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October 30, 2008

Eureka, California editorial disses Bigfoot research


Regarding The Birth of Bigfoot by John Driscoll, published October 30, 2008 in the Eureka Times-Standard…

Hard to believe, isn’t it? The newspaper that published the original article in 1958 about Jerry Crew’s Bigfoot footprint casting from Bluff Creek now has published an editorial that states, “We now know the whole thing was a hoax — or a brash attempt to claim credit for one.”

Rather than being a bit objective and relating facts which you can find in John Green’s seminal book on Bigfoot research, Sasquatch: The Apes Among Us, John Driscoll’s article dismisses the entire 1958 Bluff Creek footprint phenomena as the work of one man, Ray Wallace, and a few accomplices.

It implicates Wallace’s brother, W.R. “Shorty” Wallace, saying, “Shorty Wallace’s explanation that no one would stomp around making footprints after work is obvious bunk in hindsight. His role likely was to instill doubt.”

It also implicates a former Times editor, L.W. ‘Scoop’ Beal, quoting his wife as saying, “They were in on this hoax. It was just a fun thing and the fun got out of hand.” Beal, now deceased, can’t give us his take on what actually happened.

Editorial writer John Driscoll’s analysis of the origin of the term, Bigfoot, wouldn’t be so disturbing if he’d taken the time to get another perspective on what happened at Bluff Creek in 1958. You can find what I believe is better information by reading John Green’s book, pages 65 to 82.

John Green, a Canadian newspaperman, saw the story about Jerry Crew in a Vancouver paper back in 1958. He’d been researching the Canadian Bigfoot phenomena for a while. Of course, back then they were commonly called “Wild Men” not “Bigfoot”.

Intrigued by the discovery of the Bluff Creek footprints, Green left British Columbia with two friends to check things out in Northern California. While in the Bluff Creek area he was able to see a few large footprints. Later he went to Anderson, California, where he met Bob Titmus, another Bigfoot researcher. He wrote, “Calling on Bob Titmus turned out to be the most important thing we did on the trip.”

A few weeks later Bob Titmus phoned John Green with a hot tip: another researcher found large footprints on a sandbar of Bluff Creek, and they were not the same as the ones found on the road. He made another trip to Northern California where he and Bob looked for footprints and analyzed them.

He wrote:

“The sand on the bar was hard packed and damp. . . . I had to jump off a log about two feet high and land on the point of one heel to make a hole as deep [as the tracks].
 

“We could not think of any way a man could have made the tracks without the use of some sort of specialized heavy equipment, and there was no apparent way that such equipment, assuming that it existed, could have reached the sandbar. Both sides of the valley were steep and covered with heavy underbrush. Taking a machine down without leaving evidence of its passage seemed out of the question. . . . About the only answer would have been to fly the machine in with a large helicopter, but that could not have been done secretly because at the time the tracks were made there were construction workers living in a camp just a few hundred yards away.” - John Green, Sasquatch: The Apes Among Us, page 68

Ray Wallace was the road construction subcontractor that Jerry Crew worked for. It is true that he owned a set of wooden stompers for making fake tracks, but they don’t match the tracks found at Bluff Creek. Also Ray Wallace didn’t claim to be responsible for starting the Bluff Creek Bigfoot story; that was a claim his family made after he died.

More information:
From Wikipedia: Ray Wallace
From the BFRO: Wallace Hoax Behind Bigfoot?

October 26, 2008

The Hoopa Bigfoot Project


The Hoopa Bigfoot ProjectLast summer I was working in a local restaurant in Happy Camp when a man I didn’t know came in for lunch. After he finished eating he brought his business card to the counter and introduced himself as David Paulides of North America Bigfoot Search. He told me a bit about his Bigfoot research project in Hoopa. Since I live in Happy Camp I’m used to accidentally meeting up with Bigfoot researchers who are passing through town, so I told him who I was. I figure out-of-town Bigfoot researchers might know me by my website rather than by my name or face. He said he was in town to interview one of my acquaintances.

Months later I learned that David Paulides wrote a book about the Bigfoot research he was doing in Hoopa, a reservation about sixty miles south-west of here. I got a copy of the book, The Hoopa Project, a few weeks ago, and have been reading it - in fact, I finished it this morning. I’m here to tell you it is an amazing book - one that should be in every Bigfoot enthusiast’s library. I cannot recommend it highly enough, but I’ll give it a try.

David Paulides, formerly a law enforcement investigator with thirty years experience, brought his expert interviewing and analytical skills into the field of Bigfoot research. This may not be unique, but his skills along with dedication to the singular project in Hoopa, reflected in his consistent recording of his observations, combined to help him create what is destined to be a classic of Bigfoot research literature.

The Hoopa Project records, in minute detail, Paulides’ systematic analysis of the Hoopa Valley’s climate, plant life, and animal populations. He made many observant inquiries into the probability of Bigfoot habitation. He researched available Bigfoot databases online and charted known sightings on maps. All these preparatory considerations, he shares with us in the initial pages of his book. It could get a bit tedious to read, but it doesn’t because his writing style is easy-going though it does obviously bear the mark of someone trained to write detailed reports in his professional life.

Though the first section of the 333-page book kept my interest, the book didn’t really get going until page 93 when Paulides started sharing his incident reports. At that point, I didn’t want to put the book down. It should be noted that he divided his reports into two categories. The first category, found in chapter four, was for “Incidents Involving Bigfoot”. These include all evidence of Bigfoot except actual sightings. The second category, saved for chapter five, is “Bigfoot Sightings”. He gives us eleven incident reports and thirty-three sightings total, though some observers had more than one incident or sighting.

Each of these reports contained some clue or insight into Bigfoot life and behavior. Included in the incident reports are stories of large boulder-sized rocks being thrown, not to harm, but to frighten humans nearby. Other incidents include screaming and footsteps or footprints. The people who reported these events agreed to have their pictures taken and allowed their names to be used. They were all very believable and the ones who had sightings signed affidavits to validate their claims.

What enhanced these sighting reports was Paulides’ decision to hire an experienced forensic artist, Harvey Pratt, to make accurate drawings of what each sighting witness saw. Toward the end of the book Paulides shared his process in choosing Pratt, which started with an internet search and ended with a perfect match. Because Hoopa is a Native American reservation with members of the Yurok, Karuk, and Hoopa tribes revealing their Bigfoot encounters, it helped that Harvey Pratt is also Native American, a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes. He also has over 40 years law enforcement experience including FBI training and years of work with the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigations. Native American or not, Harvey Pratt was prepared for this job!

What came from the forensic drawings, in which Bigfoot sighting reporters shared their observations of the creature while he drew, is a series of astounding picture-perfect renditions of what these creatures actually look like. The images that came from this will open your eyes to the reality that Bigfoot is not all that different than we are. You will finally see why so many who have had Bigfoot encounters are saying, “It looked more like a human than like an animal.”

This book was created by professional law enforcement investigators, and the result is exactly what you would expect from people bringing that kind of experience to the table. If you’re looking for scientific details, you won’t get them, but you do get plenty of analysis, clearly stated reporting, and phenomenal forensic art.

Combine their skills with the location - a wide, fertile valley in the midst of heavily forested wilderness - and you have the possibility of great field work opportunities for Bigfoot researchers. Add to this the beautiful Native American people who live in the Hoopa Valley, who were open-hearted enough to consider trusting David Paulides with their surprising and peaceful encounters, and you’ve got access to some of the best Bigfoot incident and sighting stories ever told. And besides the Native Americans, there are several non-Natives represented who had Bigfoot encounters of their own to share.

On a personal note, I was thrilled to see faces I recognized and countryside I’ve traveled to and through many times. Some of the people photographed for the book are Karuks, and I live less than half a mile from the Karuk Tribe’s central office in Happy Camp. I’ve been to their annual Karuk Tribal Reunion, and to their Basketweavers’ Gathering, so I felt like I was seeing a new side to old friends. I’m very happy everyone who participated felt comfortable enough with David Paulides to reveal what happened to them.

I’d like to take this time and space to thank everyone who participated by sharing details about their Bigfoot incidents and encounters. I’m in deep gratitude as I’m sure many others who read these reports will be in years to come. Thank you for showing us that Sasquatches really do exist.

Part of David Paulides’ plan for the book is to present it to lawmakers in hopes of having Bigfoot protection legislation passed. I feel this is a noble cause, and support it. I also understand the feelings of Hoopa forestry employees that worried that Bigfoot protection legislation might destroy the Tribe’s forest industries projects. Therefore I hope that any forthcoming law making will be done on a local basis by the Tribal Councils and County Boards of Supervisors, not by State or Federal legislators who may be out of touch with the needs of Northern California counties, especially in rural areas.

Case in point: Environmentalists and the Endangered Species Act forced the closure of the sawmill in Happy Camp in the 1990s. What was once a thriving mid-forest town suddenly became a town of empty buildings and sad, wasted lives. It took many years for our town to start to recover and in the meantime many local families were devastated from income loss. Any Bigfoot protection legislation that does not share a focus with the needs of the people of this region, including but not limited to Hoopa residents, would not be welcome. I liked the examples of Bigfoot protection laws David Paulides included in this book; they are simple and to the point. Bigfoot is obviously very closely related to human beings, and should not be shot.

BigfootBy the way, in case you don’t realize it, Hoopa is only a few miles south of the site of the famous Patterson-Gimlin film at Bluff Creek. There’s a lot of Bluff Creek Bigfoot information in the pages of this book.

For more information about the Hoopa Valley and the Tribe, please see their website, Hoopa Valley Tribe, where there’s a beautiful photo of the entire valley on the main page.

There’s a recent news article about David Paulides online: Tracking Bigfoot no small feat for local detective.

David Paulides’ website: North America Bigfoot Search.

There’s some wonderful Bigfoot art prints for sale on Harvey Pratt’s website. None of these drawings are the ones included in The Hoopa Project but I think any Bigfoot researcher would appreciate having this kind of art in his or her home. I especially like the one called “Researchers Last View”.

[Important Note: Explorations into the forested areas of the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation are not permissible without a permit unless you're a member of the tribe. Do NOT leave paved roadways while you're in the reservation area unless you've received your permit to do so.]

October 21, 2008

Bigfoot News Room


The Bigfoot News Room is found at FriendFeed.Com, a social media site where you can get links to Bigfoot news, comment on them, and interact with other Bigfoot researchers. Currently this news room brings in feeds listing new YouTube Bigfoot videos, Google News on Bigfoot, and links to blog postings from a variety of Bigfoot blogs.

Here’s the link: Bigfoot News Room.

The blog feeds I add are chosen based on the Bigfoot information content of the blog, and on no other criteria. I choose not to exclude anyone. We are all in this together.

So far, blogs included are Bigfoot Sightings (of course - that’s my blog!), ThunderHawk’s Bigfoot Blog, Search For Bigfoot, Cryptomundo, Nick Redfern’s “There’s Something in the Woods…”, Blogsquatcher, and Paranormal Bigfoot, which is Regan Lee’s blog. MORE TO COME!

If you are a blog owner whose Bigfoot blog isn’t included in the feed, please leave a comment on this page with the link. Your blog must have a RSS or Atom feed to be included.

I hope you enjoy getting all the Bigfoot news in one place as much as I do.

[Note: If you need more site information, here's a page on How To Use FriendFeed.]

October 13, 2008

Santa Cruz, California Bigfoot Sighting, 1999


I’ve spent a lot of time in Santa Cruz. I used to live there, many years ago, and my first job, in 1970, was at the John Ingalls brussel sprouts cannery that used to be on Laurel Street near the railroad tracks. It was torn down years ago.

I’m well aware of how spooky the old forest north and west of Santa Cruz can be. It is a charming yet shadowy and sometimes eerie area with a narrow two-lane highway winding through it. The redwood trees and dense, lush undergrowth make a trip through this forest an experience to savor. Yet I never thought of that area as a place where there might be a Bigfoot lurking in the woods.

Why? Because the Santa Cruz area is densely populated by human beings. There are miles of unpopulated forested hills there in the California Coast Mountain Range, so I know it is possible that Sasquatch are living there, but if they’re there, I’ll guess they’re feeling fairly well penned in by now as human civilization encroaches on all sides.

I was surprised to receive the following sighting report in my email, but the woman who wrote it is willing to put her name next to the claim. That’s always a good first step toward making a sighting report believable. She also told me she discussed this with Mike Rugg, owner and curator of the Bigfoot Museum in Felton (a small town in the forest near Santa Cruz) who told her there have been other sightings in the area.

Colette Alexander’s sighting report:

June 1999: Cypress Grove (on Pocono trail) 1 mile up Highway 9 from downtown Santa Cruz, California - at San Lorenzo Creek.

My friend and I were having lunch by the creek. There is a well worn trail in the first pull-out on the right hand side of Highway 9 just up from Highway 1 and Highway 9 intersection in downtown Santa Cruz.

It was a weekday around lunchtime and there was one other person, a fisherman wading in the creek and fishing less than 50 yards away. The brush is fairly heavy there, so I do not think he even noticed us.

We were eating sandwiches and enjoying nature. I looked to my right, “spacing out on the forest” when I noticed about 20 yards away a pair of big black eyes. At first I thought it was a person, maybe a homeless person (there’s lots residing in Santa Cruz), but as I focused I noticed that it was a large gorilla-like hominid “Mimicking me - eating my sandwich!” It appeared to be a juvenile female - lifting a leaf to its mouth in the same motion and speed as I was eating my sandwich. Except when I saw it do that and realized this was happening - I slowed down my bite to the sandwich in shock and so did it - with an expression of amusement and kindness at mimicking me! I wasn’t scared, but definitely in shock.

I slowly turned to my left to nudge my girlfriend to show her, and no sooner did I do that, when I looked back it was gone. It could have just closed its eyes! It’s camouflage was incredible! It was as tall or taller than me. I was sitting down and it was sitting or squatting. I could not see it’s legs. It had black/brown fur - noticed no neck and huge shoulders. Hand and face looked gorilla like except that the front of its face was flatter than that of Primates known. I could see it had straight, white teeth. No fangs. I also noticed that it seemed to have had gray moss on its fur, definitely did not bathe, but did not smell anything. (And I’d never seen a homeless person with moss on them - soot, maybe, but not Spanish moss).

The expression of amusement and the mimicking me eating a sandwich was probably more shocking than just the mere sight - although that was incredible in-of-itself. The intelligence was not animal-like! It was eating what is believed to be the Cypress leaves (young growth there in the spring). Also note: next to a creek. Seems like most sightings are in the creeks. It is imperative that migratory patterns and food sources are noted in our sightings. I studied primate anthropology in college two years after I saw a Bigfoot and it’s taken me years before I thought it important to report this and I would take a lie detector test to prove this was a truthful encounter.

In a follow-up email Colette added: “I was a firefighter in Humbolt county for two years and have been way back in the woods, Shasta/Trinity fires in 1987. Only seen/heard coyotes. Never even thought or necessarily believed in their existence until I saw it myself. . . . Natural man - the meek - may in fact - just inherit their earth back.”

Now there’s a thought that brings up goosebumps on my arms. How do you feel about that?

Does anyone in the Santa Cruz area want to research this more? Let me know if you need contact information.

[Update: This is being investigated and documented further by David Paulides of North American Bigfoot Search.]

Here’s a map of the area.

More Bigfoot sightings in that area: Campers Claim They Saw Bigfoot

August 22, 2008

Pennsylvania: Footprints Found In Luzerne County


Scott Snook of Lewistown, Pennsylvania, hasn’t seen a Sasquatch but he found 15-inch tracks in an undisclosed backwoods location in Luzerne County. He told a reporter for the Standard Journal that he found them in a patch of poison oak where it is unlikely that anyone would intentionally plant them.

He is a member of the Pennsylvania Bigfoot Society and investigates reports in that state. He’s also passed on his hobby of Bigfoot research to his 12-year-old son, Jared.

His interest in Bigfoot started in the mid-seventies when he saw the movie, Sasquatch, the Legend of Bigfoot. In that movie, which I recently rented from Netflix, a group of men ventured into the backcountry in search of Bigfoot. It was fictionalized but based on what looked like an actual Bigfoot research expedition. (You’ll find this as part of The Sasquatch Horror Collection Triple Feature.)

Source: Is Bigfoot Roaming The Valley by Kevin Mertz of the Standard Journal, published on August 22, 2008.

Can you remember what first inspired your interest in Bigfoot? I confess, I cannot. I’ve been fascinated by Bigfoot for many years and have no idea what got that started. Maybe it is that I love a good mystery, and so long as we don’t have contact with Bigfoot, the mystery remains. Of course, once we do have contact with Bigfoot, that will open up even more paths to explore.

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