionally even overstepping the boundaries of its rural Pine Barrens
haunt to terrorized local towns and cities.
The most
infamous of these incidents occurred during the week of January 16 thru
23, 1909. Early in the week reports starting emerging from all across
the Delaware Valley that strange tracks were being found in the snow.
The mysterious footprints went over and under fences, through fields and
backyards, and across the rooftops of houses. They were even reported
in the large cities of Camden and Philadelphia. Panic immediately began
to spread, and posses formed in more than one town. Fear and intrigue
grew even greater when it was reported that bloodhounds refused to
follow the unidentified creature’s trail in Hammonton. Schools closed or
suffered low attendance throughout lower NJ and in Philadelphia. Mills
in the Pine Barrens were forced to close when workers refused to leave
their homes and travel through the woods to get to their jobs.
Eyewitnesses
spotted the beast in Camden and in Bristol, Pennsylvania, and in both
cities police fired on it but did not manage to bring it down. A few
days later it reappeared in Camden, attacking a late night meeting of a
social club and then flying away. Earlier that day it had appeared in
Haddon Heights, setting its sights upon a trolley car before flying
away. Witnesses claimed that it looked like a large flying kangaroo.
Another trolley car full of people saw it in Burlington when it scurried
across the tracks in front of their car. In West Collingswood it
appeared on the roof of a house and was described as an ostrich-like
creature. Firemen turned their hose upon it, but it attacked them and
then flew away. The entire week people reported that their livestock,
particularly their chickens, were being slaughtered. This was most
widespread in the towns of Bridgeton and Millville.
The
marauding misanthrope reappeared later in the week in Camden, where a
local woman found the beast attempting to eat her dog. She hit it with a
broomstick and it flew away.
While there has not since
been been another week to match the frequency, fervor, and intensity of
the January 1909 rampage, numerous sightings of the Jersey Devil have
continued to be reported to this day. The tale of the Devil has spread
beyond the Pine Barrens and has been embraced by all of New Jersey, even
to the point where it has been largely commercialized. The Devil is
portrayed in toys, on t-shirts, and is even the subject of his own comic
book. Most famously, the Devil has lent its name to New Jersey’s NHL
hockey team.
There are still many, however, who believe
that the Jersey Devil is a very real, very dangerous creature. There has
been a constant stream of reports over the years of Devil encounters.
Most often, people report finding strange, unidentifiable tracks in the
sandy soil in desolate areas of the Pine Barrens. Some reports claim
that they are the footprints of a strange bird. Others say that they
closely resemble hoofprints, although whatever it is walks on just two
legs. There have even been a substantial amount of reports which
describe the tracks as being cloven, a well cited description of the
feet/hooves of a more famous Devil, Satan. While less frequent, there
are still occasional reports of people who see more than just tracks and
manage to catch a glimpse of Ol’ JD himself. He is most commonly
described as having the body of a kangaroo, the head of a dog, the face
of a horse, large leathery wings, antlers similar to those of a deer, a
forked reptilian tail, and prominent, intimidating claws.
While
some Jerseyans embrace their Devil as nothing more than a quaint
figment of our collective imagination, a source of unification and
pride, and a unique and important piece of NJ folk culture, others see
it as a very real creature and a threat upon their safety. Still others
who have sworn they did not believe in the existence of the Jersey Devil
have had their minds changed after spending just one moonlit night in
the Pine Barrens. There, where a ghostly mist drifts across the cedar
swamps and the unearthly cry of some unseen creature can be heard
piercing the stillness of the dark forest, few disbelievers can be
found. Whether its deep in the Pine Barrens or deep in our collective
unconscious, one thing is certain; the Devil still lurks in New Jersey,
and most likely always will.
(Not sure where some of this comes from, I've had it a long time, so I can't list any sources or give proper credit. Sorry)
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
The first sighting of the supposed Mothman occurred on November 12,
1966. A group of gravediggers working in a cemetery in Clendenin, West
Virginia saw the figure fly through the air, right over their heads.
Other people began seeing the same creature, which they described as
looking like a man with wings.
On November 15 two
different couples in Point Pleasant had their own firsthand encounters
with the Mothman. They claimed it was at least six foot tall, and closer
to seven feet tall. They also described its bright eyes, and the huge
wings on its back. The four saw the creature fly through the air after
first unfolding its large wings. They also claimed the creature flew at
speeds of at least 100 miles per hour.
Police began
receiving reports from all over. People kept calling with reports of a
strange bird seen in the area. One man in the area, Newell Partridge saw
his television screen turn fuzzy with colors he had never seen before.
At the same time his dog began howling loudly, and a loud screeching
sound came from outside. When he walked outside, he saw two glowing red
eyes just before whatever it was flew off into the night. Almost
immediately his dog raced after it, and didn't return.
The
popularity of the creature continued to grow, as news stations and
papers around the world caught on. Dozens of locals continued to tell
the stories of what they saw, and everyone clamored for even the
smallest piece of information. In the end the press dubbed the creature
the Mothman, partly based on the hit television show Batman running at
the time.
Many of the stories of the Mothman centered on a
former TNT plant that sat empty and abandoned on the edge of town. The
building sat in the middle of a wooded area, where few people tended to
venture. Nearby was ananimal preserve, and some believed the Mothman
could find food there and blend in with the other animals in the area.
There were also stories that the creature had hid there for years before
finally being seen.
On November 16 a new report of the
Mothman surfaced, only this one came from a home near the TNT plant.
Ralph Thomas and his family spotted a strange red light in the area. At
first they thought it might be some kind of plane, but the small light
continued to circle the plant before dipping closer to the roof of the
building.
A friend stopped by for a visit, and claimed to
see the Mothman next to her car. The creature slowly climbed to its
feet, giving her a clear look into its glowing red eyes. The woman and
her daughter ran inside, where they watched the Mothman walk onto the
porch and look in the windows before flying away.
For
some, the sightings of the Mothman coincided with reports of other
strange things in the area. There were reports of UFO's in the area, and
stories of strange men in black stopping locals on the road. One
weekend over 500 reports came in regarding strange lights and things
spotted in the skies above Point Pleasant. The Mothman was the real
story though, with over 100 reports occurring in a single year.
One
thing the people thought might be connected to the Mothman was an odd
man who visited a local reporter. The man had strange eyes and an odd
voice. The reporter claimed to feel extremely uncomfortable in his
presence, and found herself wishing he would just leave. The man acted
oddly, and seemed amazed by ordinary things in her office. She saw him
once again, but when he noticed her staring at him, he climbed into a
black car and ran off.
The real story of the Mothman came
on December 15, 1967. Cars were passing over the 700 foot bridge that
connected Point Pleasant and Ohio when the bridge suddenly and
unexpectedly collapsed. The rush hour traffic crossing the bridge was
caught in the middle. Cars were sent into the icy river, and 46 people
were killed. Only 44 of those bodies were found, and they were all
buried in the same cemetery in Gallipolis, Ohio.
The night
the bridge collapsed, people in the area spotted strange lights above
Point Pleasant. Others in the area saw a man who appeared on their
doorstep, asking questions about the mysteriouslights they saw in the
sky over previous months. He seemed nice, though most people reported
that he made them feel uneasy or uncomfortable. By all indications, that
was the last time the Mothman was seen.
The story of the
Mothman has fascinated people for decades now. What was that creature
that people spotted in the sky? Was it related to the UFO sightings, or
was it foretelling the tragedy about to come? Those questions are things
that we may never have an answer to.
(Not sure where some of this comes from, I've had it a long time, so I can't list any sources. Sorry)
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
There
seems to be renewed interests in the 'wildmen' of Asia...probably the
best known is the Yeti. But there have been expeditions into the more
tropical areas of south central Asia as well. In this post, I want to
concentrate on mountainous central Asia, specifically those hominids or
'snowmen' that are said to exist in the Pamir Range of Tajikistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan and northern Pakistan. These hominids go by
several monikers...the Barmanu, the Tajik Yeti, the Almysty, the
Golub-Yavan or simply the Gul.
In August 2001, the Russian
magazine Karavan + I, published an article about the killing of a wild
man on the old Soviet-Afghanistan border. According to the author,
border guards of the Kevran unit in the Pamir Mountains saw a "Snowman"
during the winter of 1967/68. They reported their observation to their
superior, Kuzkov, the officer in charge of the unit. He did not, at
first, pay any attention to it.
The soldiers of the next
watch again saw a creature and reported the fact. Subsequently, the duty
officer accompanied the soldiers to the spot and personally observed
the creature. Kuskov informed his superior officer, a colonel in Khorog –
a settlement on the Tajikistan-Afghanistan border. News about this
reached the Central Asia Command where, in February 1968, a high-ranking
officer gave the order, ‘Catch him or, if that isn’t possible,
eliminate him!’. Thereupon, the border guards shot the creature and took
it to the border post. The body was stored in a woodshed. A subsequent
article 3) in Karavan + I in September 2001 on the happening disclosed
that the body was taken to Moscow in great secrecy.
The
magazine questioned two scientists to establish what had happened to the
remains of the "Snowman". One of these was Georgy Skvorzov, director of
the programme Animals in inhabited settlements and, according to
Karavan, for many years a collector of information about the ‘Snowmen’.
[Karavan:] Georgy, do you believe in the existence of the Snowmen?
[Skvorzov:]
Of course. The Snowman has not only just been seen once in the
mountains of Tibet, in the Pamir Mountains, Siberia and the northern
Caucasus. In recent time these sightings have been fewer. Probably these
very cautious creatures are hiding from the advancing human
civilisation.
[Karavan:] Do you know about the affair at
the end of Winter 1968 when our border guards killed a Snowman in the
Pamir Mountains and brought his body to the capital? Did scientists get
their hands on this specimen?
[Skvorzov:] We have slightly
different information if we are talking about the same event. According
to my information the body of a Snowman was found by a shepherd in the
Pamir Mountains in autumn 1968. But at that time our scientists only
received pieces of the fur and the eye-teeth.
The magazine
confided that their editor had been visited by an ex-border guard
called Andrej. He had served in the Pamir Mountains during the 1960s and
had confirmed the killing of a "Snowman" at the place mentioned.
Further information about what happened to the body or about the fur and
eye-teeth was not given.
In the Russian Newspaper Simbirskij Kur'er (Simbirsk Courier), Arsenij
Korolev reported in 2002 among others about a 1982 expedition of the
Tajik Academy of Science in the Hissar Mountains in the western Pamirs.
The academy was equally involved in the 'snowman' problem. According to
Korolev, in the 1980s, many adventure lovers came to Tajikistan in
search of snowmen. During their holidays, media workers organized
themselves into groups and came to the Hissar Mountains. A great number
of publications followed as a result and the local press was full of
stories concerning the Gul' He writes: “Only few, however, knew that
this puzzle would be solved by the scientists of the Tajik Academy of
Science." Tatjana Vasileva, at that time a scientist at the academy, is
quoted as following: “Despite all that, the scientists were not
inactive. Of course we were inquisitive to follow the traces of the
snowman, particularly so when this legends was just close to us. But the
leading stuff of the Academy was against an official expedition. The
only thing that we could do was to organize an expedition that was
dealing with soil profiles. At the same time, we could also search for
traces of the snowman."
Cryptozoologist George M. Eberhart's description of the 'Wildman'
At
the beginning of May 1982, a ten member expedition left for the Hissar
Mountains. Flora and fauna related materials were collected and examined
to find possible eyewitnesses of the snowman. The expedition team noted
that the locals themselves would reluctantly talk about the Gul. Often,
they changed the subject quite abruptly. In most cases, no personal
experiences would be reported except for encounters through another
person. The expedition found no traces of "Snowmen".
Furthermore,
Korolev reported about an encounter with a police chief of Tadshikabad
who spent the weekend with friends in the mountains: “After lunch, the
friends went to the river for a bath. The policeman was tired and fell
asleep. He only woke up because someone was shaking his car. He looked
back and saw a Gul beside his Shiguli. The Gul was pushing the Shiguli
forward. Then, the creature placed its hands at the rear windscreen of
his car. Full of fear, the policeman shot up and the Gul ran away. But
the prints of his hands at the rear windscreen of his car have remained.
A Tajik detective has taken these prints and has forwarded them to the
police department of criminal investigation."
A guide Surob stakes his honor on the wild man's existence. “I saw his footprints, bigger than the man’s, in snow.”
The
road slides upwards from Dushanbe and starts to disintegrate. Surob
gestures towards a sad-looking town to our right. “That’s town where I
was born, after collapse Soviet Union, people started banging, stealing,
breaking everything, proving they themselves are the Yetis.” He
bristles when I suggest the Yeti may be a peasant mirage. “They swear on
the Koran. Why should they lie? They know nothing, they have nothing,
they swear by Allah they have seen it.” I back down.
We
pull up at a shack for a pit stop. This is where the valley begins. I am
peckish. Soviet-style sweets are displayed in plastic bags. “What’s the
best one?” I ask in Russian. The proprietor dashes to a side room and
brings me a Snickers bar. My guide wants to hurry, but an old man with
an unwashed beard and one strikingly yellow tooth asks for a ride up
towards his village. Surob asks him if he is from here. “He from here.
Now I will gather the information.”
The peasant knows
about the Yeti. “Ten years ago, I saw him. I was climbing a hill to
gather firewood and I saw somebody. I go hey, hey, but then he started
running towards me. It was the Yeti, covered in black wool, with breasts
like the woman’s…”
I ask him to swear on the Koran that
he saw the Yeti. Raising his hand to heaven the old man insists and
gives me his Islamic word. “I don’t know about other people, but I saw
it. It was shouting with anger, rarghh, I was shouting with fear, eeee,
and I run.” The countryside changes dramatically as we talk. The road
has become a dirt track. The car is swerving and sidling as it climbs up
the barren gullies. The old man insists he saw the Yeti. Everyone knows
somebody who has in the nearby villages. “When I got back to the
village, my father started reading the Koran to me, as protection.”
Nature
is starting to blossom in rich abundance. Cherry blossom hangs off the
crags. Shoots of wild onions sprout out of the dark earth. “Look,” says
Surob. “Look at the herbals, the Yeti is eating the herbals, this is why
he lives here.” Coloured tips of wild flowers, blues, reds, purples,
grow among the jagged browns, reds and greys of the mountains. Another
curve. A stark, barren river valley. “Hey, they saw him too.” Surob
stops the car and gives traditional greetings to two middle-aged men
driving the traditional clapped-out Lada.
“Yeah, I had
fight with him,” says the hunter. “He has wool, black wool, and these
breasts…” And he wolf-whistles. His companion, a chubby man in a sizable skullcap, butts in. “Oh yes, I was up in the glade, and he
attacked my donkey. It was very frightening. He looked like a wild man —
or a clever monkey.” The sightings occur in the same places. Regularly.
In the winter of 2002, Pakistan newspapers reported that the 'Russian UFO Digest' (Rossiskij Ufologicheskij Daidjest)
reported a new wildmen event in Pakistan. A 20 year-old citizen of the
Pakistan village of Kharipur, Radschu, left his house and heard strange
sounds from the bushes in front of it. Suddenly an apelike male creature,
about 1,20m high, covered with thick black coat, came out of the bushes
and attacked and scratched him. Radschu cried and run back into his
house. The 'wildmen' fled from the apple garden when other men using
torches began to search around Radschu´s house. Eyewitnesses reported
about the high shrill cries of the creature. Old villagers remembered
they has seen such "strangers from the mountains" many times in the
past, particulary in winter, when they came into the villages in search
for food.
A another 'wild man' hominid is thought to live
in portions of eastern Afghanistan as well as the Shishi Kuh Valley in
the Chitral region of North Pakistan. The Barmanu, which translates as
“The Hairy One”, is often thought to be related to early hominids and
descriptions generally resemble the Neanderthal. As is the case with
other sightings of man like hairy hominids, accounts of this creature
are often accompanied by tales of a horrible stench, a trait which is
attributed to the creature’s wilderness lifestyle and hair covered body.
Legends of this creature have been told by the locals for centuries,
but it was not until the early 1990’s that the legend would receive
international attention.
During the early 1900’s several
Spanish expeditions into the Shishi Kih Valley region of North Pakistan
learned of the Barmanu through retelling of the legend by local people.
The tales of the Barmanu eventually caught the ear of zoologist Jordi
Magraner who traveled to the region with medical doctor Anne Mallasse
and another team member. Between 1992 and 1994 Magraner and his team
detailed not only eyewitness reports but personal experiences including
grunting noise thought to have been made by a primitive voice box as
well as discovering ape like foot prints. Magraner was killed by one of
his Pakistani guides on August 2, 2002.
(Apologizes to Lon for not giving proper credit. This was something I had saved on my PC almost 5 years ago and I assumed the sources listed below covered all credits.)
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
(Sources: www.unknownexplorers.com "Again
the "Snowman" - Rossiskij Ufologicheskij Dajdjest (Russian UFO Digest) -
January, 2003 Gurov, Boris - "Snowman Against the
USSR" - Karavan + I - August 19, 2001 Gurov, Boris -
"On the Tracks of Snowman" - Karavan + I - October 10,
2001 Khakhlov, Vitaly - "On the "Wild Men" in Central
Asia" - The Commission for the Study of the "Snowman" Question -
1959 Eberhart, George M. - "Mysterious Creatures: A
Guide to Cryptozoology, Volume 1" - 2002 standpointmag.co.ukwww.andras-nagy.com Smeljanskij, Vladimir - "Mountain Spirit" - Rabochaja Gazeta - May 24, 2006 www.tajinfo.ru Makarov, Vadim - "Atlas of the Snowman" - 2002)
This post sponsored in part by
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HISTORY
The Tasmanian Tiger, otherwise known
as the Thylacine (a conjugation of its scientific name) was an
inhabitant of Australia and Tasmania up to about 12,000 years ago. Once
dingoes appeared on the Australian mainland the thylacine population
disappeared, with the only surviving population being left on the island
of Tasmania. When farmers moved to Tasmania in the early 1800s, the
thylacines were seen as pests that were good for nothing other than
killing the livestock of the farmers. A systematic slaughter of the
thylacines was set in place, with bounties being rewarded for the
scalps. By the early 1900s thylacines were rare creatures, and the last
bounty was paid in 1909. The last reported killing of a "tiger" was
1930. The thylacines were given protected status in 1933, but it was too
late... the last thylacine found was captured and sent to the Hobart
Domain Zoo just two months after they became a protected species. This
last thylacine died on September 7, 1936. The people of Australia and
Tasmania mourned the loss of their Tasmanian Tiger. Tasmania put the
thylacine on its official Coat of Arms. This thylacine was later named
"Benjamin".
DESCRIPTION
The thylacine closely resembles a
dog, but it is actually a carnivorous marsupial, belonging to the same
family as the kangaroo and Tasmanian devil. The male thylacine would
reach 6 feet in length from head to tail, at about 45 lbs. It sported
distinctive stripes that began in mid-back and continued down to the
tail. Females were smaller. The bunched and extended rear was
reminiscent of hyenas. The tail was long, thin, inflexible and did not
wag. Its fur was coarse and sandy-brown. They had pouches in which they
carried their young. The opening on their pouches faced towards the rear
of the animal, rather than towards the head (as with Kangaroos).
Thylacines often hunted in pairs, but they did not have great speed, the
best they could do was a fast clumsy "ambling", and they seemed to
catch up to prey mainly by exhausting it from constant chase. They fed
on various animals up to the size of kangaroos. They had powerful
elongated jaws with a huge gape that could crush the skulls of their
victims. When hunted by people using dogs, the thylacines would show no
fear when cornered and would often kill the first dog to go in. The
thylacines normally did not make any sound, but while hunting they were
heard to sometimes make a quick barking "yip-yip". No known recording
exists. Thylacines were primarily nocturnal animals. Little is known
about their social habits. From shot and captured specimens it seems
that a typical thylacine litter was 3 or 4 "pups". The thylacines that
were captured and put into captivity often died quickly, but some
survived up to 13 years. They did not make for great attractions at the
zoos, caged thylacines were morose and did not respond to affection from
their human caretakers.
THE SIGHTINGS BEGIN
Soon after Benjamin's
death, reports of thylacine sightings came in from the mountains of
northwestern Tasmania. Australia's Animals and Birds Protection Board
sent an investigative team into the area but all they came back with
were some interesting reports from the inhabitants of the area. Interest
was high and another expedition that was sent in 1938 found the first
evidence of living thylacines - footprints that were positively
identified as belonging to thylacines. After this expedition, World War
II intervened and the next expedition did not take place until 1945.
This privately funded expedition found thylacine footprints and
collected more sighting reports.
SHEEP KILLINGS
In
1957 zoologist Eric R. Guiler, chairman of the Animals and Birds
Protection Board, went to Broadmarsh to investigate the killing of some
sheep by an unknown predator. Tracks were found that were identified as
thylacine prints. But no thylacine was found. Several more expeditions
followed between 1957 and 1966, but these produced only more footprints
and more reports of sightings from the local residents.
HIDDEN CAMERAS
In
1968 a Tiger Center was established, to which people could report their
thylacine sightings. Expeditions continued to beat the brush in the
wildlands of Tasmania searching for thylacines. In the 1970s a project
was set up by the World Wildlife Fund that set up several
automatic-camera units at locations where sightings were concentrated.
Bait was used and infrared beams were used to trigger the cameras. The
project ended in failure in 1980, no thylacines were captured on film.
In his official report, project leader Steven J. Smith of the National
Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) stated his view that thylacines are
extinct. Zoologist Eric Guiler later set up his own hidden camera
operation, but this attempt to capture a living thylacine on film also
failed. But the number of reported sightings shot up between 1970 and
1980, a total of 104. This gave investigators new hope in finding a
remnant population of thylacines still surviving in the more remote
areas of Tasmania. Reports of living thylacines also began to come in
from southwestern Western Australia, which was very strange because
thylacines were eliminated from mainland Australia thousands of years
ago after the introduction of dingoes, which made quick work of the
slower moving thylacines.
LIVING THYLACINE IDENTIFIED BY PARK RANGER
On
a rainy night in March of 1982 a NPWS park ranger was sleeping in the
back seat of his car. Something woke him up and he turned on his
spotlight, and turned it onto an animal that was about 20 feet away. He
said it was a thylacine, "an adult male in excellent condition, with 12
black stripes on a sandy coat." The animal ran off, and because of the
rain, no footprints were left.
The NPWS kept the report
from the public until January 1984, in order to keep people from going
to the area and disturbing the possible habitat of the last living
thylacines. This sighting did not prove the existence of living
thylacines to the government's satisfaction though, and no official
statement was made to that effect. There was also the question of was to
do about the extensive mining and timber operations in the area. If
living thylacines were found, would the government have to shut down
those commercial enterprises? The question of protection of thylacines
versus business interests was a thorny one that the government would
have to be very careful about. Real proof of living thylacines was
necessary - a live or dead thylacine body would have to be produced.
A THYLACINE SHOT IN 1981?
Following
the rash of thylacine sightings in Western Australia, the state's
Agricultural Protection Board sent Kevin Cameron, a tracker of
aboriginal descent, to investigate. Soon Cameron reported that he
himself sighted and identified a living thylacine in Western Australia.
But this was not proof enough. Then in 1985 Cameron produced pictures
that he claimed were taken of a living thylacine, along with casts of
thylacine footprints. The pictures were presented to zoologist Athol M.
Douglas at the Western Australian Museum in Perth. They showed an dog
like animal burrowing at the base of the tree. The head was hidden from
view, but its striped back and stiff tail strongly implied that it was a
thylacine. Suspicions began to arise though. Cameron would not say
where he took the pictures, and he vacillated on giving permission to
have the pictures reproduced for publication, eventually agreeing.
Cameron accompanied Douglas to a photographic laboratory while he made
enlargements. Douglas found,
"When I saw the negatives, I
realized Cameron's account with regard to the photographs was
inaccurate. The film had been cut, frames were missing, and the photos
were taken from different angles - making it impossible for the series
to have been taken in 20 or 30 seconds, as Cameron had stated.
Furthermore, in one negative, there was the shadow of another person
pointing what could be an over-under 12 gauge shotgun. Cameron had told
me he had been alone. It would have been practically impossible for an
animal as alert as a thylacine to remain stationary for so long while
human activity was going on in its vicinity. In addition, it is
significant that the animal's head does not appear in any of the
photographs." The story and pictures were released in the New Scientist
magazine, and its readers were soon criticizing the authenticity of the
photographs. They pointed out that the animal seemed to stay dead still
from photograph to photograph. And they realized by the differing
lengths of the shadows that the pictures were taken over at least an
hour. It would seem that the pictures were a hoax, and the specimen was a
stuffed thylacine. But the first picture, the one that showed the
shadow of a person holding a gun aimed at the thylacine, was omitted
from the New Scientist story. Douglas feels that,
"The
full frame of this negative is the one which shows the shadow of the man
with a rigid gun-like object pointing in the direction of the thylacine
at the base of the tree. This shadow was deliberately excluded in the
photos published in New Scientist. If I am correct in this supposition,
the thylacine was alive when the first photo was taken, but had been
dead [and frozen in rigor mortis] for several hours by the time the
second photograph was taken." Douglas hoped that the carcass would
surface, but that is doubtful since shooting a thylacine is punishable
by a $5000 fine. Cameron was not helpful in shedding any further light
on it. So the "Cameron" episode remains clouded in mystery. Either it
was a hoax using a stuffed thylacine, or a living thylacine was shot,
for reasons unknown, and pictures were taken of it. The fact that the
head is not in any of the photographs may be because the animal was shot
in the head. If they were using a stuffed thylacine, then why hide the
head?
THYLACINE CARCASS FOUND IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA
In
1966 an expedition from the Western Australia Museum found a thylacine
carcass in a cave near Mundrabilla Station. Carbon dating showed the
carcass to be 4,500 years old, but that method of dating may be invalid
since the body had been soaking in groundwater which permeated the whole
body. Zoologist Athol Douglas reported that along with the thylacine
carcass was also found a dingo carcass, and that the dingo carcass was
much more deteriorated than the thylacine carcass. Douglas gave his
opinion that the dingo carcass was not older than 20 years, and that the
thylacine carcass was not older than a year. But since the carbon
dating argues against a recent death of this thylacine, official proof
of surviving thylacines has still not been claimed.
THE SIGHTINGS SPREAD
Cryptozoological
investigator Rex Gilroy has collected various reports of thylacine
sightings from "over a wide area of the rugged eastern Australian
mountain ranges, from far north Queensland through New South Wales to
eastern Victoria." Casts of footprints found in those areas have been
verified as thylacine prints. Gilroy even claims to have seen a
thylacine himself. Diving at night with a friend along a highway towards
the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, something dashed out of the scrub
along the highway and ran in front of them. It then stopped and stared
back at the headlights for a few seconds before running off into the
scrub, towards Grose Valley. It was "almost the size of a full-grown
Alsatian dog, with fawn-colored fur and a row of blackish stripes...I
have no doubt that it was a thylacine; its appearance matched that of
stuffed specimens preserved in Government museums."
Another
Park Ranger reported seeing a thylacine in 1990. Ranger Peter Simon was
in the Namadgi-Kosciusco National Park along the New South
Wales-Victoria border when he saw what he identified as a thylacine in
broad daylight at a range of 100 feet. After Peter Simon published an
article on his sighting and the thylacine mystery in The Age magazine,
he received many cards and letters from Victoria residents who also
claimed to have seen Thylacines. Peter Simon said that the reports were
so consistent that they, " left me in no doubt that each had seen
something unusual [and] ... broadly consistent with the appearance of a
thylacine."
SUPERNATURAL APPEARANCES?
In
1982 a Western Australian farming couple claimed to have lost livestock
to thylacine predation, and say that they always gets a "prickly
feeling" at the back of his neck when the thylacines were nearby. That
"prickly feeling" is sensation that is widely reported when people
experience encounters with strange out of place creatures or entities.
Australian
writer Tony Healy reported that on the day before Ranger Peter Simon
was to have his encounter with a thylacine, his hunting dogs refused to
leave a truck that they were being transported in after they heard
strange harsh panting sounds in the brush nearby.
At a
Benedictine monastery named New Hoacia, the secretary to the Addot, Tony
James, walked into a room early in the morning and saw a thylacine, "We
both froze, and he looked at me, in quite a fearless way, and I sense
that he was just simply filled with curiosity at the sighting." The
animal fled. Tony feels that perhaps the animal was feeding off the
table scraps that were usually left out for the magpies every morning.
Another member of the monastery also reported seeing an animal that fit
the description of a thylacine while driving from the monastery.
On
April 7, 1974, at 3:30 a.m. Joan Gilbert was driving in the outskirts
of Bournemouth, England, when a strange animal ran across her
headlights. It was a, "strange striped creature, half cat and half dog.
It was the most peculiar animal I have ever seen. It had stripes, a long
thin tail, and seemed to be all gray, though it might have had some
yellow in it. Its ears were set back like a member of the cat family,
and it was as big as a medium-sized dog. It was thin, and it definitely
was not a fox." She identified it as a thylacine when she found a
picture of it in a reference book.
- Selected Sources: Clark, Jerome, Unexplained! Animal X (Discovery Channel) - Please note I DO NOT know the original source for this post. No copyright infringement intended. Will be happy to credit original source.
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
This post sponsored in part by
(Interested in sponsoring a story? then send us an Email!)
This is a question that often comes up and there are several theories about how a bigfoot could survive in harsh winter conditions.
Here are some of the most popular theories:
* Migration - Bigfoot travels to a warmer location. * Hibernation - Bigfoot sleeps during the worse winter months. * Specialized Behaviors - passed down from older bigfoot. * Grows Thicker fur/hair during the winter. * Builds Dens, Nest or stick structure
All of these could be possible but some are probably not likely at all.
First
I do not think Bigfoot hibernate and if they do it must be for very
short periods. I would guess the chances of hibernation is about 1-5
percent, if at all. Plus, we have many reported bigfoot sightings in the winter months, there wouldn't be any if they were hibernating. What they might do is stay put in some type of warmer location or shelter on the worse days of winter. I know from hunting experience that some animals just seem not to travel on really harsh winter days/nights. Now, that might be a moot point if the animal is really desperate for food.
Over the years there has been several claims of someone shooting a Bigfoot and in some cases even killing it. Most of those claims and stories have turned out to be hoaxes. Some of them were more elaborate than others, one more recent one even included a fake body. A few of them were credible stories of someone shooting at a Bigfoot or shooting a Bigfoot but the creature or person ran off. One case that comes to mind is the man I interviewed from Virginia, Hunter shoots Bigfoot. The idea of killing a Bigfoot has spawned many stories, movies and even a recent TV show called Killing Bigfoot.
There are basically two groups that have formed over the idea of killing a Bigfoot. The PRO kill side and the Anti-Kill side. Personally, I'm a no kill guy. The train of thought is that by killing one you would provide a body for science and thus proving once and for all that Bigfoot is real. But I also question who are you proving it to? The skeptics? Those that will not even consider the current evidence? So, one has to die just to convince some closed minded person? Not worth it for me.
I just got this report in and it is a very recent encounter according to the report. I really don't know what to make of it. Here is the report.
- Start Report -
Name: John *********
Email Address: On File
State: Tennessee
County: Knox
Date of Sighting: 11/22/15
Time of Day: 8:00 Nearest Town: Knoxville Length of Sighting: 1 hour and 20 minutes
How many Witnesses: 2
Any Photos/Videos: No
Describe sighting in detail:
Me and a friend were around our campfire after a day of squirrel hunting, when noises started to close in on us. We figured it was something smaller of sorts but could tell it was a predator by the sound of its footing and precise steps. As the hour and twenty minutes progressed the noises picked up and got louder like heavy footsteps all around us, believing there were 3 or four creatures.
We have mini horses on the farm and they were spooked. I have never seen them like that. I eventually checked for the carcass of the animals we'd killed and they were gone, all of them! Then the worst stench I have ever smelled, all the words for it is rot I'm not sure what was rotting but rot. It grew so strong I almost commuted, so we then decided to trek back to the house.
On our way back to the house, our neighbors house had a two black figures on it, it was too far to distinguish precise shape but there were 4 great big glowing eyes. Granted it was a full moon they shouldn't have shined like that. Now we were armed with guns through this whole experience and we witnessed one of the creatures hop off the neighbors house and head our way so we sprinted and got inside and the creature got on the roof and banged and walked on the house through out the night. Please get back to me on if there have been similar reports I fear for my family friends whatever this thing was it was a predator and there were 4-6.
- End Report -
Now, I really don't know what to make of this report. I did attempt contact in the form of a reply email but it bounced. The email address was no good.
If I can gather more information, I will be sure to share it. At this point it is still up in the air as to the validity of this report.
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
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In this episode host Leon Drew sits down with Chuck Zukowski, aka UFONUT, to talk about his research. Topics covered include The 37th Parallel, Cattle Mutilations, Bigfoot, and much more.