Showing posts with label Film Site UPDATE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film Site UPDATE. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Patterson-Gimlin Bluff Creek Film Site & Believe It Tour UPDATES, BF Site of the Day, Tribal Bigfoot Reading Group, Blog Links

See below for more Patterson-Gimlin Film Site goodies, analysis and photos. Meanwhile, some Bigfoot News....

You can sign up to receive emailed blog posts and the helpful "Bigfoot Site of the Day" from bigfootsightings.org, run by Linda Martin of Happy Camp. If your Bigfoot bookmarks folder is as ridiculously vast and unorganized as mine, you'll probably love having these mails filed away for future reference. As elusive as the Creature is out in the real world woods, Bigfoot has proliferated wildly and monstrously on the world wide web. Let BF Sightings find the way through the woods for you, or at least provide some stimulating surprises you might not have seen for all the trees.

Linda has also organized a September 2009 reading group for Dave Paulides' TRIBAL BIGFOOT, so check it! The book is fascinating in its content and full of certain interesting peculiarities that make it unique. Basically a sequel to his Cryptozoological Book of the Year winning THE HOOPA PROJECT, this one expands its range to cover areas such as Willow Creek, Del Norte, Siskiyou and Trinity Counties, as well as Oklahoma and Minnesota. Dave's controversial in some quarters, but this just ads strength and distinction to these books where many other Bigfoot books seem to repeat the same stories and cover similar, familiar ground. Dave has told me he has some "earth-shaking" revelations coming regarding the Patterson-Gimlin Film, but we'll remain mum on that issue for now... IS BIGFOOT HUMAN? Wait and see.
Now to continue from our previous post.... THE BELIEVE IT TOUR needed a guide up to the Bluff Creek film site, and as Bobo was previously engaged, we were quite happy to oblige. Here is a further update on their visit at their blog: Willow Creek and the Start of the Bigfoot Scenic Byway. Here's the tale told from Bigfoot Sightings: The Believe It Tour’s Willow Creek Adventure.

The Believe It Camp was set up right at the bottom of 12N13H, the "K" spur that takes one down to the film site area. Note: there are some nice swimming holes in the creek right at this area, if you look for them.

To get there: Look on your topo map: from "Eye See"/G-O Road take the Cedar Camp Road (12N12) left hand turn at about 16 miles up, then a couple of miles to the the sneaky right onto 12N13 at the green metal gate. From there it is about five miles down; just watch for the overgrown forest road spurs, three on right, one steep one on the left, and then you'll come to a big log landing on the left, and the 2.1 mile film site spur down (and I do mean DOWN) to Bluff Creek is to the right. Leave ALL low-clearance vehicles behind, and preferably take only 4WD ones in.

After less than a quarter mile's bushwhacky hike east from the park/camp area (keep to the right along the hill's bottom--you are now on the old Bluff Creek road!--rather than the treacherous wood-filled creek to the left) you'll come out at a big "bend in the crick" (Bob Gimlin's words), fully jammed up with log debris and giant root balls.
In the image are Brad, Craig Woolheater, Diana and SharonLee emerging onto the western side of the film site. Wounded legs and twisted ankles are common here as one navigates the woody mess. Be careful. We lost a couple of soldiers here.
Once you hit the gravel below you're just before the area where Roger and Bob first spotted the creature (in our humble opinion). Just past the roots is a curved area of open gravel bar backed by a mess of young alder trees and scrubby shrubs. Judging from the recorded distances by those who were on the ground after the film was made (see Krantz, Perez, etc.), this should be right about where the Creature was squatting by the creekside, hidden from previous view by the large wood chunks.
In this aerial photo of the area one can see the camp/park spot as a lighter clearing to the lower left. The creek flows under the dark shadows of trees one sees squiggling diagonally across the image. Now switch to the comparable topo image. At the spot where it says (oops, my bad!) "click to pan image" you are at that big bend. This is where a little creeklet flows (um, trickles, seeps) in from the south. Down on the creek bed and wading through the water briefly you will come around that slight rightward protuberance. Now, I believe, you are at the start, the first glimpse, before the film was rolling. But you can't really tell this from the creekside perspective. Because of the massive vegetal changes, not to mention some certain topological alterations (there was more sand in dem dar days), to get a feeling for the film site layout you'll need to venture up into the woods to the north of the creek.
Moving upstream, around the leftward protuberance you can see here, you are now in the zone where the film has started. Just at the start of the film (often edited out in television documentaries) one can see a damp area in the sand in front of the creature, which we believe is from this leftward jut of the creek. (We can't say for certain what the exact lay of the land was back then, but we're looking for older aerial images.) However, looking at old topos and these old sky shots, the structure of the creek and the streambed's geology seems pretty darn consistent with on-the-ground observations we made just last week.
At this leftward point of the creek is almost certainly where Patterson started his camera, running across the creek, up the slight bank. He passes, in a brief glimpse at the true start of the film, this wet spot we associate with this bump. From there the creek bellies out eastward before hitting an area called "the bowling alley" by some, where the creek makes a very marked and noticable straight and direct run northward. The white part in the above topo, just within this belly, is the film site, we attest. In the last frame of the film one may see a dark forest beyond the tiny, retreating creature. This is the start of the bowling alley area, which is shaded and relatively dark in the afternoon, as the sun at that time has fallen beyond the steep canyon walls to the southwest. Look, here it is:
So, to get a real sense of the actual terrain of the film site, do as we did: just head all the way upstream until you see the straightaway heading north. Here you will see how deeply the creek has sunk since the film was made in 1967, where large banks descend down to the creek about seven feet or so. From this point look west, climb the lower bank area and enter the woods. Head northwest a bit, staying back off the creek a little, and you'll start to see the background canyon wall and comparable Douglas Fir trees, as in the film, as all about you are the same kind of alders as the film's creature passes through. (Check our previous post to see the Believe It folks documenting this area.) But now, there are just tons more trees. Back then they were nearly all washed out by a flood. These alders are young, a fast-growing variety of tree, and certainly are not the same ones as in the film. But they are growing in the same places, obviously due to water and soil conditions. IF you can call it "soil"--just scrape away an inch or so of forest loam and you'll see... SAND. This is the same kind of sand upon which Patty walked--deposited heavily back then by the huge flood of 1964--or at least the remants of the sandbar. The alder trees that have toppled over reveal an incredibly shallow root system. There are old, dead and decaying firs set in the ground that could very well be from the time of the film (does anyone know fir decay rates?). It still is a sandbar, just covered by scrappy, tough vegetation trying to take back the land. From here proceed all the way back to where you came down into the creek at the big bend, keeping eyes out for fine and subtle details. Try to erase all the maze-like wandering between the trees, fallen debris, and boggy fern-shrouded pits, and you'll really start to get a sense that this is the film locale. The perspecives are all RIGHT on. The distance from one end to the other, if looked at as the more or less straight and easy walk that the creature takes, is much shorter than it seems when navigating through the density of it, and the site as a whole really much smaller: maybe only a couple of football fields' lengths within the area the creature walked. The distances correspond neatly with the diagrams of Titmus, Dahinden, Green, Perez and Krantz.
Imagine the creature at the end of the film, at the start of the bowling alley. Shortly after the filming, Bob Titmus tracked the creature's trail back up into the hills on the south side of the creek, up and to the west, so that it would have had a vantage point on what those strange hu-mans were doing down on the gravel bar. Look up from where you stand toward the cut of the rough road you drove in on, and this is where Patty sits, watching YOU.

Watch the PGF on You Tube HERE, with cool narration from Bob Gimlin, and for a more full view of the start of the film see the X-Creatures episode HERE, starting to watch with John Green at seven minutes into the segment. Before going to the film site you must watch this footage at least a hundred times, and it helps to look at it frame-by-frame. Etch the details in your mind, then go.

Thanks be to Cliff Barackman for helpful perspective on the site's location in today's world, to Tom Yamarone, Bobo and Scott McClean for getting me started at the film site, and always to the assiduous Daniel Perez for his fine documentary research and groundbreaking BIGFOOT AT BLUFF CREEK (it was Daniel's arrow and "X" on the map that first showed me the way forward). See links to their sites in our Outside Links section, to the right of this blog.

A bonus feature:
Murray Field, outside of Eureka, where Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin surely sent off their famous Bigfoot film of 1967--after all, the post offices were closed by the time they got back to civilization.

Appearing in the Times-Standard the Sunday the Believe It Tour were visiting was an article on the Lockheed Fire burning in the Santa Cruz/Bonny Doon/Davenport area. Some compassionate folks put up a sign of concern for Bigfoot. Or perhaps, is it that Bigfoot is WARNING US???

RUGARU!!! I challenge you: go look at Peter Matthiessen's IN THE SPIRIT OF CRAZY HORSE, find it in the Index, and ponder....

Friday, August 21, 2009

Believe It Tour on the Road to Bluff Creek, We Almost Lost Woolheater, Squatching Brush Mountain; Bigfoot's bLog Is BIGFOOT SITE OF THE DAY!

We've had a rich week out here in Willow Creek, with the incursion of The Believe It Tour
(see their awesome photo collection on Flikr here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/believeit/, with more set links below covering their visit to Bigfoot Books, some fine dining, and the venture out to Bluff Creek), along with Texan Craig Woolheater, Sharonlee Lormuno of Bigfoot Field Reporter (blog at: http://www.bigfootlives.blogspot.com/, show at: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/59501), Linda Martin of Happy Camp's Bigfoot Sightings (http://bigfootsightings.org//), and James Bobo Fay with his friend, Jimi "Slash" Frizzell.
Bigfoot wasn't "proven," but Squatching always proves to be an adventure! See our previous post for information on the Believe Its,
represented on this California 2009 leg by Mike Esordi of Connecticut, Diana Smith of Grand-View-on-Hudson New York, and Brad Pennock (wait, where does he come from?). The Believe Its came on up from San Diego, seeking ghosts out in the desert, and finding Paul Bunyan on the Humboldt/Del Norte coast, and then came on inland to visit us. We looked for bigfoot both in the wild and in history while they were here, and they went on north along the BIGFOOT SCENIC BYWAY (see rare signed poster to left) on their way up to find Lemurians and possibly Extraterrestrials up on Mount Shasta. Read their blog on this part here: http://we-believe-it.blogspot.com/2009/08/bigfoot-country-is-off-grid.html.

But first, let us toot our own horn again and get it over with. Today Bigfoot's bLog was named THE BIGFOOT SITE OF THE DAY by Linda's Bigfoot Sightings website (http://bigfootsightings.org/2009/08/20/the-bigfoot-books-blog-bigfoot-site-of-the-day/)!!!
Well, we are surely humbled by statements such as this, but we do TRY: "I was deeply impressed by the quality of Steven’s writing.... With word skill like that I have the impression that this man will be writing a lot more in the months and years to come." OK, a book is in the mental pipes, but we're not exactly taking orders yet, and the more we look the stranger the possibilities become.
The first night involved dinner at CINNABAR SAM's. I have to say, Bigfooters are often an outdoorsy form of nerd. I have never been so photographed, videoed, documented, recorded and questioned in all my life, and moments later it is Tweeted, then blogged, Flikred, then immortalized on their web site. Documentarians at heart, Bigfoot people will prove each others' existence if they cannot get the Big Hairy One on film. They do love their tech gear! Everyone is instantly famous.
That night we went out Squatching on Friday Ridge Road and up to Brush Mountain Lookout where recent BF activity has been reported
(see our previous post HERE). We had a third-gen night scope and a very cool new thermal imager so refined that it presented clear as day images in a moonless pitch dark. No Squatches made themselves known, but we did encounter some raccoons, acorns falling from trees (and one bigger thing, potentially a tossed rock), and some amazing views of straggler Perseid meteors and the Milky Way (which is astonishing through night vision binoculars!).
The next day was a trip out, as is said, "On the Road to Bluff Creek." Think of "on the road to Loch Ness," a British expression, and translate: CRAZY! Nutso? Off the deep end? Well, maybe we are?
On the way the expedition stopped in at the BLUFF CREEK COMPANY. The store building was standing still. We were shortly visited by owner Phil Smith Sr., though, and found out that he plans to tear the store down by October. And this: the asking price is actually around $600K. But still, what a deal!













One can see how the building is deteriorating, but the owner assured us that it could be restored--it just isn't in his plans to do so. Apparently, the BC Company has no phone, and the property is not on the public market yet, so anyone wanting to save the place must act more or less NOW, and will have to go to the site to inquire.
After lunch at the Orleans Mining Company Diner, where we saw many hundreds of iron skittles (and painted saw blades) on the walls, and a two-headed calf, we headed out on the G-O Road (EyeSee on the sign) up to 12N12/Cedar Camp Road.

















Below, the turnoff to the Film Site, and... the Believe It folks get their first baptism in the sacred waters of the film site area of Bluff Creek.
Round the "big bend of the creek" spoken of by Bob Gimlin is the FILM SITE, at the bottom of the now-signed 12N13H. More on this in our next post.







Here Diana and Mike investigate the film site itself, just upstream from the big bend and huge root balls of Douglas Firs.
NEAR DISASTER! GORY DEATH AVOIDED!
For those who might be thinking of going to the Film Site, TAKE HEED! BEWARE! A four-wheel drive vehicle is highly recommended! Not kidding: Craig Woolheater and Crew nearly ended up as Bigfoot and Salamander food, with their truck hanging precariously over the creek below. The rock slide at the bottom of the hill can be treacherous, and on top of that, there is nearly no way to turn around once heading down the road. So, be careful! Read the story HERE and HERE, and see the images HERE.

And at the start of the Bigfoot Byway, two more icons....
In Willow Creek everything is "Squatchy." Here we have famous bigfoot godfather Al Hodgson immortalized by a recently revamped municipal water system drawing water from Willow Creek aquifers just before the creek reaches the Trinity River. He's still living, and will always be a Legend.
Here are Denali and her Dad having some fun "messin' with Sasquatch."
OK, well, all for now. We will have to put the P-G FILM SITE UPDATE in a separate post. For now I will say: WE WALKED IN PATTY'S FOOTSTEPS!
Here are the relevant FLIKR PHOTO SETS taken by the Believe It Tour folks. Check them out, they're grrrreaaat! Links: WILLOW CREEK AND BIGFOOT BOOKS, BLUFF CREEK JOURNEY, and THE FILM SITE.

Oh, and I almost forgot. THE CHURCH OF BIGFOOT also visited this weekend. A fun night celebrating beer in Bigfoot's riverside domain was had by all.
Image here, from The Believe it Tour.