Saturday, August 18, 2012

Beaver Creek Experience off of Sprucevale Rd.




I wanted to recap on what happened on the weekend of August 10th 2012 at the Beaver Creek State Park during the Ohio Bigfoot Hunters Event. Saturday about 5:30pm a small group of us went on a hike off of Sprucevale Rd and we were going to take a hike back to Gretchens Lock area and Rich went ahead of us and Tim and Mike went off of the path into the wooded area looking for prints.I have been doing tree knocks and woops in that area,the last woop that I did,Tim answered it then we heard a third woop from across the creek.I stood near the creek and put my camcorder on record and did a sweep of the area across the creek and then I noticed that the camera didnt record.

I told Chris that I was attempting to record that area but it didnt,of course he made his smart comment and I proceeded to pan that area again while I recorded,again it didnt record so I attempted a third time and still nothing showing up on playback.We left that spot and proceeded deeper heading toward Gretchens Lock and the whole time my camcorder recorded everything once we left that original area where I tried to pan across the creek from us.I think that was odd the way it happened,does bigfoot have the capability to cause electronics to shut down or not function properly? I would like to know.


What I am about to tell you right now didnt happen at Beaver Creek but it happened at my home a few days ago.The wife was out on the back porch and she heard what she described at branches breaking just across the field,I went out and listened but heard nothing,I grabbed my camera and headed over to that area and once I got there I started filming that entire area but I didnt see anything so I started heading back home and I checked my camera but yet it didnt record again but it works any other time when I need to use it,this seems really strange to me and I dont know what is going on but I would like to find out.I know some people will say that I didnt press the record button or something,I did press it and it said recording on the viewing screen and it recorded everything except for the possibly activity.

Physical Contact with Bigfoot!



One on one contact with the big hairy fellow
By Paul H.


I spoke to a gentleman on the phone lastnight about multiple sightings that occured at his home,he told me that this creature but didnt know it was bigfoot until later was looking in his windows many many times.The family would hear noises outside of the home on many occasions,there would be noises,grunting,small rocks thrown at the house and from time to time they would hear foot steps on the roof.They originally thought that this was a person looking in their windows and making the ruckus.

One night they were sitting in the house and this creature was staring in the windows and the two sons which were teenagers decided that they were going to run outside and tackle the man that was peering in.So they proceeded out of the door and chased this thing and the two sons tackled it and knocked it down to the ground and this creature bit one of the boys on the shoulder before brushing the kids aside.They said this thing pushed them away with such force that they thought that they were ragdolls.They also said that this creature was about 6ft tall so now they think it must have been a juvenile bigfoot,still to this day that area has activity from time to time and there are still howls late at night.

Growing up with Sasquatch in Marysville,Ohio

I have come across this report from Ohio and here's how the story goes!






Though I’ve lived in Florida for just over 12 years now, I grew up in Ohio. I’m convinced that we had a Sasquatch that would pass through the area on a regular basis. This conviction is due to both sightings of it ( them? ) and other evidence. I had actually e-mailed Autumn Williams with these accounts several years ago after watching a few episodes of Mysterious Encounters when it was in production. She never bothered to write back in response, so I don’t even know if she received the message. Since then, I contacted a researcher in Ohio with these events. Sorry to say, I don’t recall the man’s name. He was excited about it when he replied back to me with questions, but I’ve heard nothing since.
 
My parents and I moved into a house that was only a couple hundred yards from an abandoned railroad bed in Marysville, Ohio when I was 5-years-old. It wasn’t long after that we, my friends and I, started our forays to the railroad bed. During the Summer months, the weeds there would grow far taller than we were. For us, it was akin to being in a forest. Each Summer, we’d carve a path through, using sticks to hack and slash at the weeds, cutting out a narrow, curving path and a larger open area where we’d gather to talk and whatnot.
 
When the Sasquatch first turned up, or, I should say, when we first noticed it, we were still young. We had no idea what was there. We felt that something was there on occasion, watching us. But for a long time we saw nothing. Then one of my friends reported having seen something large and hairy there one night. He saw it from a distance and only briefly. The rest of us didn’t take him too seriously at first. He kept hounding us with it, though. Then another friend, a girl who’s grandparents lived in the lot adjoining the railroad bed, saw something one night. She mostly lived with her grandparents due to family issues and her bedroom window looked right out at the old railroad bed. Having a second report of something large and hairy up there at night made us all take it more seriously. Still, we were young and stupid. And the railroad bed was our place to go to get away from our parents. It was our place. We weren’t going to give it up easily. Being so young still, we had no idea what we had. We started calling it a Troll. As we never had the impression that it was there full-time. So, we learned to live with it.
 
It’s been suggested to me before, upon sharing these events, that the Sasquatch may have been young itself. I don’t know.
 
Several years went by. We were easing into our early teens. That’s when things started to pick up. Maybe there was a juvenile. Maybe it was just watching us grow and decided that, while it was willing to allow young children to play there, it wasn’t going to be so tolerant of older children. But the girl who lived right next to the railroad bed had several more night-time sightings. She was actually so afraid of what she saw that she convinced herself that she dreamed these, rather than truly admit that there was something there. I had three sightings of it/them over the years. She was with me for the first. We were in her grandparents’ yard, walking up the short, gentle hill to the railroad bed. She froze and put her arm across my chest, stopping me. I looked at her. She was staring, open-mouthed and wide-eyed, pointing straight ahead. Through a narrow gap in the weeds, I saw what looked like the head and shoulders of a large humanoid figure with dark black hair. It was either sitting or crouched, holding perfectly still. We were seeing its profile. We backed slowly down the hill until it was out of sight, then turned and ran.
 
After that, she refused to ever go back up there. Not even as part of a group. The following day, we told another friend. He wanted to see the spot where the creature had been seen. It was broad daylight, so I took him up there, albeit reluctantly. The only sign we saw of it was a large patch of flattened grasses where it had been.
 
Somewhere in there, he and I also found what we referred to as the “vine cave”, which I now believe to have been a nest. From our point of view, it simply popped into existence literally overnight in the large, open area we’d carved. He and I actually crawled into it a few times, but always felt very uncomfortable in it and always left quickly. Not long after the discovery of the “vine cave”, a couple of rival kids destroyed it, thinking we’d built it. I think that may have well caused the increase in encounters with the Sasquatch and it’s attempts to chase us away.
 
My second and third sightings were spaced out over the next few years. Each time I saw it was in broad daylight. I was in our driveway, pulling weeds that were growing up through the gravel. Movement from up at the railroad bed caught my attention. I looked up there to see a tall, humanoid being with long arms walking along the hill, moving to my right. It was covered in dark black hair. I’ve always suspected it was the same creature I saw on my first sighting, but don’t know for sure. I watched it walk for a few seconds until it was blocked from view by a neighbor’s storage shed. Then I turned and ran into the house. I didn’t go back up to the railroad bed for weeks.
 
My third sighting was from a far greater distance. On the other side of the railroad bed was a fenced-in area of cow pasture and the local water tower. Beyond that was a trailer court. I was in our upstairs back bedroom one afternoon, again, during broad daylight. I saw what I first took to be a rolled-up rug by a trash can back in the trailer court. I could just barely see it, due to the distance. I looked away, then looked back. What I was seeing seemed shorter, as if it had sagged, or crouched. I kept looking away, then looking back, wanting to see if it moved. I couldn’t tell if it was moving or not. Finally, I looked away for about ten minutes. When I looked back, whatever it had been was gone.
 
Another friend of mine lived in a house just beyond the far side of the trailer court. A wooden privacy fence divided his back yard from the trailer court. He once told me that he and his family would sometimes smell a heavy, musky scent at night. They would sometimes hear what sounded like heavy footfalls outside their house at night. He said his mother even claimed to have heard a loud heartbeat on occasion.
 
All in all, we were lucky. We gave it plenty of incentive to lash out at us. Luckily, it never did anything to hurt us. Just scare us, employing fear tactics. We were just too dumb and stubborn to pay close enough attention. Even after we’d all seen it.
 
Aside from the direct sightings of the creature(s), we had other evidence that it was there as well. Once, when I was in my teens and at the railroad bed alone, something that sounded very large was in the weeds and brush ahead of me, thrashing at the weeds, causing them to move and make a lot of noise. I thought at first it was the same friend who’s wanted to go check out the site of my first direct sighting of the Sasquatch. About the same moment I realized that whatever was ahead of me was too large to be him a rock about the size of my fist was thrown at me, just narrowly missing hitting me in the head. I ran and refused to go back to the railroad bed for weeks after. Next time I was there alone I was in the same place and the same weed-thrashing occurred again. Luckily, no rock was thrown that time. Another time that same friend who wanted to see the spot of my first sighting and I were at the railroad bed by ourselves. There had to have been at the very least two of the creatures with us, one on either side of us. Nothing was thrown at us, but the same weed-thrashing noises started up to each side of us. Oddly, this time, nothing was moving that we could see. Both of us clearly heard the sounds, but couldn’t see a thing moving. Still, after holding our ground for only a few moments, we both ran.
 
This same friend also decided to step up our own claims on the railroad bed after he and found a rock cairn built on our path one day. The cairn was small. My friend spouted his usual line of, “No f^*&ing monkey is going to chase me away!” and promptly kicked the cairn, scattered the stones. We gathered up new stones and built a new, larger, cairn in place of the one we’d found. We left and went back the next day to find our own cairn scattered and new, larger, one in its place. My friend immediately kicked it apart and we built a new one, larger still, in place of the one we’d found. This went on for days; each day we’d find that the cairn we’d built the day before had been wrecked and new, larger, one would be in its place. Each day my friend would scatter the new one and we’d build our own, larger yet, in place of the most recent one we’d found. Secretly, I thought he was going back up to the railroad bed later an d building the new ones we’d “find” the next day and he thought the same of me. Finally, after this had gone on long enough that the cairns were getting to be a bit larger than shoebox size, my friend decided to go one better and scent mark the cairn we’d just built. He told me what he was going to do and promptly unzipped his pants and urinated on the rock cairn we had just built. Afterward, we left and went to his house. We hung out on his front porch for two or three hours, talking, then decided to go check on the new, scent marked, cairn. The smell hit us when we were still a good hundred yards, maybe more, from the cairn. We knew what we’d find and it scared both of us. As we’d been together for the entire intervening time, each knew that the other had not gone back to the railroad bed to do anything. The scent was an overpowering musk that was so strong it made us sick. Think skunk concentrate. We held our breath, ran in, saw what we knew we’d find - a new cairn that was noticeably larger than the one we’d built a few hours prior - and ran back out into clear air to breath. That stench lingered for days, but that ended the rock cairn war.
 
There were other times, before and after that, when my friends and I would be at the railroad bed and smell what smelled like a skunk. We also once found what looked to be shallow, crude pit toilets. We saw what looked to be finger marks in the mud and suspected they’d been dug out with very large bare hands. Several of the toilets contained what looked to be human fecal matter, only far larger.
 
The next door neighbors we had while I was growing up were very wasteful people. They didn’t believe in leftovers from meals. If something wasn’t eaten, it went into the trash, not the refrigerator. Their trash was torn open many, many, many times. They went to the expense of having a brick wall that was maybe 5-foot-tall built around the area they kept their trash cans in. There was a green picket gate on the front for the garbage collectors to open to get access to the trash. They also bought trash cans with locking lids. None of it did any good. Whatever kept tearing into the trash would sometimes open the gate, leaving it open, and knew how to unlock the locked trashcan lids. I’ve often wondered if their trash wasn’t why the Sasquatch liked that area and if it wasn’t using the railroad bed as a convenient staging place to raid both their trash and trash from the aforementioned trailer court.
 
I have no evidence to support these claims. We were young and never thought to gather any evidence - something I kick myself for to this day. Having a Sasquatch passing though so closely so often didn’t seem special to us because we were growing up with it.
 
The address for the house my parents and I lived in while all this went on is XXXXXXXX Street, Marysville, Ohio 43040. We moved in when I was 5-years-old and moved out in 1998 when I was 22, only days before my 23rd birthday. Last I was told, the railroad bed area has become even more abandoned and overgrown. But I’ve no idea if the Sasquatch is still there, or not.

One Man's Inspiring Story about China's Bigfoot


"Although I have seen the Wildman several times, I couldn't record it because it escaped too fast, and I didn't have a good camera to record faraway objects. Besides, it is too exhausting for a single man to search in such a large area." -- Li Guohua, Yeren Researcher

The Chinese version of Bigfoot is called YaJin (野人), sometimes anglicized as Yeren. It directly translates to Wild Man. Today at Chinese Daily you can read an article of a 62 year-old man who has been searching for the Wild Man for 30 years. This is a touching story unlike any Chinese-Yeren-Hubei Province-Shennongjia Region story we have shared with you so far. Its a little more personal.

In 2010 we shared the story about the Hubei Wild Man Research Association looking for 100 scientist and explorers. Later that year we shared the Yeti hair research by The Shennongjia Nature Reserve. More recently, earlier this year we announced China to Explore Virgin Forest Home of 'Bigfoot'

Now you can read a story about a man, not an institution, a man who's story is very similar to many Bigfooters here in the North America.

Cooking a meal in 1980. 
One man has made it his life mission to track down the mysterious 'Wildman' that is said to be roaming the mountains of Shennongjia. Wang Xiaodong reports in Shennongjia, Hubei province.

For the past three decades, Li Guohua has had just one mission in life: to find the legendary "Wildman" in the thick forests of Hubei province.

He can't recall how many times he almost lost his life to unexpected cold, falling into canyons or fighting bears. He was even mistaken by police for being an armed fugitive when trying to trace the ape-like Wildman in the mountains of Shennongjia, the scene of numerous witness reports of this elusive ape-man.
The retired 62-year-old firmly believes in the existence of Wildman and plans to organize an exploration team.

"Although I am not as vigorous as I used to be, I am still strong enough to climb mountains and with my experience I can guide young team members," he says. "I am sure I will find a Wildman and be able to provide solid evidence if I can get support from others."

Born in Yichang, Hubei province, Li says he has always been a curious person. "I was fascinated by the wilderness and forests when I was a child."

"When I was a boy, I would go to the woods near my home whenever I had a chance. I would roam there for hours, hunting birds and tasting different wild fruits, and hurried back home only when it began to get dark."

Li's first encounter with the Wildman was in 1972, when he found several "big footprints" while working in Muyu town as a logger.

"I had heard many stories about the Wildman. After I saw the big footprints my curiosity soared and I was convinced there must be such a creature in the forest."

Four years later he was working as an actor when he started his search.

"I heard five officials encountered a strange creature when driving on a mountain road. Locals talked about this for several days and I found it hard to calm down."

As his fellow performers in the troupe traveled to Wuhan for training, Li took off on his own up the mountain, with just some biscuits, a rope and steel bar.

He didn't find a Wildman but it was his first of many adventures.

"Whenever winter came, I just could not resist the temptation and would involuntarily find myself in forests. It was like I was enchanted," he says.

Li made his journeys of exploration mostly in winter as the light is better because the leaves have fallen, enabling him to find the creature's tracks. He spent days, even months, in the forest.

"To find a Wildman, you have to become a Wildman first. Like wild animals, the Wildman's senses are more acute than human beings and they can easily detect an approaching person."

Li pours scorn on the large-scale science exploration teams that are occasionally organized to search for the creature.

"These guys will never find anything new like a Wildman as they make too much noise, even if they are well equipped. To find a Wildman, you have to live in the mountains and merge with nature."

Spending time alone in harsh conditions comes easy to Li, who says he has been a loner since he was a child.
Speaking of being alone in the mountains, he says: "The solitude was so strong sometimes I became numb to the outside world. In addition, there was physical weakness caused by cold and fatigue. Sometimes, I was gripped by illusions and felt I could almost see Death."

Years of unrelenting effort, however, did bring some reward as Li saw the Wildman and its footprints on several occasions.

"It was the moment that I can never forget," he says of his first encounter with the beast, on Feb 28, 1980.
The Wildman appeared to be chasing him, Li says, possibly because it thought he was prey.

"I hid behind some trees and tried hard to contain my violently beating heart, closing my eyes for a while hoping I could see it more clearly later," he says.

As the creature came nearer, he could see clearly it resembled both a man and an ape. It was about 2.6 meters tall, with red hair all over its body, no tail, two arms waving as it walked like a man.

He was horrified but even so aimed his gun and pulled the trigger. But it failed to fire, as the charge was damp. He did not have a camera.

The creature turned around and ran swiftly toward a bamboo forest.

"Seeing the creature disappear, I collapsed on the snowy ground."

"When I returned haggard to the art troupe and saw my colleagues, I tried to say hello but could not remember their names, as I had been cut off from society for too long."

Since retiring a few years ago, Li's family of three has been relying on his monthly pension of about 2,000 yuan ($313). However, Li still continues the search.

"Once I receive a witness report from the villagers, I immediately go to the scene with them to check it out."
He blames lack of equipment and manpower on his inability to provide evidence of the creature's existence.
"Although I have seen the Wildman several times, I couldn't record it because it escaped too fast, and I didn't have a good camera to record faraway objects. Besides, it is too exhausting for a single man to search in such a large area."

He has published a book about his travails, with the help of Beijing Book House Technology & Culture Co.
"Li is a little obstinate and not very sociable," says Wang Wei, a marketing manager of the company. "But he is very focused on his pursuit. It is not easy in modern society, when many people just follow the trends and frequently shift focus."

"I hope I can find a sponsor and some volunteers so that I can continue with the search," Li says. "I have devoted all my life to the search and I hope I can put an end to this mystery so that I can be relieved before the end of my life."

Contact the writer at wangxiaodong@chinadaily.com.cn.
Zhou Lihua in Wuhan contributed to this story.
(China Daily 08/16/2012 page20)
 

Everything You Didn't Know About the Bryan Sykes' Bigfoot DNA Research

Painting Showing Gigantoopithecus being watched (hunted?) by Homo erectus [Credit: Profimedia] 
“Science does not accept or reject hypotheses but evaluates them on the basis of evidence. This is why I am confident that examining the evidence of alleged Yetis does not fall outside the realm of proper scientific enquiry.” -- Bryan Sykes; Project lead on the Oxford-Lausanne Collateral Hominid Project

As we get closer to the deadline (September 2012) for accepting specimens for the Oxford-Lausanne Collateral Hominid Project; a/k/a Bryan Sykes' Bigfoot DNA research. The story is making the rounds in the media again. You can read our past posts about Bryan Sykes and his Bigfoot DNA research, but it is all wrapped up in a nice package in the article below. Here is the most extensive article about the research. How it came about, how the research will be done and what it hopes to determine.

Yetis in the lab: The search for mythical beasts

By Georgina Kenyon | 16 August 2012
Yeti, Bigfoot, Sasquatch and Yowie - names that conjure up images of giant reclusive creatures that never quite stay still long enough for the photographer to focus their camera.
Over the years, hundreds of sightings of these supposedly mythical beasts have been recorded around the world by the public and so-called cryptozoologists, who scour the world in search of evidence for their existence. “Proof” comes in many forms, from fuzzy photographs and shaky videos to plaster casts of footprints and tufts of hair. But, as yet, none of these encounters has provided any conclusive evidence and cryptozoology remains a field largely disregarded by science. Instead, with a knowing look and a snigger, “sightings” of “cryptids” are explained away as hoaxes, existing species or the products of over excited imaginations.

So it makes it all the more extraordinary that established scientists would become involved in a search that, on the face of it, looks like it could help to prove whether or not these undocumented creatures exist. But, in May of this year, researchers from Switzerland and the UK did just that when they launched the Oxford-Lausanne Collateral Hominid Project.

“It’s one of the claims by cryptozoologists that science does not take them seriously. Well, this is their chance. We are calling for people to send us their evidence, and we will test it through DNA analysis,” says Bryan Sykes, a professor of human genetics at the University of Oxford in the UK.

It is likely that the project is the biggest and most comprehensive attempt yet to probe suspected “remains”. “Nothing like this, on this level, has been done before,” says Richard Freeman from the Centre for Fortean Zoology in the UK. But therein lies the rub.  For people like Freeman who devote their lives to looking for these creatures, it is the biggest signal yet that after years out in the cold mainstream science is finally taking the seriously. But for some scientists, the whole venture is an embarrassing curiosity to be held at arm’s length.

Sykes is no stranger to media storms. As well as his work retrieving ancient DNA samples and mapping human migration through DNA analysis, he is also the founder of a business called Oxford Ancestors, which helps people trace their relatives through DNA for a fee. In 2003, the company claimed that an accountant from South Florida was a direct descendent of the Mongolian warlord Genghis Khan – something that sparked headlines around the world. Later analysis – and headlines –suggested that his company’s interpretation was incorrect.

Hair today...

If the episode scarred Sykes, it does not show. His new project was similarly announced to much fanfare, again sending headline writers into overdrive. “Scientists seek big genes of bigfoot”, read one. But the professor says that the response was to be expected. Myths and legends about these creatures loom large in every culture and the idea of finally finding solid evidence for their existence is appealing, no matter who you are. “It’s a story that just does not go away, we are so intrigued by these quests for the unknown, even doubters want to hear about developments,” he says.

For his own part, he says that he sees “no reason why there cannot be species not yet known to science”, but adds the caveat that he would “need to see the evidence”. He is also keen to point out that he is not – nor intends to become – a cryptozoologist. “I don’t not want to become completely eccentric,” he adds.

The idea for the project came about in 2011 when Sykes visited Dr Michel Sartori, the Director of the Museum of Zoology in Lausanne in Switzerland. Out of sheer curiosity, Sykes had gone to view the museum’s extensive library of books on cryptozoology, including over 40,000 documents and photos from a collection donated by the late Belgian-French scientist Bernard Heuvelmans.  He was a trained zoologist, who also spent much of his life looking for cryptids. The museum holds many of his books, such as In the Wake of the Sea-Serpents, which records “sightings” of giant squids and whale-like animals.

During the visit, the pair began to wonder if they could build on Huevelmans’s work and expand the museum’s display. “We started to think it would really enhance the collection if we also had specimens of ‘cryptids’ on show,” says Sartori.

And so the Hominid project was born. The team have put a call out for people around the world to submit samples to the team before September, along with theories about what they could be. They then plan to use DNA barcoding to test each specimen. It is a technique that is widely used in biology. For example it is used by food inspectors to check what is served up on a plate is what a restaurant says it is. Customs officials also use it to stop trafficking of illegal animal parts, whilst field biologists use it to identify organisms. In all cases the technique is largely the same. A sequence of DNA is extracted from an organism or sample of interest and then compared against a DNA bank.

In the case of the Collateral Hominid Project, the team will largely focus on hair samples – the most commonly presented physical evidence to back up claims of sightings.

“Up until the last couple of years, you needed quite a lot of biological material … and often the results were inconclusive,” said Sykes. “Now, all we need is a small amount of hair.”

Hair is useful because the keratin – a kind of biological plastic that encases the hair shaft -  protects the DNA that it contains from the contamination and degradation that can affect DNA from other parts of the body, such as teeth and bone. Once they have extracted a sample, the will compare it to the billions of sequences published online, such as at Genbank (managed by the National Institutes of Health in the US). If the sequence is different to those known from existing species it may be a new species. The more DNA that is used, the more reliable the comparison.

‘Hidden from view’

But even if the team find a sequence of DNA that has no match in the world’s databases it does not automatically mean that the creature is a mythical beast, says Albert Zink, an anthropologist at the European Academy of Bolzano in Italy who questions the validity of the whole enterprise. “It could be a sample of an extinct animal that has nothing to do with the Yeti myth,” he explains.

Sykes admits that might be the case but he is unconcerned. Although the search for Yeti DNA grabbed the headlines, it is part of a bigger project charting the relationship between our own species and others. It could even help identify new species of hominid - a general term archaeologists and paleontologists use for humans and our ancestors.  The team want to use the samples to narrow down their search for unknown species – alive or dead, mythical or not. If the DNA tests find something of interest, the thinking goes, the team can began to look for other clues – potentially in the area where the sample was found. Cryptids became involved because, along with unstudied primate species and subspecies of bears, some people believe the legends could describe distant relations.

"Theories as to what Yetis are... range from surviving collateral hominid species, such as Homo neanderthalensis or Homo floresiensis, to large primates like Gigantopithecus, which were widely thought to be extinct,” says Sykes.

These theories were given a boost in 2004 when scientists published details of skeletal remains of a species of human (Homo floresiensis) from the Indonesian island of Flores, in the journal Nature. The adult species, previously unknown to science, was just 1m (3ft) tall and was likely a descendent of Homo Erectus, which arrived on the island 900,000 years ago. As far as scientists can tell, the “hobbit”, as it was nicknamed, survived for thousands of years unnoticed by modern humans and was still alive as recently as 12,000 years.

Finds like this make it more likely that accounts of mythical, human-like creatures could be founded on grains of truth, some say. For example, the Indonesian cryptid Orang Pendek (“short person”) is often described in Indonesian folklore as a small, hairy, manlike creature not dissimilar to Homo floresiensis.

As Henry Gee, an editor at the respected Nature Journal, wrote in 2004 following the discovery: “In the light of the Flores skeleton, a recent initiative to scour central Sumatra for 'Orang Pendek' can be viewed in a more serious light.

He also argued that new species of mammal – including oxen - are still occasionally discovered by scientists. “If animals as large as oxen can remain hidden into an era when we would expect that scientists had rustled every tree and bush in search of new forms of life, there is no reason why the same should not apply to new species of large primate, including members of the human family,” he wrote.

Gee has since stepped away from the debate, but it’s a theory that others buy into. “Given how people are encroaching on wilderness areas, it seems increasingly unlikely that large mammals, and especially human-like species, remain undocumented,” says Dr Murray Cox from the Institute of Molecular BioSciences, Massey University in New Zealand. “However, some parts of the world, including the Himalayas and the arctic forests of North America, still show very limited impact by humans. So perhaps the possibility of new mammal species there cannot be completely discounted.”

‘Proper science’

But, others are less forgiving. According to Prof. Darren Curnoe of the School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of New South Wales in Australia, the chances of finding a completely new species of hominid are remote. He is also critical of the project efforts, especially linking it to the possibility of finding a Yeti.

“There are far better ways to spend scarce funding for science than chasing mythological creatures and more than enough real and mind-boggling mysteries in nature to keep many generations of scientists busy,” he says.

Sykes has heard that kind of criticism ever since the project started. Although he admits that the project is speculative and unlikely to find a new species of hominid, he argues the search is still valid.

“Science does not accept or reject hypotheses but evaluates them on the basis of evidence,” he says. “This is why I am confident that examining the evidence of alleged Yetis does not fall outside the realm of proper scientific enquiry.”

And, of course, the project has captured the public’s imagination in a way that much of science does not. Put simply, the idea of a Yeti – or some other undocumented mythical beast from folklore – remains a seductive idea for humans. It taps into our desire to explore and understand the world around us, and to believe there are still things left to be discovered. It is part of the reason there was recently a team of 38 people tramping into the remote mountains of the Shennongjia nature reserve in Hubei, China, in search of the yeren. And part of the reason that countless teams over the last 100 years have probed forests, mountains, jungles and islands from the Himalayas to Borneo in search of them.

But the fate of these kind of expeditions – and the entire field of cryptozoology - could soon be decided by Sykes and his team. If the Oxford Lausanne project finds something interesting, it opens up the possibility of further attention from mainstream science. But another possibility is that the team races through all of the samples in the museum and proves that all of them come from species already known to science. Certainly history suggests this outcome is likely.

For example a “Yeti finger” that lay in the Royal College of Surgeons museum in London since the 1950s was tested in 2011, revealing that the remains were in fact human. Whilst in 2008, tests on hairs collected in India that were also said to have come for a showed they came from a species of Himalayan goat. Countless other examples have met with similar results.

If that is the case, the current saviour of cryptozoology could become its own worst enemy. And then, Sartori says, it will be time for believers to put up or shut up.

“We are challenging the people who claim to have seen the Yeti or the Orang Pendek to show us real evidence, or otherwise hold your peace,” he says.


Tonight on the Science Channel; UCLA Physicist, "Bigfoot is a UFO Pilot"

"I feel that the scientific community has been myopically narrow-minded concerning the feasibility of these various subjects. As a Ph.D. in theoretical nuclear physics, I endeavor to bring the scientific perspective to these controversial topics from an open-minded stance." --Dr. Ruel, Ph. D

You can get a full dose of Dr. Franklin Ruel, Ph.D. tonight on the Science Channel at 9pm (check your local listings). For those that do not know him, The Dr. holds a Ph.D. in theoretical nuclear physics from UCLA and intends to answer questions like: Are some UFO abductees being implanted with control chips? Is it possible that Bigfoot could be an alien entity? Was the mighty T.Rex covered with feathers? Who has been stealing female cadavers from Russian cemeteries?

The show is called Professor Weird. You can read the Doctor's pitch below:
It focuses on the scientific evidence for UFOs and ETs, paranormal phenomena, cryptozoological entities, weird crime, bizarre medicine, strange people and anything else of an unusual and fascinating nature. I feel that the scientific community has been myopically narrow-minded concerning the feasibility of these various subjects. As a Ph.D. in theoretical nuclear physics, I endeavor to bring the scientific perspective to these controversial topics from an open-minded stance.

The program will be a combination of fascinating field reports and intriguing in-studio presentations,including a "Realm of Bizarre News" feature.

My able assistant on the show, Laura Brunkala, who is a superb researcher, provides a counterbalancing skepticism to many of my viewpoints so that I do not go off on a tangent!
You don't have to wait until tonight to hear why Bigfoot are UFO pilots. Below we have one of Dr. Ruel's articles followed by a short video supporting his Bigfoot UFO pilot theory.

Is Bigfoot Possibly an Alien Entity?

Dr. Franklin Ruehl, Ph.D.

Rather than being a missing link between man and the apes, Bigfoot may possibly be an alien entity. This intriguing possibility is derived from evidence in several solid UFO cases.

The earliest clues date back to 1888, when a cattleman described an encounter with friendly Indians in Humboldt County, California. They led him to a cave where he saw a hefty humanoid creature covered in long, shiny black hair, with no neck, sitting cross-legged.

One Indian told him three of these "Crazy Bears" had been cast out of a small moon that dropped from the sky and landed.The "moon" then ascended back into the air. So it's highly likely the "Crazy Bears" were really Bigfoots, and the "moon," a spacecraft.

Now fast-forward almost 100 years to 1973... and Mrs. Reafa Heitfield. She and her 13-year-old son were sleeping in a trailer in Cincinnati, Ohio on the morning of October 21. Reafa arose at 2:30 a.m. to quench her thirst, and noticed strange lights in the adjoining parking lot. Looking out the window, her attention was drawn, in particular, to an inexplicable cone of light, shaped like a huge bubble umbrella -- about seven feet in diameter.

Nearby she spotted a grayish, ape-like creature with a large, downward angled snout, no neck and a sizable waist. Moving slowly, it then entered into the light. About five minutes later, both apeman and UFO disappeared.

Another dramatic incident occurred a few days later on October 25, 1973. A group of farmers in Fayette County, Pennsylvania caught sight of a dome-shaped UFO that was brightly lit and about 100 feet in diameter. As the locals drove toward it, they saw a pair of gargantuan creatures covered with thick, matted hair, luminescent green eyes and long arms that dangled below their knees.

A farmer's son fired a gun shot at the creatures, one of which raised its right hand in the air. At that very moment, the UFO disappeared. Then, the two Bigfoots escaped into the woods and were never seen again.

Dairy farmer William Bosak of Frederic, Wisconsin was returning from a co-op meeting about 10:30 p.m. on December 9, 1974, when he nearly slammed into a globular UFO on the road in front of him, its bottom half enshrouded in fog.

Inside the visible transparent dome was a six-foot-tall ape-like creature with reddish-brown fur covering its body (except for the face) and distinctive pointed ears. It appeared to be operating a control panel. As Bosak passed by, the object suddenly arose and disappeared.

In August,1976, after a series of UFO sightings around Rutland, British Columbia, Canada, several men and their children saw a hairy ape-like entity, six to seven feet tall roaming about a mountainside. They also found a clump of hair that was sent to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for identification. Laboratory analysis confirmed it was primate hair, but, significantly, it could not be matched to any known species on earth!

Perhaps the Bigfoot creatures are UFO pilots, landing on earth for exploratory purposes. Or, conceivably, higher level ETs are leaving behind some specimens as "guinea pigs" to test our environment for long-term survival. Or, possibly,these Bigfoots are criminal entities being deposited on Earth as a form of cosmic deportation!

 

Friday, August 17, 2012

1978 "Bigfoot' sighting local legend,The Minerva Monster




This Minerva monster sighting is not far from my location,actually it is only about 10 minutes from here.I have relatives that live in the same area as the sighting and has told me a few things that him and his father saw at that time.


PARIS TWP. — It was a hot summer night in August 1978.
Evelyn Cayton was sitting at the kitchen table with family and friends. They heard a noise in her back yard on Lincoln Street SE, about two miles west of Minerva.
It wasn’t the first time. The kids had heard strange noises before. They thought it was a hermit. Maybe a crazed mountain man. It made the dog go berserk.
Then they saw something in the woods — a 6-foot-tall, thickly haired beast.
The night of Aug. 20 was different. The beast got closer than ever, peering into the kitchen window, illuminated by an outside light, reeking of ammonia and rotten eggs.
Weighing 300 pounds, black-and-brown matted hair covered its head and body, making the face indistinguishable.
Venturing outside, the Caytons and their guests searched for it. They saw it in the headlights of a car. The manlike animal moved toward them. Everybody got scared and ran inside. A woman was so frightened she cried.
Twenty-six years ago this month, the stunned group reported what they saw to Stark County sheriff’s deputy James Shannon.
Some details elude him, but Shannon remembers that night, the start of what he calls the most bizarre investigation of his 30-year law enforcement career.
“They heard something in the window, kind of clawing and pawing,” said Shannon, who retired in 1997 as a captain in the department. “From what I remember, I don’t think this creature, critter, whatever the hell it was, was trying to get in as much as it was saying, ‘Hey, look at me.’ ”
Shannon did not suspect a hoax. Not a hint of it.
The family saw something. He doesn’t know what, though he’s not convinced it was a Bigfoot.
Then again, “For all I knew, I could have been the first person to substantiate the existence of one.”

Bigfoot buzz

The sighting was a sensation. It made the front page of The Repository four times.
“Deputies seek 6-foot beast,” trumpeted the headline on the first story, at the bottom corner of the front page. A few days later, the story was bannered across the top: “Beast still, but noises, odor persists.”
“Deputies will resume a stake-out tonight in efforts to spot a 6-foot hairy beast that frightened a Lincoln St. SE family earlier this week,” the Aug. 24 story began.
Jim Hillibish gumshoed the story for The Repository.
“It was those doldrums between the Hall of Fame (festival) and Labor Day,” he said, laughing. “It was a good story and we kept it going.”
Overnight, the property became a Bigfoot outpost, attracting media from Akron, Cleveland and even outside the country. Wire services spread the story nationally. Bigfoot investigators from Florida and California and hunters armed with high-power rifles descended on 14186 Lincoln St. SE.
A van drove onto the Cayton’s front yard one time. A group of hunters hopped out, flanked by Doberman pinschers, trekking into the deep woods and old strip mine behind the property. Bigfoot believers camped out in the woods.
It got so bad that the Caytons posted a fence to keep gawkers out. Evelyn Cayton was on the brink of a nervous breakdown.
“I think the hype lasted into the fall,” Shannon recalled.
In 1983, Herbert Cayton, Evelyn’s husband, recounted the Bigfoot buzz.
“One day there were 100 to 150 cars ... in my driveway, on my lawn and lining both sides of the road,” he said.
Evelyn and Herbert Cayton are deceased. The remaining Caytons are publicity shy. Howe Cayton, a son, and Rebecca Manley, a daughter, declined to be interviewed about the Bigfoot.
The family took a lot of razzing. At a high school football game, local folks mocked them, chanting, “Bigfoot, Bigfoot.” A local eatery spoofed the sighting, advertising on a roadside sign: “Bigfoot ate here.”
Herbert Cayton took the skepticism in stride.
“There were doubters,” he said. “Those who yelled things from car windows when they passed. It was weird. ... The way I feel about it is if they don’t want to believe, they don’t have to.”
“I think most people thought of it as a joke, as a lark,” said Shannon.
But the Cayton report spurred claims of other sightings.
“Somebody claimed that they saw a Bigfoot running across Route 30 near the Cayton’s house,” Shannon said. “It was a fog-shrouded night and all of a sudden they saw this thing dart out in front of them.”
Another sighting was reported on Liberty Church Road SE.
The woman “reported hearing strange noises in the woods surrounding her house since sometime in June,” Shannon’s August report said. It sounded like a cat fight or a woman’s shriek, the woman said. Other neighbors heard the noises.

Searching for Sasquatch

Shannon took the Bigfoot report seriously, like any other investigation: a stolen car, a drug deal, a barroom scuffle.
On the night of Aug. 20, he spent an hour or two at the Cayton home, then returned when daylight broke.
Shannon and four other deputies scoured the area, searching for six or seven hours in Army surplus Jeeps and on horseback.
“A lot of people thought it was a bear; somebody thought it was a deer,” Shannon said. “And I thought, ‘These people ought to be able to tell the difference.’ ”
Cayton, who worked the midnight shift at Diebold, wasn’t home that night, but said he had seen the creature twice before.
“It was shaped like a man and it walked like a man,” he told The Repository in 1983. “When a bear moves away, it goes away on all four feet. This swung up over the (edge of the) strip mine on two.”
Part of a skull was found in a pit behind the Cayton home, Shannon said; it appeared to be from a cow or other large animal. Tufts of fur were found on the remains of a chicken coop, where the Caytons had spotted the Bigfoot sitting.
The fur and skull went to Malone College for analysis. The skull also was taken to the pathology laboratory at Aultman Hospital, but the hospital refused to examine it.
Nobody knows what happened to them.
Suzie Thomas, spokeswoman for Malone College, said she’s fielded questions about the samples before and has asked those who were on campus then.
“Either their memory is failing them or they’re just not admitting they were involved in a hunt for (Bigfoot),” she said, laughing.

Police report

Shannon interviewed residents of the Cayton home, friends, even a professional photographer in quest of a snapshot of Bigfoot.
The Caytons never used the word “Bigfoot.”
Mrs. Cayton simply described a creature, more than 6 feet tall with stubby legs and hairy, indistinct features, that at one point turned to protect two “smaller things that were standing beside it,” the report said. It eventually walked away into the strip mine.
Manley, 27, and her sister Vicki Keck, 25, were shaken.
Scott Patterson, 18, a family friend, also was shaken up. Skeptical of past sightings, Patterson told Shannon he was now a “believer.”
The sightings didn’t end on Aug. 20.
Two days later, Mary Ackerman, another Cayton daughter, said she saw the beast standing on the edge of a strip mine when she pulled into her parents’ driveway, and five days after the initial report, John Nutter, a photographer from Cuyahoga Falls, said he saw a bear about 30 feet away in a wooded area near Liberty Church Road SE. Nutter took a photo and retreated quickly. A deputy combed the area for 90 minutes and found what appeared to be bear tracks.
But Nutter’s color film produced a “fuzzy” image, and he waffled on the bear story.
“I thought it over and now (I) don’t think it was a bear,” he told The Repository a few days later. “It made a sound unlike any bear I’ve ever heard.”

More sightings

The Minerva Bigfoot continues to fascinate. Last month, a researcher visited the Cayton home to search the woods.
And reports of Bigfoot persist in Paris Township, a hotbed of sightings, though not with the same fervor of the 1978 sightings.
David White, 58, said he’s heard mysterious sounds behind his Paris Township home, a few hundred yards from the Cayton home, at the rear of Skyland Hills Mobile Home Park.
“It’s a blood-chilling sound,” White said. “A curdling sound.”
White paused. His eyes grew wide. “It will scare the hell out of you.”
He said he heard the noises last summer, echoing from the woods next to a small lake.
David’s wife, Connie White, backed him up: “You don’t want to look and see what it was,” she said. They said it sounded like the noises on a Bigfoot TV show.
“I’ve heard wild cats, panthers, you name it,” said David White, who grew up hunting with his father, “and I’ve never heard the sound like I heard here.”
Hunters have seen “something” in the woods, he added, vowing never to return. They said it sounded like a bear.
“It scared the animals off,” David White said. “The turkey, the deer, the rabbits — all the wild game was gone.”
In the 1980s, White said, his teenage son was haunted by “something” in a remote area on Crowl Street SE; it was months, maybe more than a year, before his son would camp in those woods again.
He said he also saw one in the Greentown area when he was a school boy. About an hour before sunset, White and two friends rode bicycles back to a strip mine pond off Highland Park Street NW.
Bigfoot was about 100 yards away, he said, the beast’s upper body on the other side of the lake, ominously poking over the brush line.
“This dog we had, a big collie, it wasn’t scared of nothing,” White said. “When it ran, we knew it was time to go.”
White stretched his hands about four feet apart: “Its shoulders were that wide.”

The story lives on

A few years ago, the legendary Minerva sighting was featured on the “Ripley’s Believe It or Not” television show.
In 1996, The Wall Street Journal interviewed Shannon.
“We’re a pretty urban county, so there’s not too many places for Bigfoot to hide,” Shannon told the reporter. “When Bigfoot walks into one of our liquor stores and pulls a holdup, then I’ll believe it.”
The Akron Beacon Journal’s coverage included an artist’s rendering, and the story forever linked reporter Barbara Galloway, now an Alliance High School teacher, to the “Minerva Monster.”
“Of probably all the 3,000 stories I’ve done in my career, that’s the one that everyone remembers.”
Galloway’s name pops up on the Internet, mingled with reports detailing the Minerva case.
“People remember it, for some insane reason,” she said, “and they ask me about it quite a lot. I probably get a couple inquiries a year.”
Galloway recalls details of the Cayton story, including a “lionlike, tan-colored animal on four legs that walked with it.” She also recalls the Caytons “didn’t feel they were in imminent danger. ... It was just maybe curious.”
Galloway and photographer Ted Wall camped out on the Caytons’ porch.
“Ted was a grizzled veteran of news and he was like, ‘By gosh, if it is here, I am going to get a picture of it.’”
The creature never showed. But Galloway does not discount the story.
Some things couldn’t be explained, she noted. A tunnel, 7 or 8 feet long, was dug through dense brush and thorn bushes, leading to a gully behind the Cayton home. It resembled a nest or sleeping area — maybe Bigfoot’s bed.
Galloway grew up a farm girl. She knows the work of a bear when she sees it. It marks its territory, clawing trees, Galloway said, leaving scattered bark and tree limbs.
And “a person basically would have had to go in there with a chain saw and carve out a perfect circle, and it wasn’t like that at all. It didn’t look human, and it didn’t match the behavior patterns of a bear.”

Sticking to their story

The Caytons stuck to their story, said Shannon, Galloway and Donald Keating, a Bigfoot investigator from Newcomerstown.
“They were very plain, simple, down-to-earth people, and you could tell something had happened that really frightened them,” Galloway said. “There were never any inconsistencies with their story, however many times we went over it.”
Shannon drew the same conclusion.
“Some of the persons were interviewed separately and all described the beast identically,” he reported. “All hoped they would never see it again.”
Keating, who founded the annual Bigfoot conference in Newcomerstown and the Tri-State Bigfoot Study Group, said the Minerva story stands out among the hundred or so he’s probed.
“Back in ’85, when I spoke with the family, and again in ’91, their reports were the same practically word for word as they were in ’78,” he said. “If you had a list of the top 10 sightings in Ohio based on credibility or believability, Minerva would easily be in the top three.”
Massive publicity overwhelmed the Caytons, Galloway said.
“They were quite appalled when all the reporters and the hunters did show up,” she said. “They were kind of reluctant to even do the story, but on the other hand they felt they had to make it known it was even happening and that this unusual thing was in their area.”
Shannon still wonders exactly what the Caytons saw.
“To this day, I don’t think that I doubt that they saw something, and underscore something. I don’t necessarily think it was a Bigfoot.”

Additional Repository articles

They heard a noise in her backyard on Lincoln Street SE.

It wasn’t the first time. The kids had heard noises before. They thought it was a hermit, maybe a crazed mountain man. The hermit also made the dogs go berserk, the Cayton family thought.
But the night of Aug. 20 was different.
This time they saw something: a 6-foot-tall, thickly-haired beast.
The creature stood at the kitchen window, reeking of ammonia and rotten eggs.
It must have weighed 300 pounds. Hair covered its body, making the face indistinguishable, at least in the darkness.
The beast peered into the window, startling those inside. Venturing outside, the Caytons and their guests searched for it. At one point, Mrs. Cayton drew a rifle on the beast. It didn’t budge. Next it showed up in the headlights of a car. The man-like animal moved toward them. Scared, the Caytons and the others dashed inside. One woman was so frightened she cried.
Twenty-six years ago this month, the group reported what they saw to Stark County sheriff’s deputy James Shannon.
Some details elude him, but Shannon remembers that night, the start of what he calls the most bizarre investigation of his 30-year law enforcement career.
“They heard something in the window, kind of clawing and pawing,” said Shannon, who retired in 1997 as a captain in the department. “They ... investigated and saw what several of them described as Bigfoot kind of drawing attention to itself.
“From what I remember, I don’t think this creature, critter, whatever the hell it was, was trying to get in as much as it was saying, ‘Hey, look at me.’ ”
Shannon did not suspect a hoax. Not a hint of it.
The family saw something. He doesn’t know what, though he doesn’t believe it was a Bigfoot.
Then again, “for all I knew, I could have been the first person to substantiate the existence of one.”

Bigfoot buzz
The sighting was a
sensation. It made the front page of The Repository four times.
“Deputies seek 6-foot beast,” trumpeted the headline on the first story at the bottom corner of the front page. A few days later, the story was bannered across the top: “Beast still, but noises, odor persists.”
“Deputies will resume a stake-out tonight in efforts to spot a 6-foot hairy beast that frightened a Lincoln St. SE family earlier this week,” the Aug. 24 story began.
Jim Hillibish gumshoed the story for The Repository.
“The Hall of Fame (festival) was about over,” he said, laughing. “It was those doldrums between the Hall of Fame and Labor Day. It was a good story and we kept it going.”
Overnight, the property became a Bigfoot outpost, attracting media from Akron, Cleveland and even outside the country. Wire services spread the story nationally. Bigfoot investigators and hunters armed with high-power rifles descended on 14186 Lincoln St. SE.
A van drove onto the Cayton’s front yard one time. A group of hunters hopped out, flanked by Doberman pinschers, trekking into the deep woods and old strip mine behind the property. Bigfoot investigators camped out in the woods.
It got so bad that the Caytons posted a fence around their property to keep gawkers out. Evelyn Cayton was on the brink of a nervous breakdown.
“I think the hype lasted into the fall,” Shannon recalled.
In 1983, Herbert Cayton, Evelyn’s husband, recounted the Bigfoot hysteria.
“One day there were 100 to 150 cars ... in my driveway, on my lawn and lining both sides of the road,” he recalled.
Evelyn and Herbert Cayton are deceased. Today, the remaining Caytons are publicity shy. Becky Manley, their daughter, and Howe Cayton, their son, declined to be interviewed about the Bigfoot.
The family took a lot of razzing. At a high school football game, local folks mocked them, chanting, “Bigfoot, Bigfoot.” A local eatery spoofed the sighting, advertising on a roadside sign: “Bigfoot ate here.”
Herbert Cayton understood the skepticism.
“There were doubters,” he said. “Those who yelled things from car windows when they passed. It was weird. Things like that are hard to believe. The way I feel about it is if they don’t want to believe, they don’t have to.”
“I think most people thought of it as a joke, as a lark,” said Shannon.
But the Cayton report spurred other sightings.
“Somebody claimed that they saw a Bigfoot running across Route 30 near the Cayton’s house,” Shannon said. “It was a fog-shrouded night and all of a sudden they saw this thing dart out in front of them.”
Another sighting was reported on Liberty Church Road SE.
The woman “reported hearing strange noises in the woods surrounding her house since sometime in June,” Shannon’s August report said. It sounded like a cat fight or a woman’s shriek, the woman said. Other neighbors heard the noises.

Searching for Sasquatch

Shannon took the Bigfoot report seriously. He handled it like any other investigation: a stolen car, a drug deal, a barroom scuffle.
He spent a few hours at the Cayton home the night of Aug. 20, then returned when daylight broke. Shannon and four other deputies scoured the area, searching for six or seven hours in Army surplus Jeeps and on horseback.
“A lot of people thought it was a bear, somebody thought it was a deer,” Shannon said. “And I thought, ‘These people ought to be able to tell the difference.’ ”
Cayton, who worked the midnight shift at Diebold, wasn’t home the night of Aug. 20, but said he had seen the creature twice before.
“It was shaped like a man and it walked like a man,” he told The Repository in 1983. “When a bear moves away, it goes away on all four feet. This swung up over the (edge of the) strip mine on two.”
Part of a skull was found in a pit behind the Cayton home, Shannon said; it appeared to be from a cow or other large animal. Tufts of fur were found on the remains of a chicken coop, where the Cayton’s had spotted the Bigfoot sitting.
The fur and skull went to Malone College for analysis, according to the sheriff’s report. The skull also was taken to the pathology laboratory at Aultman Hospital, but the hospital refused to examine it.
Nobody knows what happened to the skull and fur.
Suzie Thomas, spokeswoman for Malone College, said she’s fielded questions about the samples before and has asked those who were on campus then.
“Either their memory is failing them or they’re just not admitting they were involved in a hunt for (Bigfoot),” she said, laughing.

Police report

Shannon interviewed 10 people — residents of the Cayton home, friends, even a professional photographer in quest of a snapshot of Bigfoot.
Originally, the word Bigfoot was not even uttered by the Caytons, Shannon recalled.
Mrs. Cayton simply described a humanoid, more than 6 feet tall with stubby legs and hairy, indistinct features, that at one point turned to protect two “smaller things that were standing beside it,” the report. It didn’t flee after Mrs. Cayton loaded a .22 rifle, but it eventually walked away into the strip mine.
The Cayton’s two daughters — Rebecca Manley, 27, and Vicki Keck, 25, — were shaken.
Scott Patterson, 18, a family friend, also was shook up. Skeptical of past sightings, Patterson told Shannon he was now a “believer.”
The sightings didn’t end Aug. 20.
Two days later, Mary Ackerman, another Cayton daughter, said she saw the beast standing on the edge of a strip mine when she pulled into her parents’ driveway, and five days after the initial report, John Nutter, a photographer from Cuyahoga Falls, said he saw a bear about 30 feet away in a wooded area near Liberty Church Road SE. Nutter took a photo and retreated quickly. A deputy combed the area for 90 minutes and found what appeared to be bear tracks.
But Nutter’s color film produced a “fuzzy” image, and he waffled on the bear story.
“I thought it over and now (I) don’t think it was a bear,” he told The Repository a few days later. “It made a sound unlike any bear I’ve ever heard.”

More sightings

The Minerva Bigfoot continues to fascinate. Last month, a researcher visited the Cayton home to search the woods.
And reports of Bigfoot persist in Paris Township, a hotbed of sightings, though not with the same fervor of the 1978 sightings.
David White, 58, said he hears sounds behind his Paris Township home, a few hundred yards from the Cayton home, at the rear of Skyland Hills Mobile Home Park.
“It’s a blood-chilling sound,” White said. “A curdling sound.”
White paused. His eyes grew wide. “It will scare the hell out of you.”
He said he heard the noise last August, echoing from the pine trees that surround a small lake.
David’s wife, Connie White, backed him up: “You don’t want to look and see what it was,” she said.
“I’ve heard wild cats, panthers, you name it,” said David White, who grew up hunting with his father, “and I’ve never heard the sound like I heard here.”
Hunters have seen “something” in the woods, he added, vowing never to return.
In the 1980s, White said his teenage son was haunted by a Bigfoot experience in woods near Crowl Street SE; it was months, maybe more than a year, before his son would camp in the woods again.
He said he also saw one in the Greentown area when he was a school boy. About an hour before sunset, White and two friends rode bicycles back to a strip mine pond off Highland Park Street NW.
Bigfoot was about 100 yards away, he said, the beast’s upper body on the other side of the lake, ominously poking over the brush line.
“He stood up and this thing was hairy with long arms and ugly.”
“This dog we had, a big collie, it wasn’t scared of nothing,” White said. “When it ran, we knew it was time to go.”
White stretched his hands about four feet apart: “Its shoulders were that wide.”
The story lives on
A few years ago, “Ripley’s Believe It or Not” featured the legendary Minerva sighting on its television show.
In 1996, The Wall Street Journal interviewed Shannon.
“We’re a pretty urban county, so there’s not too many places for Bigfoot to hide,” Shannon told the reporter. “When Bigfoot walks into one of our liquor stores and pulls a hold up, then I’ll believe it.”
The Akron Beacon Journal’s coverage included an artist’s rendering, and the story forever linked reporter Barbara Galloway, now an Allinace High School tea cher, to the “Minerva Monster.”
“Of probably all the 3,000 stories I’ve done in my career, that’s the one that everyone remembers.”
Galloway’s name pops up on the Internet, mingled with reports detailing the Minerva case. Alliance students and faculty burst with curiosity and ask her about the “Minerva Monster.”
“People remember it for some insane reason,” Galloway said, “and they ask me about it quite a lot. I probably get a couple inquiries a year.”
She recalls details of the Cayton story, including a “lion-like, tan-colored animal on four legs that walked with it.” She also recalls the Caytons “didn’t feel they were in imminent danger. ... It was just maybe curious.”
Galloway and photographer Ted Wall camped out on the Cayton’s porch.
“Ted was a grizzled veteran of news and he was like, ‘By gosh, if it is here, I am going to get a picture of it.’”
The creature never showed. But Galloway does not discount the story.
Some things couldn’t be explained, she noted. A tunnel, 7 or 8 feet long, was dug through dense brush and thorn bushes, leading to a gully behind the Cayton home. It resembled a nest or sleeping area — maybe Bigfoot’s bed.
Galloway grew up a farm girl. She knows the work of a bear when she sees one. It marks its territory, clawing trees, Galloway said, leaving scattered bark and tree limbs.
And “a person basically would have had to go in there with a chain saw and carve out a perfect circle, and it wasn’t like that at all. It didn’t look human, and it didn’t match the behavior patterns of a bear.”
Sticking to their story
The Caytons stuck to their story, said Shannon, Galloway and Donald Keating, a Bigfoot investigator from Newcomerstown.
“They were very plain, simple, down-to-earth people, and you could tell something had happened that really frightened them,” Galloway said. “There were never any inconsistencies with their story, however many times we went over it.”
Shannon drew the same conclusion.
“Some of the persons were interviewed separately and all described the beast identically,” he reported. “All hoped they would never see it again.”
Keating, who founded the annual Bigfoot conference in Newcomerstown and the Tri-County Bigfoot Study Group, said the Minerva story stands out among the hundred or so he’s probed.
“The ‘Minerva Monster’ episode ... appears to be one of the longest lived series of events that hasn’t changed at all during the past 26 years,” he said. “Back in ’85, when I spoke with the family, and again in ’91, their reports were the same practically word for word as they were in ’78.”
“If you had a list of the top 10 sightings in Ohio based on credibility or believability,” Keating said, “Minerva would easily be in the top three.”
Massive publicity overwhelmed the Caytons, Galloway said.
“They were quite appalled when all the reporters and the hunters did show up,” she said. “They were kind of reluctant to even do the story, but on the other hand they felt they had to make it known it was even happening and that this unusual thing was in their area.”
Shannon still wonders exactly what the Caytons saw.


The Missing Monster

John Nutter of Cuyahoga Falls was convinced he had proof of the existence of a large, hairy creature that Paris Township residents and Stark County were claiming as the their answer to a Bigfoot. The "Minerva monster," as it became known in media circles, has eluded law-enforcement officials and anyone with the camera during the hot, dry months of August and into September. Nutter walked into the Beacon journal with a roll of film. He said he and a brother were walking a wooded area near an abandoned strip mine that when the creature stepped out from behind a tree in front of them. Nutter said he snapped one picture of the creature before running to safety. The film was ceremoniously developed in the Beacon journal dark room yielded a murky picture of trees, brush and nothing else.
Here is the old pit pond where some of the Minerva reports came from, taken while we were there in 1978. The area was very off-limits, but we managed to search the area many times only to be chased out by dog packs and gun toting residents.

Minerva’s monster is almost like a pet

By Barbara Mudrak, Akron Beacon Journal Staff Writer Sunday June 29, 1980He’s become, residents of the area say, a fixture in the neighborhood: Everyone knows he’s there, but no one pays much attention anymore. He has a few eccentricities, such as regularly pelting nearby houses with small stones, but mostly he keeps to himself and is generally considered a good neighbor, they say. The so-called "Minerva monster," who two years ago created an uproar the likes of which Paris Township had never seen, still is hanging around the densely wooded area behind the home of Herbert and Evelyn Cayton in southeastern Stark County, nearby residents report. "He’s almost like a pet," said Mary Ackerman, one of the Caytons’ daughters, who lives nearby.’It was moving pretty good on two legs, pumping its arms like a track star. I got back in the car, rolled up the windows and locked the door.’- Herbert Burke Jr.THE CREATURE’S first reported public appearance came in August 1978 when Mrs. Cay- ton, her son, Howe, and another daughter, Vicki Keck, were walking up the banks of the abandoned strip pit behind the house. There, they said, they saw a creature - described as over six feet tall and covered with dark, matted hair - standing less than 50 feet away. Mrs. Cayton and Mrs. Keck, along with their friends, Becky Manley and Linda Jones, both of Canton, and Scott Patterson, of Minerva, said they got a better look at the creature a few nights later when he appeared outside a window, less than 10 feet from the kitchen table where the group was sitting. A powerful outdoor light over- head showed the creature clearly, but the witnesses said they could not distinguish arms or facial features because of the thick hair. They said the creature weighed at least 300 pounds.
THE FlVE said they noticed that when the creature appeared, the usual "night noises" from crickets and tree toads stopped and a strange, peculiar odor like that a stagnant water was evident.
They called the Stark County sheriff’s and deputy James Shannon was dispatched to the scene. Shannon paid he smelled a terrible odor when he arrived. He said later the sheriff’s department did not consider the sightings a hoax. Reports of the creature brought a horde of reporters, photographers, curiosity seekers and "bigfoot" hunters to the area. Some of the hunters came armed with shotguns, high-powered rifles, Dobermans and cases of beer.
TWO YEARS later, it appears no one is any closer to finding out what the Minerva monster is. Sheriff’s deputies who investigated in 1978 say they were never able to identify some pieces of hair and something that looked like a jawbone, found near the strip pits.
Herbert Burke Jr., 24, lived in the trailer park next to the Caytons and said he got a good look at the creature as it crossed Route 30 last summer. Burke, who now lives in North Canton, said he’d heard stories about the creature but decided he would "believe it when I see it." He said that one night as he was pulling into the driveway of the trailer park, he spotted something tall standing across the road. He ’said he shined his head lights on the creature - which was less than 40 yards away - then got out of the car for a better look. He said the creature was seven or eight feet tall, weighed more than 400 pounds, and was covered with dark, matted hair.
AS THE lights illuminated the creature, it began running toward the woods, he said. "It was moving pretty good on two legs, pumping its arms like a track star," he said." I got back in the car, rolled up the windows and locked the door." He said he and other residents of the trailer park often heard rocks hitting their mobile homes at night and a variety of strange noises coming from the woods. He said the noises ranged from a kind of laughter, to a loud scream, to something that sounded like a baby’s cry. The Caytons say they often find large footprints in the soft ground near their garden, and Mrs. Cayton has several snapshots of them. She said the footprints resemble those of a human and range from 14 to 21 inches long.
IN THE MONTS following the commotion two years ago, she said, she put out fruits and vegetables behind the house every night on Deputy Shannon’s advice. She said every morning the food would be gone and footprints occasionally would be nearby.
"This year I’ve got a garden out and if any of my vegetables are touched...," Mrs. Cayton said in a mock-threatening voice. The Caytons and their neighbors say that, on occasion, they still experience the eerie silence and smell the odor, which Mrs. Ackerman says smells like the "seaweed" her son Andy brought up from the lake in the abandoned strip mine last year.
WITH THE silence and the smell, they say, they know the creature probably is near. But they say they have grown accustomed to it and no longer make a fuss. "Whatever it is, it’s not dangerous," Mrs. Cayton said. "If it was going to hurt someone, it would have done it by now."