The Lone Star Bigfoot
By Chester Moore, Jr.
In 2000, residents of Sabine reported seeing a
gray, ape-like creature in the area's dense forests. The local
newspaper dubbed the creature the "Sabine Thing".
A similar beast called the "Caddo Critter" is said to have inhabited
the bottoms around scenic Caddo Lake in the 1970's. The Sulphur River
along the Texas-Arkansas border has been a source of similar sightings
for decades.
As strange as those stories may sound, they are not the only cases of
mysterious ape-like animal sightings in Texas, not by a long shot.
"Bigfoot" (a.k.a. "Sasquatch") is a term associated with the US Pacific
Northwest, but a handful of investigators are searching for the same
(or very similar) animal right here in the Lone Star State.
Bobby Hamilton of Warren is founder of the Gulf Coast Bigfoot Research
Organization (GCBRO), a group dedicated to solving these mysteries in
Texas and elsewhere. "I know it sounds crazy, but there are Bigfoot
creatures right here in Texas," Hamilton said. "That's a lot to
swallow, but I've been researching these creatures in the field for
quite some time now. They're out there."
Something Hamilton likes to make clear up front is that his
organization believes these creatures are real flesh and blood animals,
not part of some paranormal government conspiracy. "They're flesh and
blood animals. We don't believe they are flying around in UFOs or are
shapeshifters or anything like that. In fact, we don't allow anyone
into our group who talks about that kind of stuff. We believe these
animals to be a primate, a very smart primate that we just haven't yet
proven exists."
The GCBRO keeps a log of sightings by county in Texas and other states,
and according to Hamilton, reports come in on a weekly basis. "Some of
them are recent reports while others may be 30 years old," he said.
"But they all tell us something. If an area has a bunch of sightings
over a long period of time we know that's a good area to research."
Researching an area consists of looking for sign like footprints and
twisted limbs and listening for vocalizations. "We have recorded some
noises we just can't place with known animals. Some of these sounds are
pretty amazing, even frightening," Hamilton said.
The group has even found some hair samples. Primatologists who examined
the samples said they were from "no known animal." One came back as
matching alleged Bigfoot hair gathered in the Pacific Northwest.
Beyond gathering physical evidence of the creatures' existence,
Hamilton said some in his group have had close encounters. "There are
people within our group who have seen these creatures, myself included.
Some joined the group because they saw one and others have seen them in
the course of research."
Craig Woolheater is a researcher for the Texas Bigfoot Research Center
(TBRC), another group studying the Bigfoot phenomenon. "Several of our
members have seen these creatures, and that's a big part of the reason
we're so passionate about studying them. It's one thing to read about
them, but another to see them," he said.
Woolheater's sighting occurred while he and his wife were traveling
through Louisiana one night in the early 1990's. "This big, grayish,
hairy creature was on the side of the road. It was dark, but we got a
good look at it. The beast was kind of slumped over," he said.
TBRC members believe the creatures are a subspecies of the ones in the
Pacific Northwest. "The basic reports are the same-a large, hairy
animal walking upright," Woolheater said. "But there are some
differences, like coloration, hair length and build. Until it's proven
they exist, all of that's kind of a moot point. This is certainly
cryptozoology's biggest mystery."
Loren Coleman, considered by many to be the world's foremost
cryptozoologist, notes that there have been several discoveries of
large animals in recent years. "A new species of antelope was found in
Vietnam a few years ago. Tales of the mountain gorilla used to be
greeted with the same kind of disdain as modern day mystery primate
sightings. One day we may find out these creatures are real too."
Coleman, who along with Patrick Hughye wrote A
Field Guide to Bigfoot, Yeti and Other Mystery Primates Worldwide,
said there are plenty of historical references of apelike creatures in
the South, both from European and Native American culture. "The
Louisiana Choctaw Indian had an animal they called the nalusa fayala,
which means 'long, evil being," he said.
The most famous Southern Bigfoot sightings came from just across the
border on the Arkansas side of the Sulphur River near the tiny
community of Fouke. The "Fouke Monster," as the creature was called by
locals, achieved celluloid immortality in the 1973 film, The Legend of
Boggy Creek. Smokey Crabtree was a wildlife advisor for the film, and
his family accounted for several of the sighting reenactments. He has
authored two books, Smokey and the Fouke Monster and Too Close to the
Mirror, and believes there are such creatures roaming the southern
bottomlands. According to him, the filmmakers did not tell the whole
story, or at least did not tell it accurately.
"A lot of people got the impression after watching the movie that the
creature was mean and aggressive, but in my experience it wasn't," he
said. "There were other inaccuracies, which is why I wrote Smokey and
the Fouke Monster."
Being a cryptozoology buff, I jumped on the opportunity to drive up to
Fouke and visit with Crabtree. I interviewed him at his home and then
went for a walk along the banks of Boggy Creek. I felt like a kid
watching The Legend of Boggy Creek for the first time.
One thing I always wondered is why the creature in the film was never
referred to as a "Bigfoot," as most mysterious North American primates
seem to get tagged.
"At the time Bigfoot was something that was known of in the Pacific
Northwest and in a lot of ways the area of Fouke was sheltered from
that part of the world," Crabtree said. "We never heard of Bigfoot, but
we knew something strange was going on around our little community."
How did Crabtree, a lifelong hunter, fisherman and trapper, react when
he first heard of the creature? "My son came home one day saying he saw
this big, hairy creature in the woods behind where we lived," he said.
"I could tell he was dead serious too, and this bothered me. I had
never known my son to lie, but I just couldn't believe there might be
something like that out in the woods I had hunted and trapped in my
whole life.
"After awhile, older members of my family started coming to me and
saying my son wasn't lying. They had seen such a creature in the area
in years past but swore to never tell. However, they felt they had to
let me know my son was telling the truth."
After that, even common incidents in the woods took on new significance
for Crabtree. "I started looking back to things that happened to me out
in the woods and in the bottoms in the past, and wondered if something
strange had really occurred," he said.
One thing most cryptozoologists agree on is that if such a creature
existed in the Fouke area, there must have been more than one of them.
The natural question, therefore, regards recent sightings.
"We get reports from time to time," Crabtree said. "In fact, a few
years ago I got a report from several different people who reported
seeing a large hairy creature off of Highway 71. Three motorists saw
this thing on the side of the road at the same time, and on the same
night a lady who had no knowledge of the other sightings reported
seeing the same thing in the same general area."
Do a handful of these creatures roam the vast woodlands of the Lone
Star State? Well, no one has proven it. Then again, no one has
disproven it either.
Think about that the next time you are in the woods alone and that
creepy feeling comes over you.
Copyright 2002 by Chester Moore
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