Bigfoot At 50


by John Flinn
Legend of the elusive forest dweller has spawned speculation for half a century.


Somewhere in the wilds of the Siskiyou Mountains, a hulking, ill-kempt, apelike creature should be on the lookout for that dreaded letter from the AARP Yes, it’s true: Bigfoot is about to turn 50.

Or, to put it more precisely, if less fancifully, the phenomenon of Bigfoot is hitting the half-century mark.

In 1958, a man from Willow Creek in Humboldt County discovered the first size-15 footprints in the mud. Wildlife biologists, scoop-hungry reporters, cryptozoologists, psychics, new age shamans and even big-game hunters have been combing the wooded mountains ever since. They’ve turned up more footprints โ€“ lots and lots of footprints โ€“ and a few other intriguing bits of evidence, but no one has been able to produce definitive, unassailable proof that the creature exists.

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Still, several communities claim Bigfoot as their native son โ€“ none with a louder voice than Willow Creek, a tiny town overlooking the Trinity River on Highway 299, 40 minutes east of Arcata. It’s home to the Bigfoot Museum, the Bigfoot Motel and the Bigfoot Golf & Country Club, and was the site of the 2003 International Bigfoot Symposium.

Stories of a big, apelike beast called Sasquatch circulated in the Pacific Northwest long before white settlers arrived. Then, on Aug. 27, 1958, a bulldozer operator named Jerry Crew stumbled upon a set of eerily large footprints next to a U.S. Forest Service road he was building near Bluff Creek.

Andrew Genzoli, a columnist for the Humboldt Times, coined the name Bigfoot, and suddenly Northern California had its own version of the Loch Ness monster.

Image: Happy Birthday to the Big Guy

Nine years later, two other men from Willow Creek, Roger Patterson and Robert Gimlin, were searching in the same area and shot the famous home movie that depicts, depending on your point of view, either Bigfoot or a person in a cheesy gorilla costume. The 53-second clip has been analyzed nearly as thoroughly as the Zapruder film, and whatever your conclusion, there are dozens of “experts” who will back you up.

In the decades that followed, there have been recurrent whispers in Willow Creek of Bigfoot sightings.

But 84-year-old Al Hodgson, retired owner of the town’s variety store, says encounters are more common than is publicly known.

“If you say you’ve seen Bigfoot, people make fun of you,” he said. “A lot of people hold back, keep it to themselves.”

He’s never encountered the big beast himself, but Hodgson has found several sets of footprints, which he preserved with plaster casts. They’re now on display at the town’s Bigfoot Museum.

Many of those who’ve encountered Bigfoot say the creature stinks like rotting garbage. So don’t just look; use your nose, too.

. . .

Source - http://www.ocregister.com/

 

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