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Last Updated 8:14 am PDT Thursday, October 25, 2007
Story appeared in SCENE section, Page E1
Huddled by the campfire, the screech of a creature unknown raises the mother of all goose bumps. Was it Bigfoot or Mothman, the Chenoo or Chupacabra?
Tales of these legendary forest creatures are not for folks who sleep with the lights on, peer under beds and inspect closets before bedtime. The rest of us relish a morsel of fright and a quality shudder.
Did you hear the one about Old Mossback or the superhuman Lemurians who inhabit an underground city of gold beneath Mount Shasta? Long sacred to American Indians, Mount Shasta also is believed to be the site of magic crystals, UFO landings and, gasp, the doorway to another dimension.
Lakes are said to be inhabited by serpentine creatures like Tahoe Tessie (Lake Tahoe) and Ogopogo (Lake Okanagan, British Columbia). And we'd be neglectful not to mention the outdoors-loving werewolf and the American Indians' Wendigo. Both are meat eaters.
Not that such things deserve credence, but do watch for exposed tree roots while sprinting for the car.
Chills in the West mostly are courtesy of Bigfoot, sometimes called Sasquatch. Thought to be a stinky, hairy, bipedal humanoid, Bigfoot mostly has been reported roaming from California's North Coast on up into Canada.
Reports of face-to-face encounters, awful odors, unearthly screams and humongous footprints are logged and investigated by people with degrees in science. And just try to convince the backpackers, the campers and the fishermen who have seen Bigfoot that it doesn't exist.
"I saw one when I was 4 years old, and I've since talked to about 200 who have seen one," says Michael Rugg, proprietor of the Bigfoot Discovery Museum in Felton, near Santa Cruz. "You see one of these things yourself and it takes away your skepticism."
Nonbelievers laugh themselves silly over such claims. Hazel Gendron, who lived in Happy Camp for many years, scoffs at the existence of Bigfoot. Happy Camp, 323 miles north of Sacramento and near the Oregon border, is Bigfoot country. Its backyard is the Siskiyou Wilderness area, a vast, forested region described as the most isolated and remote wilderness area in the United States.
"Not a believer," says Gendron, now living in Shasta Lake City. "I always backpacked in those mountains without a gun, sometimes camping eight or 10 days at a time. I never carried a gun, only a camera. It's not the animals I was afraid of, it was the marijuana growers out there."
Gendron, a historian and author, believes the Bigfoot story may have originated from the Tolawa tribe.
"The old Indians had ancient stories handed down which had moral themes and also themes to keep the kids in line," she says. "If the kids happened to wander off, this big, hairy man was going to get them. That was probably the beginning for the idea of Bigfoot."
Fear can be inspired by things living and allegedly living, things seen and unseen.
"The great majority of Bigfoot sightings are associated with extreme fear," Rugg says.
Maybe it was a shadowy figure, the snap of dry twigs, the rustling of brush that froze the soul of Vinson Brown. Something was out there, shrouded by the inky blackness of the Siskiyou Wilderness area. Brown and his German shepherd could feel its presence.
"The hair on the dog was standing straight up, and that dog wasn't afraid of anything," says Barbara Brown, relating her late husband's story. "He (the dog) even scared off bears."
Whatever was out there behind their home in Happy Camp that night made a believer of Vinson Brown.
"He didn't believe in Bigfoot, but he did after that night," she says.
Sightings or reports have been made in every state but Hawaii, according to the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (www.bfro.net). Washington leads with 414 incidents, followed by California (369) and Oregon (199).
A BFRO investigator interviewed a backpacker two years ago after a Bigfoot encounter in the Desolation Wilderness area of El Dorado County. In part, the unnamed backpacker had this to say:
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AVOID THESE MOVIES BEFORE BACKPACKING
Campfire Stories (2001) Ranger Bill spins scary stories around the campfire. This is the film with Jamie-Lynn Sigler (Meadow Soprano on "The Sopranos"), and not to be confused with ...Campfire Tales (1997) More teens stranded in the woods following an auto accident. Spooky stories ensue.
Sleepaway Camp (1983) Camps in the woods aren't always the safest places to send the kids especially Camp Arawak. A cult classic.
Friday the 13th (1980) Speaking of camp, Camp Crystal Lake is definitely a no-no. Beware of Jason Voorhees, the guy who started wearing a hockey mask in "Friday the 13th Part III" (1982) and swinging a machete.
Wendigo (2001) Creature of American Indian myth prowls the woods of upstate New York. Eerie.
Deliverance (1972) Gorgeous scenery, disturbing tale. City slickers victimized by crazed mountain folk. Where's a cop when you need one?
Harry and the Hendersons (1987) Family makes friends with a friendly, injured Bigfoot. PG-rated family film.
The Blair Witch Project (1999) Film crew seeks evil entity in the woods. Not a good idea.
Evil Dead (1981) Forest demons gang up on five college students holed up in a cabin. By today's production standards, you may find this bloody, low-budget horror classic downright hilarious.
Dan Vierria
TEN SURVIVAL TIPS -- JUST IN CASE!
Safety first in the wilderness, especially when confronted by unknown species, mutant forms and anything spawned from toxic waste. Below are some of SciFi Channel's popular "Survival Tips" from its "SciFi Saturday: The Most Dangerous Night of Television."1. If its footprint is bigger than your Hummer leave.
2. Never swim alone at night naked.
3. Just because it's dead doesn't mean it's not hungry.
4. If its teeth are bigger than its body, don't try to pet it.
5. "No trespassing" signs only work for things that can read.
6. If it has 20 legs, you can't outrun it.
7. If you can see bits of flesh caught in its teeth ... you're standing too close.
8. When running from a monster, never wear high heels.
9. If the egg weighs more than you ... don't wait around for it to hatch.
10. If it breathes fire, it might not make a good pet.
Dan Vierria
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