Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Reading THE HOOPA PROJECT: A Study in Contrasts and Confusion

THE HOOPA PROJECT: A Fact and Logic Check and Close Reading, Section One. (A Book Review.)

It was on April Fool's Day that Skamania County made its Bigfoot Ordinance, Mr. Paulides.

Paulides, David; Harvey Pratt, illustrations. THE HOOPA PROJECT: Bigfoot Encounters in California. Blaine, WA: Hancock House Publishers, 2008.

First, don't take this review the wrong way. The Hoopa Project is, despite certain flaws, still a fascinating book. Say what you will about David Paulides and Harvey Pratt, they have done some interesting work, some of it unique. NABS decided to focus on one limited area of Bigfoot activity in this book, and also focussed on a particular cultural group, the Hupa Indians. This gives the book a certain strength and distinction. When we first read it upon its release we barrelled through it in just a few days, drawn on by intrigue to the end. However, as we went along there was a certain feeling of unease. We found ourselves repeatedly asking, Did he really say that? Isn't this or that point just plain wrong? That is not even begining to mention all of the typos and poor general editing. The redundancies in the book, with affidavits repeating the narrative for each sighting report, prove to be highly tedious, and hence the book could have been reduced to nearly half its size--but that is for another blog entry.

Here we cover just the first section, and think it will be clear if you read to the end of this part of our review, that the book sits on rather shaky foundations. In saying what we say below, please note, we are not trying to debunk Bigfoot, but rather to debunk the statements and methods found in this particular Bigfoot book. Hence, we do not necessarily question or doubt the Skookum cast or various hair and scat DNA finds, but Paulides' use of these in his narrative. It is our feeling that he and NABS are so eager to conquer the field and the issue at hand, so confident in their own investigative abilities, so concerned with outdoing all the other Bigfoot groups (especially the BFRO) and researchers, that they get going right from the start on the wrong foot, so to speak. If we are to prove Bigfoot to the world, or to make the field at all respectable to the general public or the scientific world, then we simply MUST have solid methodological foundations, and our analyses of evidence and reports should be sound, not fraught with gross errors of logic and procedure. If the story isn't straight to begin with, then everything that follows is corrupted in sequence, and the errors compound multiplicatively upon those that preceeded them.

After Paulides came out as being in support of the "Bluff Creek Massacre Theory" (blogged about earlier by us HERE and HERE, and the MK interview HERE and HERE) we really had to revisit those misgivings. We decided to go back and do a review. What follows is a close reading of the book's first 51 pages, with an eye bent to ascertaining fact, fiction, and error in the book. The sightings reports which constitute the majority of the book are best left for later. Despite minor errors and glitches of methodology and assumption in this later part of the book, the reports are still good, and need to be appreciated for what they are--personal stories, anecdotal evidence, and at least suggestive of certain traits of the Creature and of a particular Native American culture in Northwestern California. We particularly appreciate this part of the book, despite misgivings about the introductory part, as we, too, live in the same region, and we receive the same kinds of reports from locals constantly.

All of us make mistakes--that is for sure. Even Bigfoot's bLog does, we'll admit it humbly if and when it happens. We are here to learn, after all, not to dictate. However, we feel there is a real need to run through parts of this book in order to show how egregious the errors and illogical assumptions can be in a Bigfoot book. It would do us all well if we learned to fact-check, edit, and think correctly before we publish these things. If we bigfooters can't get the story straight, the media and public surely won't, either. Since the people outside of the world of Bigfooting cannot or will not look more deeply into the evidence, it is clear that they will evaluate the topic based upon what they can see: the behavior of the researchers, and the consistency of their productions.

Image: "Paul Bunyan Conservation Society" footprint stompers, sold at Willow Creek Bigfoot Days festival, 2007. Photo by Steven Streufert. Rant Mullens and Ray Wallace would surely have envied these desigtns!

Introduction. On pp. 9-12 we find out how Paulides got his start hunting Bigfoot: in logical error and imaginative leaps. He tells of going out with his father into the mountains in Lassen County. They find a fire down in a creekbed, "made of fifteen to twenty small twigs broken into equal pieces approximately one foot long... placed on the sand in the shape of a teepee." Now, what this is doing in a Bigfoot book is a mystery, as there has never been a convincing report of these creatures utilizing fire. He notes that there were no footprints around the fire in the sand. If so, how could it have been a Bigfoot? Why assume it was made by a Bigfoot? He then acknowledges that this is odd, and admits that he doesn't really think it was a Bigfoot. OK, so will he say it? Maybe it was a pot grower? A hobo? No, he then proposes an even more extreme idea: maybe, he says, it was one of the "Little People" spoken of by Natives. But Dave, you then say they live in caves and underground, and that they only come out at night. And if there were no signs of footprints at all, what made the fire, a levitating elf? Occam's Razor would say that he should, logically, propose the simplest solution, not go from one presumptuous assumption to an even more wild presupposition. This may have intrigued Paulides about Bigfoot, or whatever; but as the first section of the book all it does is convince us that he is a guy who is prone to leaping to odd conclusions first, rather than the simplest and most rational ones. This, then, sets the logical tone of the book.

On pp. 12-14 he speaks of the "Whistler incident," up in B.C., Canada, in 2002. What happened? Nothing. He went to Canada, hired a guide to take him fishing, and then the guide told him a story about a roadside sighting of Bigfoot, told to him after Paulides asked him a leading question about "strange, outdoor wildlife experiences." Dave says he was "mesmerized," as if he had never heard of Bigfoot before; but just a page earlier he is talking about hearing about it way back in his childhood. Why would anyone be so entranced by the most common kind of Bigfoot story: "it walked across the road"? We've all heard this a million times on TV and elsewhere. Also, later on in the book, he himself devalues such sightings as being not substantial enough.

On page 14 he mentions that he then "read everything" he could about Bigfoot. If so, then why does he not give ANY credit to previous researchers on the pages that follow throughout his own book? If one is conducting professional research and scholarship and publishes a book or monograph one is ACCOUNTABLE to the field and other scholars that have gone before one, and one is required to give citation of their works and conclusions. Rather, Paulides goes on to claim nearly all of the following pages' contents as solely his own, as if they arose only from his own original "experienced police" investigation; but he has already admitted that they did not. As we shall show, he takes credit for other's work as if these were new discoveries, effectively stealing their ideas. Plagiarism is not just the exact quoting of someone else's written words; rather, in a scholarly sense, it is the lifting and appropriation of ideas and theories, without due credit given, as well. To follow such shoddy scholarship with public arrogance and grandiose statements is even less palatable.

In Chapter One Paulides covers what he calls "Government Acknowledgement" of Bigfoot. It is HARDLY that. No official support of the Sasquatch's existence is ever released by The Government. That Skamania County, Washington (pp. 19-22), issued a declaration about Bigfoot, in Ordinance No. 69-01, on APRIL FOOL'S DAY (of all days!), 1969, is obviously part good humor, and also partly related to the desire to prevent obsessed would-be Bigfoot hunters from shooting other hunters out in the woods. This was, notably, only a year and a half after the Patterson film was shot, and Bigfoot Hunting mania was at full steam. Yet Paulides takes it as a wholly literal statement of government belief in Bigfoot.

The ordinance specifically states,
"Whereas, publicity attendant upon such real or imagined sightings has resulted in an influx of scientific investigators as well as casual hunters, many armed with lethal weapons, and... Whereas, the absence of specific laws covering the taking of specimens encourages laxity in the use of firearms and other deadly devices and poses a clear and present threat to the safety and well-being of persons living and traveling within the boundaries of Skamania County as well as to the creatures themselves...".

An amendment to it from 1984 also states, "Should the Skamania County Coroner determine any victim/creatures to have been humanoid the Prosecuting Attorney shall pursue the case under the existing laws pertaining to homicide." Isn't it clear? This ordinance has been set down to hopefully prevent murder of humans, and is NOT a clear recognition of there actually being such a creature as Bigfoot out there. Rather, it only says that IF the creature exists, then the killing of one will not be considered to be murder, and will be subject to a fine. By "Victim" they obviously mean "human," so if someone is shot (i.e., Homo sapiens) during a Bigfoot hunt, then it will be considered to be murder. Clearly, the focus is on homicide, and discouraging it, not the acknowledgement of a Creature out there. All that the ordinance says is that it is "possible," that it is "possibly" out there in the hills--hardly a bold declaration of belief and support. We bigfooters believe, sure, but Skamania County is obviously hedging their bets and playing it safely.

Paulides claims that this declaration was found when he did "an internet search for Bigfoot/Sasquatch legislation," implying (given all of his claims of an extensive professional investigative background) that he was somehow searching "official" government information sites. Rather, obviously, he just up and GOOGLED IT. One does not have to be an "Investigator" with "30 years experience" to do this. Furthermore, he must have already known about this ordinance, as it was WIDELY noted in the Bigfoot literature, in many books that he must have read if he read "everything" he could find on the subject; and it has been presented in a few television shows and Bigfoot documentaries, such as Sasquatch Odyssey. Let's just pick a few books off of our own shelf and take a look. Oh, look! Here the Skamania ordinance is in John Green's book (1978), and here it is in Peter Byrne's book (1975), and here it is again extensively covered in Robert Michael Pyle's book (1995), and here is Murphy's book (2004) with photos of the official documents and everything! Surely the author has read at least one of these major tomes, since he read "everything on Bigfoot." This is NOT, then, original research. The Hoopa Project author is not proving his big-time cop abilities, but rather just doing what any Bigfoot internet geek does. Why does he do this and not credit prior researchers? It is, it seems to us, to build up the narrative trope that he is some special kind of researcher, not just some guy reading books on Bigfoot and surfing the 'net. It is, it seems to us again, largely a fictional construction. Here comes Paulides, a guy in the field of Bigfooting only a couple of years, and already at the start he claims to be the only professional, full-time, serious Bigfoot researcher out there? Come on, and go figure.

Images: NABS/ public commercial product promotional images, found on Amazon.com.

The book brings up the Environmental Atlas for Washington, or “Provisional U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Environmental Reconnaissance Inventory of the State of Washington,” published by the Army Corps of Engineers in 1975. A lot is made of this publication, as if it proves official government recognition of the Sasquatch as a real animal. Rather, it can be taken as a slightly tongue-in-cheek presentation, but also seriously as a declaration that the creature has been REPORTED to be in Washington. The Atlas does not present this topic mockingly, and does indeed take it as a possibility that there could be something to all of the reports. It is clear, however, that the “very existence of Sasquatch… is hotly disputed,” as the Atlas states. From this point it refers repeatedly only to ALLEGED Bigfoot hair, “alleged sightings, tracks and other experiences.” It says these reports CONJURE UP the image of Bigfoot, implying a phantasm. It does not come out and SAY that the creature is actually KNOWN to be 8-12 feet tall, and so on. It is a PROVISIONAL statement. Other qualifying words used throughout this report include, “reported,” “apparently,” “if” and “generally considered.” It is also clearly reporting on what is, to the author, generally considered to be folk mythology or cultural belief particular to the region, which MIGHT have some basis in fact—might, only, is what they are saying: “If Sasquatch is purely legendary, the legend is likely to be a long time dying…. Legendary or actual, Sasquatch excites a great popular interest in Washington.” See, this Atlas includes cultural dimensions, and not just environmental facts. Also, this Atlas is not an official production of the entire USA government, nor a statement of official governmental or institutional policy. It is a regional side-project, done by a certain and limited agency of the government only. It is no more official policy than a particular wildlife study or environmental impact report done by someone working for the government.

Paulides, though he at other points in his larger work is clearly suspicious of government cover-up (especially with his belief in the "Massacre" conspiracy theories, and his recent belief that an Oregon lake was closed by authorities because of Bigfoot activity), here places great credibility in government: “If you believe in your government and you believe they have the best evidence, laboratories, and tools available, then I believe the government is taking a bold step forward in the authentication of Bigfoot/Sasquatch as a creature.” (p. 19) However, there is no real original study being done in this Atlas, and its imprimatur is limited. It is a short summary of previously known aspects of the issue only. There was no new testing done officially in this project, though there is a mention of some hair having been analyzed at some point by the FBI with inconclusive results: “no known animal” does not necessarily prove Bigfoot. If one actually reads this brief bit from the Atlas one can clearly see that it is nothing official, scientific, nor comprehensive. On page 17 Paulides goes to great length to say how “extremely competent, intelligent, and technical” the US Army Corps of Engineers is, how “cautious” they are. But does he not recall how the Corps was largely blamed for the poor design and management of the levees that broke and inundated New Orleans during the Hurricane Katrina debacle? If we know one thing for certain about the government, it is that it is a vast, compartmentalized bureaucracy, one often at odds with itself, and in a great many instances incompetent and self-contradictory. Again, Paulides claims he found this Atlas in his “personal search of the United States government records,” but it was well known for years, seen or spoken of in many Bigfoot books and websites. We are sure he just read about it somewhere, and then wrote to the Corps to get a copy—no P.I. work necessary there; and no credit is given for previous work on the Atlas Bigfoot article. Oh well.

Images: From the Corps of Engineers Atlas of WA, showing Sasquatch in both. Click to Enlarge.
What does the Corps really say? The BFRO asked and here is what they say: “But whenever they are questioned by reporters who seek clarification on the issue of whether the Corps or the state of Washington officially acknowledges the existence of bigfoots, they steadfastly claim that the listing in the Atlas was an ‘error’ or a ‘joke’ that was not corrected prior to the printing of the atlas.” And this appears on the BFRO Blue Forum: "A biologist/writer was assigned to put together the WA state atlas. The criteria was defined broadly as environmental elements of interest to public (because the atlas was made for the public). The writer spent some time determining what things were of great interest to the public, that [are] broadly environmental in nature. The sasquatch was one of the items that came up consistently." So, this project was for popular consumption, not official, and was mainly (apparently) written by one biologist, not the entire Corps or US Government! Personally, we think it is cool that Sasquatch made it into the Atlas, and we think personally that the Creature does exist; but this Atlas IS NOT proof that the government agrees with us bigfooters. Why is Bigfoot in the Atlas, then, you ask? Because BIGFOOT IS COOL.

Anyway, let's ramble onward....

The next section, starting on page 28, deals with how NABS (Dave, that is) "started the search," and found the location where they (he) would search for Bigfoot. Obviously, this is mostly a foregone conclusion--just look at the maps in John Green's old books and you'll have every clue you need. He proceeds to try to make his choice seem quasi-scientific, but again just runs through all of the basics already covered by Green and others decades earlier; and he glaringly does not give one bit of credit to Green or anyone else. He says he spent "weeks of working the Internet and deciphering graphs and charts," but then jumps immediately into talking about the area around Hoopa, CA. He does not really explain at this point why he chose this area save that basically he kind of liked the look of it. It had the Patterson-Gimlin film site nearby, and lots of Native Americans. What more could one hope for? It is only later in the text, presumably narratively after he had decided on Hoopa already, that he begins to try to build a data structure to explain his choice. Almost all of this basic data was contained in John Green's books and SASQUATCH DATABASE, now available online (click the highlighted text).

Image: One of John Green's early pamphlet books, predating and pre-configuring Paulides' research by over three decades.

Fact checks, pp. 28-34:

• He says that Hoopa Valley is one of only two valleys in this region. He is wrong. Basically every river has some kind of valley somewhere, Willow Creek has a valley. There is the Eel River valley, the Mattole valley, and on and on...

• He says the creature in the PGF is "running across Bluff Creek," but actually the creature WALKS away from the creek on a sandbar.

• He says that Louse Camp is on Bluff Creek, six miles south from the P-G film site, but it is NOT. It is 2.5 miles as the creek flows, west then southward, and even less by direct line.

• He says that there have been "few actual sightings in the new century" in this area, but we know and have heard of many, many of them, and know some who have seen Bigfoot right up from Louse Camp in recent years. Several BFRO researchers, as well as NABS-affiliated researcher Sean Fries of Weaverville, have reported constant wood knocks, vocalizations and other signs of Bigfoot activity in the area. Paulides is utterly WRONG when he says about Bluff Creek, "The weather can be treacherous, the trail is very tough and you won't see Bigfoot. You had a chance of seeing him in this region in the 1950s and maybe early 60s, but not now." Huh, what now Dave? This is just not true, based on no real research at all, and is a statement made simply off the top of his head. He uses it to make Hoopa seem like a more active zone. Also, there are roads in the area, not trails, and they are mostly fairly well graded and leveled. Bigfoot activity in the area is reported regularly, with new sightings and reports each year that goes by.

• He uses the name "Hoopa" to describe the people of that tribal group and reservation affiliation, though their official name is HUPA. Hoopa is the name of the city and reservation, not the people. This is a fundamental error that should never be made by someone who has supposedly spent two years living among these people.

•  He states (pg. 29) that the Hupa received their reservation in 1876, but in fact it was 1864 when the treaty was ratified and the reservation "comprising 90% of their original homelands" was established. (Source: Hutchinson Encyclopedia article). He says that it was established under President Ulysses S. Grant, but Grant was only in office March 4, 1869 – March 4, 1877. This "official occupancy" recognized by the US government came only after the millennia-long homeland had been disrupted by the coming of European-Americans and the consequent decades of genocide, colonialism and "Indian Wars." It is a fact, though, that as remote and resilient as they are, these Natives never lost their traditions and connection to the land that they share with Oh-Mah.

• On the same page he says that Highway One is on the coast from Hoopa, but it is known as Highway 101. He speaks of the "Bald Mountains," but the name used for those is "Bald Hills," traversed by Bald Hills Road from Weitchpec to the coast near Orick, an area important to Bigfoot history.

• On pg. 30 he speaks of the "Go Road," more properly called the G-O ROAD, or Gasquet-Orleans road. He mentions it as if it is the same road as the famed Bluff Creek Road. He conflates the G-O project with the Bigfoot track-find and equipment vandalism events of 1958, but the Bluff Creek one was a logging project road starting considerably south of Orleans. The G-O road was to end in Orleans, not down near the mouth of Bluff Creek, nearer to Weitchpec than Orleans, where the road Jerry Crew and Ray Wallace made famous starts. The Bluff Creek road runs past Louse Camp up into the dead-end of the creek's headwaters area for logging access. As evidenced by the Notice Creek bridge, which bears the marking "1958," built by Jerry's crew, this is the road project that the Bigfoot events happened on, not any of the G-O Road projects.

Image: Bluff Creek Basin on Google Earth. The Bluff Creek Road starts way at BOTTOM, Orleans and the G-O Road turnoff are at right. They are NOT the same road. Way up to north and west is the PGF site, where the creek bends eastward into the  basin's headwaters.

• He claims on the same page that it was the "Hoopa" and Yurok Tribes that fought the battle in court to end the G-O Road construction before it entered Native sacred mountain peaks in the Siskiyou wilderness area. In fact, it was the Sierra Club and the passage of NEPA that got that ball rolling, and then a remarkable alliance of Native and environmental concerns later combined to assure the protection under the Indian Religious Freedom Act and eventual declaration of an official Siskyou Wilderness Area and also the Smith River Wild and Scenic National Recreation Area. Combining these two areas, plus the cost of fighting legal battles, eventually closed the road project only seven miles short of completion at its middle. One source says "The GO Road battle was won on environmental grounds, not on grounds of religious freedoms. As one Yurok stated, to establish the area as wilderness is to completely miss the point." (See article HERE.) 

• He says that Patterson and Gimlin came to Bluff Creek to film a Bigfoot, but their stated intention was to film tracks of the creature found recently. He says, wrongly, that they “left the area of the Go Road and started to slowly make their way by horseback down into the Bluff Creek region. Just as they were about to reach Bluff Creek they each saw movement in the creek…,” etc. ACTUALLY, no. They DROVE up Bluff Creek Road from down near the mouth at the Klamath, up from the Bluff Creek Company on the road to Louse Camp, where they camped just upstream from the campsite and Notice Creek. They were in the area for DAYS or WEEKS before eventually spotting the creature, and were riding up and down the creek a lot. Where Paulides gets his version of the story is surely a source in thin air, not actual research of documented sources.

• Furthermore, speaking of the filming (pg. 31), Paulides says they were using a 35mm camera, but it was a 16mm camera.

• Speaking of the Creature he says experts have determined that she was 7-foot, 3-inches and over 700 pounds, but ACTUALLY, no one has really been able to finally agree on or conclusively prove these measurements, and there are many theories out there that differ pretty widely. There are whole books written about this subject, but which Paulides has simply not bothered to read and absorb.

• Speaking of the film he says that the Creature was carrying "something" (a stick), as if this is an established fact. Actually, it is pretty much only M.K. Davis who sees that stick. We can't! This is verifiable proof that Paulides was under the sway of Davis’ odd and conspiratorial thinking even at this early, pre-Bluff Creek Massacre Theory stage of things.

• He speaks of muscles moving in the right thigh and right shoulder of the Creature. In fact, muscles can be seen moving ALL OVER the Bigfoot in the film, especially in the back and buttocks. This is why it looks real upon close inspection. Why does he select only two limited spots? Odd.

• He speaks of the creature "on tape," but actually, it was on FILM, from a real movie camera, not a video tape machine (which did not exist in the consumer market at the time). He also states that the film has been declared by "professors" and "experts" to be impossible to fake; but the sad fact is that way more such figures think that it IS a hoax. The film has never been finally or credibly debunked, but Paulides should say that there is still much disagreement on that topic.

• He speaks of Willow Creek’s Bigfoot Days as being “a huge event that draws university professors, professional Bigfoot hunters and a variety of amateur explorers.” Has he ever BEEN to this event? It is not some kind of academic conference. In fact, it is a small community parade with a festival of vendors and a car show down in the park. It has very little serious Bigfoot content, mostly consisting of gorilla suits, or knick-knack sellers hawking novelty goods.

• He says Willow Creek area itself has “relatively few” sightings “compared with other regions in Northern California,” but in fact, as evidenced by reports in the Bigfoot Books store and around town there are MANY sightings right around this area, every bit as much as on the Hoopa Reservation. This stuff is in the historical records and books, and even gets reported in Paulides' sequel, Tribal Bigfoot. Living here in Willow Creek, we ourselves pass by a large number of Bigfoot sighting areas every single day, and new ones continue to be told to us.

• He says (pg. 32) there are no public campgrounds anywhere in the Hoopa region, but in fact Tish Tang Creek, which he mentions, DOES have a public camping site. In fact, he MENTIONS “Tish Tang Campgrounds” on the very same page, in his sightings chart.

• Astonishingly (pg. 33), he says that “the Hoopa Valley has been an area with significant human habitation for over 250 years.” In another place he says "almost 200 years." IN FACT, the Hupa people claim residence in the area for over 4,000 years! And this is just what they remember. Archaeology probably proves or will prove an even more ancient occupancy--we need to look into this further. (See the Wikipedia HUPA article.)

• He speaks of a finding of an animal bed, and then another instance where some scientists found some bedding material. Apparently they found it slightly odd, and found some deer bones near by it. Paulides leaps to the conclusion that it simply must have been Bigfoot, as what other animal would make a bed and leave bones around? This is NOT proof of Bigfoot, but just proof that some bones and a bed were found. A-hem! As Ray Crowe used to say, "Keep your Skepticals on."

Getting the picture yet??? Well, that was JUST A FEW PAGES of the book! Read on for more.

The next section, "By The Numbers" (pg. 34-45) is a somewhat lengthy attempt at statistical accumulation and analysis. It is interesting, but it almost exactly replicates (WITHOUT credit given) the same work that John Green has done over the decades. Green was the first Bigfoot researcher we know of to attempt serious data accumulation and systemization, and to put it into a properly constructed computer database. This was back when computers still had the green, text-only screens, folks. Anyway, the conclusions Paulides comes up with completely mirror Green's in terms of the conclusion that Sasquatch/Bigfoot creatures generally tend to live in moist, rain-prone, forested and mountainous regions. Nothing new there!

He'd already decided to study the west coast, so he immediately excludes sightings hotspots such as Ohio, Florida, Texas, Pennsylvania, and northern Michigan and Wisconsin. This is unfortunate, but understandable--after all, he wanted to do his research in Northern California, fairly close to his home, right? So, his sightings research is initially biased in that he only searched for sightings in the far western, coastal states.

Also, one notes that his list of research sites is rather limited. He said he had read "everything" on Bigfoot earlier, but here there is only one book (Bigfoot Casebook) and the Track Record newsletter (known to be up, down, and all over the place). The rest of the list consists of eight web sites. The first two sites on his list are in fact NABS web sites! Did he REALLY think he could sneak this by us as ostensible research? Nabigfootsearch.com and CaliforniaBigfootsearch.com... that's odd. How could he create and gather his statistics for this analysis from his own web sites if he had just gotten started in accumulating data? That would be, um, impossible. You can't build a database without... building it! Anyway....
BFRO.net--great! A fine database there. But then the GCBRO.com site?
You've got to be kidding. That site on our checking today had only TWO sightings for all of Bigfoot-infested Humboldt County! OregonBigfoot.com has a nice database, and a site which we highly recommend--another good choice. However, Bigfootinfo.org had only 17 sightings for all of California. Next comes "Home.clara.net," which is not even a Bigfoot site, but rather an internet service provider's home page! Ugh. The last, BigfootEncounters.com is a great general site, but their sightings reports are not in any proper database format. The California list has no source citation. They are basically just long lists organized by location, of often non-attributed or unverified, and quite often very brief sightings.

These latter type of sources do NOT live up to the criteria Paulides lays out on pg. 35, where he says that he eliminated all reports that did not have enough information: "In order to be considered significant, a sighting had to include information other than just 'Bigfoot sighted, Highway 37, 9 a.m., 1966.' I looked for dates and times, a narrative describing the circumstances, a description of the creature, and possibly the chance that the sighting was investigated to some degree." Fine, Dave, but really, nearly all Bigfoot sightings are like this stuff you want to rule out. The really good ones are all the more rare than the already rare fleeting ones. Now, when trying to accumulate raw data about a creature's distribution, it is NOT an effective method to just willy-nilly exclude sightings that do not live up to an arbitrary standard. For raw data you want... DATA! That means any credible sighting should be counted. If, however, you are seeking later to define what the best source sightings for a description of the creature are, then fine, use the best; but do not exclude data at the start--that is called BIAS.

So, whatever the results of his ten pages of analysis, we can say that at the start the data was corrupted by his bias for Northern California and Hoopa in particular. Also, some of his sources are good, but the others are simply bad or non-existent. Basically, he must have data-mined the BFRO database at that time, with a sprinkling of Bigfoot Encounters backgrounding. This would explain Matt Moneymaker's displeasure at Bigfoot Books' stocking of the NABS Bigfoot Sightings Map in our shop. A quick check encouraged by Matt revealed a huge data piracy from the BFRO site, though at least the map gives credit to the BFRO.

Paulides has gone to great lengths in this selection to at least read all of the sightings he could find in his limited selection of sources, and then to assemble it into graphs. This is a good idea, but as it is deeply flawed initially and in methodology in its selection bias, we're not sure what in it can be counted on to be reliable. Though it demonstrates clearly what was already widely known about Bigfoot and Sasquatch habitat in sightings, it fails to establish firm grounds outside of bias. He admits that there are problems, as Bigfoot is seen all over the country, and is reported to survive in some quite unlikely places which don't fit his assumptions, such as Arizona. Rather than trying to reconcile this, he just rules out the entire USA that does not fit into his presumptions. He then arbitrarily rules out any sightings or reports from before 1940. Then he declares that he only wants first-hand reports, even though a huge number of Bigfoot reports in the books and records are second and third- hand. He shows no stable criteria for his selection or de-selection of sightings, as if it is just up to how he feels about a report. This is not scientific. Then he goes even further, this time entering full illogic: "A Bigfoot incident in this book (for affidavit reasons) constitutes an occurrence that can be directly related to accepted and known Bigfoot behavior." So, we take it from this, only those reports that correspond with David Paulides' ASSUMPTIONS about what Bigfoot is like or how it acts will fit in to his modeling. In this regard, if one thinks Bigfoot is "human," then one will SEE Bigfoot as such, and it will turn up in one's reportage and forensic illustrations. This does not make sense. Bigfoot is NOT an established creature yet, though many have seen it or seen signs that may have been made by it. Bigfoot is a cryptid thus far because we DO NOT yet know all of the facts about it. Sure, patterns of behavior and size and shape arise, but they have not been absolutely verified. Therefore, it stands to reason that we should remain open-minded about what a Bigfoot is and what it can do. We assume that they are bipedal; so should we rule out ALL quadrupedal reports? They are supposed to be brown in color; so should we rule out any that are grey or silvery in color?

Already Paulides has ruled out sightings that don't include more than a date, place, time, any that are just fleeting road crossings, any that don't fit into his standard model (another bias), any that occur outside of his selected study area, etc., etc. So WHAT IS LEFT? It seems to us that the vast majority of Bigfoot sightings occur outside of the parameters Paulides has selected. Most are brief, many are vague, there is great uncertainty in some where the witness might be unsure of what they saw, and there are many that are told to only a few people often years after they happened, with details perhaps vaguely documented. Also, we cannot forget that perception is relative, so that how one person sees a Bigfoot will differ from how another sees one. Some of the sightings are surely misperceptions. Some of them are tall tales. How does statistician Dave decide which are which? As he does not make this very clear, all of his data, though interesting, is basically useless as statistic or science. It is ten pages of confirmation bias glaringly delineated.

In the end he selects Humboldt County, CA, which should have been obvious to begin with; but then he chooses Hoopa for nearly completely arbitrary reasons. "Hoopa seemed to be a natural location to set up my office and hang a shingle as it was set in a valley with all the amenities of home." So, after all of this work trying to find where Bigfoot lives, he opts for comfort. Then he repeats his false presumption that Hupa heritage goes back "almost two hundred years," when in fact it goes back thousands. He mentions the climate of Hoopa, but just about anywhere in Humboldt has that climate, with rain, a body of water, mountains, wilderness and parks. He even mentions that the "Bigfoot capital of the world," Willow Creek, is right nearby, as is Bluff Creek, where the PGF was shot. So, why not set up shop in Willow Creek, or Orleans? It is clear from what he says here: The area (Hoopa) also comes with an interesting history, a reservation, and a region that is almost completely surrounded by wilderness areas. So we see, rather clearly, that the selection that was the basis and foundation of this whole research and book project was based upon personal interest in this particular Native American reservation, and also upon the convenience of the researcher. This is bias, pure and simple, and hardly follows logically or necessarily from the preceding statistical analysis. Hence, we can call the whole process a distortion or a sham. His “Decision” was in fact no more scientific or credible than if we were to just up and say, hey, let’s go camp at Mount Shasta and look for UFOs and Lemurians!

Paulides goes on to talk briefly about the local Natives' "Sacred High Country." He puts it "by coincidence... directly in the middle of the Bluff Creek region, but in fact it is to the north and west of Bluff Creek. He speaks of "tribal elders" making the trek into this high, mountain peak area, but in fact it is mainly reserved only for the tribal groups' medicine men or shamans to make this pilgrimage. He rather superficially describes this quest, in what we feel are fairly ethnocentric terms, saying they go there to "pray to their gods." This is the general dismissal that old anthropologists always made to describe the "strange beliefs" that people they did not understand practiced and followed. In fact, this point demonstrates what is perhaps the greatest deficiency in The Hoopa Project--that of true ethnographic exploration. There is almost no real description of this cultural background so vital to understanding these people, and nearly all of the conversations are with younger tribal members, non-elders, dealing with events of the day, not the deep and rich reality that would give substance to any book about these issues. Despite all of his time spent in the Hoopa Valley, among the Hupa, here (pg 49) Paulides goes to "court documents" go get to the idea that this area was the "center of the Indians' universe." OK, but what does it MEAN? We get no real insight into this realm from this book, sadly.

Images: Above and below, the Bigfoot Mural at the Early Bird "Bigfoot Burger" restaurant. Photos by Steven Streufert.

He then concludes the section we are analyzing with "Best Bigfoot Evidence, Past and Present." He speaks of the camcorder as revolutionizing the documentation of sightings, but in fact there are very few videos of Bigfoot, as opposed to the Patterson-Gimlin Film, that have any real quality or credibility. Well, maybe the Freeman video.... He talks about newspaper reports, but didn't he already rule these out earlier as unreliable and not first-hand enough for him? He speaks of DNA from hair and scat being "classified" as Bigfoot, as it often comes back as "not on file" and close to primate. However, the fact is that though these results are intriguing, they are often inconclusive, and often are not on file because the supposed DNA has been corrupted or degraded. DNA of a Bigfoot has never been verified AS from a Bigfoot because there as yet is not a standard set example of what a sample of Bigfoot DNA really is. This is a topic that constitutes interesting possibility, but has yet to prove much. He glances over a few historical bits at this point, with great superficiality and preconceptions.

Odd parasites have been claimed to have been found in some crap that was supposedly from a Bigfoot, but no one knows if Bigfoot made that pile of scat, and no one has to our knowledge actually seen Bigfoot take a dump. Despite this, Dave seems to know that Bigfoot scat looks like "a giant human scat, very large." He speaks of the more recent analyses of footprints done by Jeff Meldrum and Jimmy Chilcutt, but he fails to credit them in particular, and rather just proceeds to use general terms that exaggerate the number of academics and scientists who have looked into the issue and found the evidence to be convincing. In actuality, very few scientists find the evidence credible. This is what makes Meldrum special, and he should really be named and cited here, not just vaguely alluded to. He speaks of the Skookum cast, which may very well be an imprint of a Bigfoot butt, but he totally disregards the fact that there is still hot dispute over this artifact, with many claiming that it is clearly an impression made by an elk. Despite this inconclusive status, Paulides is ready to make the leap into self-validation: "This cast has validated much of the information about the physical aspects (size, weight, body structure, etc.) of Bigfoot." In fact, it really does not do this, but it is still a very interesting piece of possible evidence.

The last paragraph in this section reveals even more. "I am purposely avoiding an extensive description of the Bigfoot evidence because that is not what this book is about. There are many outstanding books in print that offer exhaustive insights into evidence that will satisfy anyone's craving in that area." Well, if this book isn't about evidence, then what IS it about? We'd really like to know. Sightings are evidence, and throughout the book he makes claims to various remains as evidence for the creature. We'd argue that without the analysis of any evidence we are left only with anecdotes. They are stories. Surely an ex-detective police investigator would know this. The stories are great, that is for sure. Some of them are very credible. But don't we want something that could "hold up in court" or convince others that this stuff is real? We need a convincing set of evidence to do this, complete with a logical and coherent system of investigation and methodology. Also, if Paulides is not going to quote or cite any of the researchers or authors of these "outstanding books" on Bigfoot, could he not at least have a Bibliography or Works Cited section? For all of its intriguing and very interesting accounts, The Hoopa Project simply comes up lacking in the end, and leaves any intelligent reader scratching his or her head in skeptical confusion on nearly every page we've reviewed here.

In Bigfooting we need to establish historical consistency, along with logic in methodology, or else we are a rudderless ship that will look like its foudering (or floundering) to the masses at large. Bigfooting needs to become more professional and serious if it is ever to gain the respect it deserves. We need PEER REVIEW, people. It cannot survive solely upon egotism and wild theoretical speculation. Sadly, with so many who just jump into it, without earning their bones and polishing their chops, it often looks like a circus. And human, all too human....

We will continue with this project on The Hoopa Project sometime in the future. Up to this point we have covered the major section of the book preceding the sightings reports. These reports are good, but soon our critical axe will fall in their direction, too. Look for our Part Two coming soon!

BIGFOOT'S BLOG interviewed David Paulides of NABS in 2009, when they released Ray Crowe's newsletter THE TRACK RECORD on CD.
Read that here:
DAVID PAULIDES, of NORTH AMERICA BIGFOOT SEARCH, Interview and Discussion with Bigfoot Books

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ANGRY BIGFOOT SPEAKS!

Me so mad, me speech-less! Me fume. Me fester. Me boil over and make stink from here to Weitchpec! Me go roll more rock down in road now. Keep Bluff Creek closed all summer long!

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This weblog, website, soapbox, or whatever you call it is copyright 2010, Steven Streufert, Bigfoot Books Intergalactic. Sharing and borrowing is allowed (and often practiced by us, too) if you give full credit and a fair and nice link back to our page. Thanks!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Continued DISCUSSION WITH A SKEPTIC; plus LETTER TO A YOUNG SQUATCHER; News, Comments, and ANTHROPOMORPH ATTACK: 9-11 Mystery Solved!



NEWS FLASH! 9-11 CONSPIRACY THEORY UNRAVELED... IT WAS COOKIE MONSTER!
Giant Anthropoid Feeding Frenzy and Question of Genetic Origin of Creature Cause Hysterical Speculations.

It wasn't Dick Cheney and George Bush and the PNAC plan. It wasn't al-Qaeda and Osama. It wasn't intentionally demolished nor destroyed by airplanes and fire. What the government and all the news channels didn't show you that day in September, 2001, was the REAL truth. Cookie Monster destroyed the World Trade Center Twin Towers!

Evidence now shows that the fire-retardant insulation in the buildings, along with thermite demolition explosive materials, combined to create an aroma uncannily similar to that of chocolate chip cookies. This attracted the giant blue monster, and man was he ever hungry! No malign intent on the part of the creature has yet been discovered. It would seem he just could not resist the tasty flavor. "Om Nom nom nom! AWWWWM-num-num-num-num!"

We have always wondered, just WHAT is Cookie Monster, the cookie-addicted hominoid creature from the Sesame Street TV show? We now know, thanks to a Sesame Street Magazine cover of October 1976 (recently unearthed by our friend Brian), that Cookie is actually related to King Kong. And we ALL know what Creature is the REAL source for the King Kong legends and movies. Right? That's right! Could Cookie Monster be an icy-blue Yeti, or an aberrant Bigfoot/Sasquatch, just with a sugar-mutated blue coat of fur? We believe so. That this issue of the magazine came out in the ninth anniversary month of the Patterson-Gimlin Film of Bigfoot in Bluff Creek only serves as a secret clue.

The remake version of the KING KONG movie, from 1976, prominently features not only the Twin Towers with a Giant Ape, but also an incredibly inspiring Jessica Lange in her Golden Globe-winning first major film appearance. We saw it in the theaters when we were just a pre-teen kid, and it was truly scary, and... fascinating.

Visit the Muppet WIKI, and their Cookie Monster page HERE.

As Cliff Barackman, noted Bigfoot researcher, recently put it on his fine NORTH AMERICAN BIGFOOT BLOG:
"I've been interested in sasquatches for a long time. When I was very young, it was clear to me that King Kong and even Curious George were depictions of bigfoots. After all, they stood and walked on two legs. Perhaps they really weren't bigfoots, but to my young mind there was no difference. I... ponder the similarities between the Curious George story and a possible scenario of the first live capture of a juvenile bigfoot. Unlike Curious George, I do not think that a juvenile bigfoot would take comfort in its zoo surroundings. How long could a sasquatch be kept in a traditional zoo setting? Not long, I imagine... a rampaging sasquatch that escaped from captivity would be a formidable thing to reckon with."

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Another NEWS FLASH!

M.K. DAVIS and Don Monroe's 34-minute video interview with AL HODGSON has finally surfaced. Apparently they felt pressured to at last release it after our own interview with Al Hodgson was transcribed and published HERE (in three parts, two and a quarter hours, unedited and complete--click link to get started). This interview done by MK has been used in tiny out of context quotes to fuel all manner of false presuppositions on forums like the GCBRO and other internet dens of iniquity. One may notice in viewing it that not once does Al speak of a "Massacre" of Bigfoot in Bluff Creek. Go figure. Still, it is Al, so it is interesting. VIEW THE STREAMING VIDEO MK DAVIS-AL HODGSON INTERVIEW HERE. You'll notice that the paranoid and delusional Bigfoot conspiracy theorists will make hay out of just about anything. Also, they spelled Al's last name wrongly. Go figure, eh?

"They don't want you knowin' the truth. That's the truth!" -- Don Monroe, BF researcher
OK, Don Don.

NOTE: If any of you know of a streaming hosting site for audio the would post our mp3 audio file of the Al Hodgson interview, please do let us know. We'd like to get the full recording out there for all researchers concerned to hear.

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We'd like to briefly comment on the concept of "Bigfoot People," as recently brought up by Linda Martin on her BIGFOOT SIGHTINGS web site blog in her comments on an upcoming MonsterQuest episode featuring the "Sierra Sasquatch." View that entry HERE. Our humbly submitted comments:

People, “human beings,” are animals, creatures and beasts, so what is the problem? Humans are apes, or more properly, in the same family of animals. We all eat, defecate and procreate. It’s just that some of us do it in houses, and some do it in the woods. To say “Bigfoot People” is misleading–it implies that the Creatures are human like us, which they decidely are not, based on the vast majority of sightings. “People” think they are special, but we are just another form of animal. All animals have their own special abilities and evolved survival talents, as do we; but what is important is noticing all the differences. That is how we tell one thing from another. Otherwise they would just get all blended together in our minds. I think the word we should be avoiding is “monster.” Then again, what do you expect on a show called MonsterQuest? I've taken lately to using "Creature," but capitalized to leave in Mystery and respect. I agree, "beast" implies "monster," which is the word we really need to get away from. Hence the irony of MonsterQuest. They are really just seeking animals, odd ones perhaps; but we should never consider "animal" as a pejorative term. We need to come to respect and understanding of different forms of life and consciousness.

Image: A Bigfoot statue at Orick, CA, says howdy, or acts like a wise sage, or..... Photo, Steven Streufert, 2009.

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LETTER TO A YOUNG SQUATCHER *

Recently, a middle school kid from Southern California sent us a letter asking questions for a school project about the world of cryptozoology, Sasquatch, Bigfoot research, and what it's like to be a part of it. What, basically, is it like to explore things that the majority of society views as crazy? We started by thinking the answer to this would be a simple few short sentences per question, but now we find there are no simple answers. At least, we cannot stop from going on and on about Squatchy stuff. His questions are numbered in the following, with our responses between each number.

Images, here and at  bottom of this section: Winter clouds above Willow Creek, CA and Bigfoot Country at sunset, By Steven Streufert, 2010. All photos, CLICK TO ENLARGE.

1) Did any one person inspire you to research Bigfoot?

No one person was my singular influence, but I have to say that it was the Patterson-Gimlin film that first intrigued me, as a kid of about 10 years old, when I saw it at a drive-in movie theater. From there I read all of the books I could find in the local library, and within these I became enamored with the adventurous image of Roger and Bob on their horses exploring this great mystery of nature. The images of them I saw in this early documentary, riding their horses through the wooded creek bed, settled in my mind the idea that the natural world held surprising and fascinating things, beyond just lions, tigers and bears. Those old black and white photos in John Green's books seemed to come from another world; but then, nearly thirty years later, I found myself living in Humboldt County, and then Willow Creek in particular, right in the center of the history of the Bigfoot phenomenon. Standing on the ridge where those early footprints were found by Jerry Crew in 1958, and others were found later in 1967, proved to be absolutely inspiring. It was like a Christian going to the Holy Land. In 2000 I camped in Louse Camp, where the Pacific Northwest Expedition was based, and just could not believe the powerful feeling I had hiking up Bluff Creek itself, toward the P-G film site. At night I could have sworn there were big Creatures out there watching me in the dark woods.

Over the years those early photos of the investigators really stuck with me. Reading their stories was even better. It was Rene Dahinden who, with his witty humor, critical sarcasm and determination, really influenced me the most. I never got to meet him, but since his death I have met many of the most famous bigfooters, and can even email them or talk to them on the phone when I have questions. It is amazing how closely-knit, or how interconnected, the Bigfoot community really is. Once you put your foot in the door and prove yourself to be sincere, you suddenly seem to know just about everybody, or at least know of them and their activities. The one of them all who inspires me the most these days is Bob Gimlin. He is still alive and sharp as a tack, and he has held true to his story of how they filmed the Creature all of these years ago. Perhaps the most convincing thing to me that tends to prove Bigfoot exists is hearing Bob Gimlin, a guy who obviously would not lie to you, say that he saw what he saw on that sandbar back on October 20th, 1967.

As far as current researchers, I'd have to choose Daniel Perez as an inspiration. When I first got a hold of his BIGFOOT TIMES newsletter and books BIGFOOT AT BLUFF CREEK and BIG FOOTNOTES I was really impressed with the fact that someone out there was doing scholarly work with full documentation and historical fact-checking. Daniel is also a great critical gadfly, and he keeps all bigfooters on their toes, lest they wander down the wrong paths and suffer the wrath of his pen. Perez is the real successor to both John Green and Dahinden, though he doesn't get out into the field as much as guys like Matt Moneymaker, James Bobo Fay and Cliff Barackman of the BFRO, who also inspire and interest me greatly.

2) Have you bought any Bigfoot memorabilia not including books?

Well, I have to admit it: I am kind of a Bigfoot geek. Just like Star Trek fans collect all kinds of stuff, and in fact sometimes everything having to do with that show, I too seem to gather up Bigfoot things. I don’t like to buy new novelties so much, but love any classic Bigfoot object, from old clippings from magazines, footprint casts, little statues, movies, buttons, patches, coffee mugs, stickers, posters and just about anything else. The clear favorite Bigfoot collection is my authentic replica of the sculpted head of Bigfoot that Roger Patterson made before he made his famous film--it is one of the few things that don't end up for sale in the shop. Really, though, since I am in the business of selling used and rare books, I try to focus my spending and collecting on obtaining rare and unusual books on Bigfoot/Sasquatch. I don’t really make much money on these things, but stock them nonetheless, as I like to have them all around me, and I love to be able to share them with customers and visiting Bigfooters. Really, though, one could spend all day and all of one’s money collecting Bigfoot junk. There is just SO much of it that one has to draw a line somewhere. Plus, it is usually really hard to find, and rare. Therefore, I do try to stay away from hunting for the Creature on eBay when I can.

3) Are there any specific requirements or types of training needed to have a job involved with Sasquatch?

I have to tell you that there really isn’t any “job” that officially involves Bigfoot hunting. In fact, most of the bigfooters seem to spend all of their own time and money financing this hobby and obsession. It sometimes comes to dominate people’s lives over everything else, as it did with Rene Dahinden, and often results in divorce and poverty. Sometimes a belief in Bigfoot, if too prominently displayed publicly, can threaten your employability. This would especially apply in positions such as a college professor or police officer. That being said, police officers and rangers are one of the largest groups of Bigfoot witnesses out there. There are rangers, such as Robert Leiterman here in Humboldt County, who also do Bigfoot field research in their spare time. Mr. Leiterman is even paid to do campfire presentations on the Bigfoot mystery in his job in the redwood forest. He is also an author of fictional Bigfoot books for young readers.

Images: Two of Rene Dahinden, historical. Also, the "Bigfoot Lives" metallic pin, produced by Bishop Products.

If you want specifically to explore a career that could involve Bigfoot in some way, then I would recommend that you choose a field that could put you out in nature where the Creatures are. Either that, or be like Dr. Jeff Meldrum or Kathy Moskowitz-Strain, both noted Bigfoot researchers you may have seen on television, and study in an academic field that could somehow relate to the Big Hairy Guy. Both of the above are in Anthropology. Another way would clearly be to study Biology, and perhaps to focus on wildlife and ecological issues. Researchers such as John Bindernagel have strong backgrounds in traditional studies that suit them well when out in the field looking for Bigfoot, or as authors and public speakers on the subject. Or, perhaps, you could be like myself—I studied Literature, Philosophy, Religion and Psychology, got two Masters degrees, and somehow ended up in love with the antiquarian book trade and selling books in Willow Creek. My love of all things interesting and strange eventually kept me from wanting to specialize in any one single thing. Through books I can specialize in everything; but somehow, in great measure because of where I live, Bigfoot seems to have taken over my life and much of my time. I say that if you are deeply interested in Bigfoot, then you will find that Bigfoot is tracking YOU. Just moving to the town where I live has put me right in the middle of Bigfoot action and history. What more could I ask for that to see that famous Bigfoot statue, which I knew of in childhood, every day as I go to work?

4) At school many people make fun of me because I am researching Bigfoot. Have you ever been put down because of doing what you love to do?

You know, there will always be some of your peers who will pick on you for whatever you do in your life or for that in which you believe. Mostly they are just insecure in themselves, and seek to find what they think are weaknesses in others. They are either jealous or afraid of being different themselves. They live with a herd mentality, it would seem, a state quite contrary to human intelligence and individuality. I would say you should pursue what you are interested in and love, and not to worry about the rest. No one has ever achieved greatness by being the same as everyone else. People are at their pinnacle when they have the guts to strike out on their own and look at things in new and interesting ways. I think you will find that the Universe will pay you back accordingly, providing satisfactory rewards for you to the same extent that you are willing to stick your neck out and really go for it.

Bigfoot research is really not that strange, if you know the full history and body of evidence. It is just the study of an animal that can't be captured or proven, or hasn't been yet, anyway. It seems funny if all you know is what appears in bad, joking television shows and tabloid magazines. Rather, I would argue, the huge body of sightings and reports over a long period of time suggest at the very least there is something more to this phenomenon than mere hallucination, craziness, and wishful thinking. There really does seem to be something real behind it, even if some of that is really within the realm of human psychology.

In the field of Bigfoot research it does one well to have studied Logic. If you are going to profess any kind of belief you should be quite sure that your ideas make sense, and their bases are reasonable. Before I ever considered writing or blogging on Bigfoot I made darn sure that I knew what I was talking about first. I read something like 60 books on Bigfoot/Sasquatch before I ever began internet publishing. I read ALL of the skeptical books, too, so that I would know exactly what I would be up against and what tactics I would have to use to combat illogic coming from the so-called skeptical, scientific side of the argument.

Image: Doesn't this Yeti look like a Muppet?

I would advise strongly that you consider whether you want to be a public figure in Bigfoot research, or a private investigator. Once you enter the field as a known person you will find that the “B-word” will be attached to you wherever you go. If one Googles my name, for instance, one will find innumerable Bigfoot references and links. If I were a professional in some field where it mattered I might have thought twice about it. Luckily, though, I am self-employed, and I can’t imagine there are many book-buying customers who would hold Bigfoot against me. It could impact me if, say, I ever wanted to get involved with something like teaching, though. However, there are many Bigfoot researchers who hold down perfectly normal jobs, and don’t have to hide their interests, people like researchers Cliff Barackman and Thom Powell, both of whom are school teachers. I don’t care, personally—I am committed. I don’t say “I believe” because I don't like that term, but rather that I am infinitely interested in the subject. That keeps me going, and it keeps the skeptical bugs off my back.

5) Have you ever been on any documentary like shows similar to MonsterQuest?

No, I’ve never been on that show, or any other major television or radio shows. However, I do know personally or communicate with many of the people you see on MonsterQuest and the other ones. It’s funny, a small world kind of feeling, in the Bigfoot world. I have appeared live on an hour-long internet radio show called SquatchDetective (click link to listen), on BlogTalk Radio. That was fun, though a little nerve-wracking, especially at first. After the first few minutes, though, I found that Bigfoot interest took over, and there was by the end not nearly enough time to cover all that I’d wanted to talk about. It just flew by; and I am one who is not too fond of public speaking to groups any larger than my close friends.

Image: Speakers at the Yakima Bigfoot Round-Up, 2009, with Bob Gimlin. Jeff Meldrum, Kathy Strain, Gimlin, Derek Randles, John Bindernagel, and Chris Murphy (obscured by camera). By Steven Streufert.

I didn’t decide to come out publicly as a "bigfooter" until the 2007 Willow Creek Patterson-Gimlin Film 40th Anniversary Celebration. Before that I was just privately curious, and not too aware of how vast the Bigfoot Community really is. I published my first writing on Bigfoot in an article concerning that conference, in the North Coast Journal, a Humboldt County arts and culture paper. I was pretty involved before that, though, co-founding the humorous Church of Bigfoot, Scientist in 1999 or so, and attending the great International Bigfoot Symposium here in our town in 2003. During the last decade I developed my own personal interest in the cryptid hominoid questions, and have also had a few "strange" moments in the woods that may have been Bigfoot encounters. I live in the forested mountains, so it isn't hard for me to go "Bigfoot hunting." In 2008 something large and heavy, not some bear or deer, walked down by my cabin on a hill above Willow Creek. I can only explain it as a Sasquatch. What else could it have been? I ask myself constantly. There’s no turning back now, I suppose, though I have never actually SEEN the creature with absolute certainty. Currently my blog has garnered almost 23,000 hits in just over a year of publishing it, and it is growing. Recently we have been featured at the top of the list of the “Best Bloggers on Bigfoot Research” on the BFRO web site, the most popular Bigfoot site in the world so far as we know. Who knows what the future may hold? Bigfoot calls me onward.

6) Has researching Sasquatch ever backfired on you (i.e., someone avoided you for researching Bigfoot)?

Well, I’ll tell you, the ladies don’t seem to like it very much. They seem to generally think Bigfoot research is just a little “icky.” You don’t want to talk about Bigfoot when you’re out on the town, or out on a date. A lot of my friends don’t seem to like it, especially as they can’t seem to understand why I have gotten so deeply into it. It seems strange to them, not from the perspective of the Creature being strange so much as they think I am a bit strange. That is OK. I like strange and mysterious things!

One way that Bigfoot research can backfire is in regard to relations with other researchers. They all have their opinions, and sometimes not that much real substantiation for them. Pretty much ANY position one takes will end up angering someone. These battles over points, which for the most part cannot be proven any more than the Creature, may end up frequently in public recrimination, flame wars, and the flinging of insults and anger all over the internet and in the Bigfoot rumor mill. I call this phenomenon “The Bigfoot Wars,” and this has gone on essentially from the start, when early guys like Bob Titmus, Peter Byrne, Rene Dahinden, and John Green all ended up kind of hating each other. At least, they tended not to want to work together, and so the research only suffered because of personal differences. It seems to work like this: because the creature is so elusive, so intangible nearly all the time, so un-provable in the normal scientific ways, and because we cannot really pin down basic features, facts and behaviors without a captured specimen, we are left just with the sometimes vague or contradictory things that witnesses say, and then the all too human arguments about them after the fact. These arguments exist even though much of the time they are based on nothing, on nothing but hot, thin air and defensive egotism.

Image: Roger and Bob with Bigfoot, drawn by Mike Rugg, on Jerry Hein's memorabilia sales table, Yakima Round-Up. By Steven Streufert, 2009.

Another problem which I regret to have to mention is that of the witnesses. This is a big issue these days. In my store I get dozens of reports a year, and one has to really wonder about some of them. Most are quite ordinary and believable, and the people seem wholly credible and reliable. Other times there are people who seem to have a problem with pathological lying or exaggerated tall tale telling. Sometimes they just want to see if they can trick you into believing them, to see if they can pull your leg. Though the majority of them are believable, often there are people who report things that seem good at first, and then get stranger and more elaborate and unbelievable as they go along telling the story. One has to take a step back and wonder if these people are possibly having drug problems, delusional, confused, irrational, or just dishonestly seeking attention. They are the few, but they often have the most grand and impressive stories. Sometimes one gets involved with them on a personal level, and they begin to regard one as a friend and confidante. This can be dangerous as the researcher then starts to lose objectivity on the one hand, and gets wrapped up in their antic personal or family problems on the other. This has happened to me in several instances, where I really had to back away from a witness I no longer trusted to tell the truth and be psychologically clear.

It is as Daniel Perez has told me, “Trust, but Verify.” One should check these things out, but not be led down a loony or hoaxing path. Most of the witnesses are for real, though, and this is the most impressive proof that there is SOMETHING out there, for sure. The Backfire Effect of which you speak is why I have "ANGRY BIGFOOT SPEAKS" on my blog. He helps me say serious things in commentary on issues, but with humor and satire. Hopefully he lessens backlash, and I get to vent my own feelings.

7) Which Bigfoot-related movie is your favorite and which would you recommend to me?

I like everything that has Bigfoot in it, generally. Though, one does often grow tired of the fictional B-movie grade Bigfoot slasher/killer horror films. There are some classics in this genre, however, such as ABOMINABLE. And then there is the great THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK. The latter is of particular interest, as it is basically a docudrama, based on a true story, using original locations and even local people from Fouke, Arkansas, but it combines them with typical horror motifs that keep the film entertaining and at times exciting. It is also a nature film, and I must say that perhaps the scariest aspect of the film is the excellently done, beautiful but sinister footage of the spooky swamps where the creature is said to live. I’ve seen most of the Bigfoot films, and the fictional ones are nearly all pretty bad; but I watch them all anyway--it's fun, if nothing else. I am interested in the Creature itself as an apparently real creature, but I am just as intrigued by popular cultural manifestations of the motif. HARRY AND THE HENDERSONS was too cute for me to really like, too silly, but it had a good message at its heart.

I really prefer the non-fictional documentaries, but they are made for TV, and it is truly rare that one is made that does not degenerate into tabloid mockery or superficial skeptical dismissal without real substantiation. There are some that are partly good, like MONSTERQUEST, and the National Geographic ones, but these fall short with critical flaws and their attraction to over-dramatizing things for ratings rather than taking them fully seriously. SASQUATCH: LEGEND MEETS SCIENCE is a very good one that tries to consider some real evidence in real ways, and looks at a few of the famous films made of the creature. Also very good are the A-and-E ANCIENT MYSTERIES documentary, with Leonard Nimoy narrating, and the old IN SEARCH OF… BIGFOOT episode.

CLICK LINKS OF LAST FEW TITLES TO VIEW FOR FREE OR BUY VIDEOS, the last two are online streaming, courtesy of the BFRO web site.

You have to take the serious and the humorous together. One leavens the other. If one can’t necessarily find or prove Bigfoot, it is OK to watch a silly horror flick that can make you laugh. Some will even make you wonder. Good luck with your I-Search project! Keep your mind and eyes open. You never know what you may see!

* (Title after Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet)

BONUS LINK: View a good MonsterQuest PGF presentation with Bob Gimlin narrating HERE.

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A DISCUSSION WITH A SKEPTIC ON BIGFOOT,

PART TWO, A More Brief Addendum.

BIGFOOT BOOKS TALKS ABOUT SASQUATCH WITH A SCIENTIFICALLY-MINDED ANONYMOUS READER… CONTINUED.

CAN THE MINDS MEET ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE OF EMPIRICISM AND POSSIBILITY? An on-going exploration.

A brief interaction with “Skeptic” from our previous blog entry, DISCUSSION WITH A SKEPTIC ON BIGFOOT (click linked text to read it), began after he saw the recent National Geographic documentary, American Paranormal: Bigfoot. This is a minimal update to our previous post. As we were on our iPhone and hence limited in our typing patience, we mainly just let him do the talking. It is interesting, as one may see how he is ALMOST convinced by the Patterson-Gimlin Film, and even admits the possibility of a real Bigfoot to some degree. He sent in the following:

SKEPTIC: Actually, I saw a show on BF last night on Nat Geo. It heavily features Bill Munns' digitization and analysis of PGF. It was definitely biased in that they didn't talk to a lot of experts, but they did show some interesting stuff. The musculature of the PGF creature may be the convincing thing, at least in the way it was presented. The "compliant gait" could be faked, longer arms could be added as part of the suit, but the way the fur clings to the body and muscle contraction seems visible. That is hard to fake even now, but particularly with ape suits available at that time. So maybe it is real. I just don't know. I wish a panel of totally disinterested anatomists and kinesiologists could really be brought together to look at the film. The film is ultimately the closest "proof" there is.

"Skeptic," again, followed up when he had proposed that perhaps the PG Film was real, but that the Bigfoot had gone extinct since then, and when we replied that there are more sighting reports now than ever:

SKEPTIC: The fact there are more sightings WITHOUT film or other evidence makes it less probable that it is real, you know. So the fact that there are more sightings now, yet still without evidence, argues against the existence of Bigfoot, and more that there are more people now there, more delusions, wishful thinking, mis-sightings (brown bears, whose habitat is similar to that of many BF sightings), weird feelings in the woods, more hoaxes, etc. The more the encounters, the greater the chance of real documentation, if the creature is real and alive.

Then, on Mar 13, 2010, at 12:36 AM, Steven Streufert, Bigfoot Books wrote, and started it up again:

BIGFOOT BOOKS: “Bigfoot?” Check this out:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=banaB07Fu9c&feature=related
Watch it until the midpoint, at least.
(This is the video of a three-legged bear waking bipedally upright, looking a lot like a Bigfoot when it moves through the woods, obscured partially by branches.)

SKEPTIC: I think a lot of bigfoot "sightings" are probably black bears. Their habitat and the locations of bigfoot sightings overlap very nicely. Others are just hallucinations or "spooked feelings" onto which people project some image in their brains, like a lot of ghost "sightings." On another note, it's amazing that the bear survived after presumably losing one of its front legs/arms in a bear trap. It defied the odds in surviving bleeding or infection. It then later survived the odds by surviving with this very real handicap. It may have been aided in its survival by scavenging on thrown-away human food in garbage cans and dumps.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: It looks amazingly like a bigfoot when it is moving through the trees. A huge number of BF sightings are probably wishful thinking or mis-interpretive imagination. However, there are many that are vividly up close and personal, undeniable... unless the witnesses are liars. Bears are impressive creatures. That they can survive as they do indicates that an omnivorous BF creature could, too, if it were adaptive and flexible.

SKEPTIC: Yes, some bears will survive and maybe thrive as scavengers as our population continues to grow, largely due to third-world fecundity and immigration. Other bears, less adaptable, like Grizzlies are doomed, as are many other animals.

Bigfoot is either fiction or has died out due to its own lack of adaptability and loss of habitat (or isolation of once continuous roaming areas by human development). Other hominid species and non-hominid primates have existed until fairly recently, and bones really do decay or become buried under leaves and soil fast in forests. So it is possible that there was a human-like animal in N. America until recently. I don't think it exists anymore, if it did. With more humans, more cameras (virtually every cell phone now), there'd be more PGF-type footages at the least.

Bigfoot fulfills the human desire for transcendency and escapism from the nudging and gnawing sense that we are animals, born for no reason, dying for no reason, just here to eat, shit and reproduce. Everyone feels this. We need mystery to survive psychologically. Without mystery, we have to face the banality and triviality of our own lives and deaths.

It is ironic that we seek both certainty and mystery. Certainty, because it alleviates our own questions about our positions in the world and our own decisions. Mystery, because so long as there is mystery, there is a chance of there being something more than random material cause and effect, which is a kind of certainty, but not the kind we crave, as it is dehumanizing and mechanical. We need both, and in some way they reinforce each other, even though they are diametrically opposed.

We want fascistic certainty about our own importance, yet we want unknowables that point to other worlds to which we may one day ascend. Related but distinct, and again irreconcilable with strict logic. But reconcilable when considering human psychology.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: There is a lot of evidence in Native American culture that there were once a whole lot of them out there. BFROVIDEOS on YouTube had a really cool thermal video. They may have made it pay-per-view, though. There is still a lot of habitat. Come on up here sometime and I'll show you "Bigfoot Country." I predict that wolves and grizzlies will one day re-colonize in the lower 48, perhaps even spreading into Northern California. Only a matter of time, and Conservation….

SKEPTIC: There was also a belief that the world was created by spiders or other creatures in N.A. cultures. And, again, when I go outside at night, I can sometimes "feel" weird creatures in the woods, and it frightens and thrills me. We all want that. We want to know there is more than just what we see out there, even as we want to know there are rules.

It is easy to project our desire for "others" (which beyond maintaining the mystery we need also alleviates the loneliness we feel) onto human-like creatures that may be out there. We have had language longer than the last date of extinction of other hominids, e.g. Neanderthals and probably others. So there is also an oral tradition of man-like creatures, which once did exist alongside of us, that may have been passed down to many cultures.

And I am willing to concede that some ape-like creature, perhaps even a hominid, did exist alongside us in N. America for some time. They did certainly in Europe (until probably about 20K years ago), and, although it is controversial, possibly in Indonesia even until perhaps even just a half-dozen to a dozen thousand years ago. There may well be more.

However, if bigfoot did exist in N. America for some time, migrating like H. sapiens over the ice bridge (since one thing is certain, apes, including the hominid group of apes, all evolved in Africa), it is almost certainly extinct now. If it did exist, it may have gone extinct long ago (in which case PGF would be a hoax) or very recently. But with so many people and so many devices for recording encounters, it defies all logic that it could still exist now.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: Some things are metaphoric, some aren't. Spiders = “web of stars,” for instance. Indonesia area still has "hobbit" reports. Orang Pendak… Google it.

SKEPTIC: I know, but there was controversy about whether the fossils were properly identified. I don't give much credence to recent reports. Some things are metaphoric, yes, and so BF might be too. It's the wildman myth.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: "The mythology has to come from somewhere. It doesn't just come out of a Kellogg's corn flake box!" --Rene Dahinden

I LIKE the maybe, and BF is the best of them all as he stands just the other side of real, and may be real. Look into HOBBIT. They have found many more skeletons. A ... population! Views have changed. Be open minded. It's the best way to be. By no means have humans reached the limits of understanding.

SKEPTIC: There are bones of H. floresiensis. There are none of bigfoot. The controversy about the hobbit is whether it was a separate species or just a group of miniature humans.

There is something one learns when taking an ecology class. Large animals require truly huge areas. Shy and retiring large animals require even more. And while the total amount of undisturbed area may still be great, it is broken up. And, again, one learns in ecology classes that it is not sheer area that matters, but connectivity. One huge area of 100,000 acres, say, means more biodiversity, especially for larger animals, than 100,000 acres broken up by roads and human settlements into 10 x 10,000 acres.

Images: Homo floresiensis skulls, and one from H. sapiens for comparison. Sourced on Wikipedia Commons.

This is actually a last-ditch conservation philosophy, providing corridors for animals to gain access to larger area footprints. It's often just a simple road that cuts habitats in two and prevents access to the larger territory. Corridors don't always work, though, as it means somehow funneling animals through a small "tunnel" to access to other part of the territory.

So, even when the "virgin" areas may seem large in sum, if they are broken, even just by small roads, into parcels (and for a big animal even 50 sq. miles - a huge "parcel" by our standards - may not be enough), it just doesn't work for certain animals.

If you consider the number of, say, 50 sq. mile areas that are unbroken and undisturbed in the world by any road or other human scar, there are very few. Perhaps in the Amazon, but, even there, that's disappearing fast.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: There are LOTS of those areas here, with only dirt or very sparsely traveled roads. Come see for yourself!

SKEPTIC: If BF is human-shy, it would not be sparse enough. Look at a Google satellite map of the area. Not as sparse as that. Also, where are the movies and photos. Everyone has a cell phone with a camera these days.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: You have never walked on the GROUND in these areas. It is incredibly sparse, and humans may log or plow dirt roads, but they soon leave. It is incredibly dense and inaccessible in most places. Google Earth is deceptive. Go to Orleans CA there, go west a little ways, you will be in the Bluff Creek country. Then go north, into the Klamath-Siskiyou Wilderness. You won't see Bigfoot on Google Earth, but you would get a whole different impression trying to walk around in there.

Image: Thank you Google Earth. You helped me greatly in studying the P-G film site zone before venturing forth! Click to enlarge to see the location of the site.

SKEPTIC: Walk and take a camera. Send me a pic of BF!

BIGFOOT BOOKS: I've tried. I think there was one in my yard, a forest actually, but a photo was impossible. I didn't actually see it. But it behaved and sounded like no other animal I know.

SKEPTIC: I've heard weird sounds in my yard too. Doesn't mean it was BF. Maybe it was a chick stalking you.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: This instance was different. I KNOW weird sounds. I had a mountain lion in my yard yesterday. Raccoons, foxes, bears, skunks, owls, doves, hawks, osprey, deer--all sorts of things live up here. That one night, whatever it was, was NONE of them. I doubt it was a 500 pound man in the middle of the night, either.
Chicks? I don't tend to go for the ones that make the ground shake when they walk, though.

SKEPTIC: Maybe, but probably not. The mind is a powerful instrument of hallucination and misinterpretation of senses. Mama Cass is stalking you.

Image: Rene Dahinden's foot is dwarfed by the Bigfoot track, this one appearing to be from the 1967 Patty creature. Historical.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: I was absolutely lucid during the event, and checking my assumptions all along the way. Basically... WTF?!  Mama Cass? Maybe her reincarnation?

SKEPTIC: With 500-lb creature, you would have seen footprints afterwards. Did you check?

BIGFOOT BOOKS: Yes, hard-packed dirt, but there were depressions in the understory plants. Hadn't been there before.

SKEPTIC: But 500-lb depressions?

BIGFOOT BOOKS: Who knows??? Heavy, but how can you tell? I don't know the actual weight, but it sounded huge, heavier than a black bear.

SKEPTIC: Did it smell?

BIGFOOT BOOKS: I didn't notice scent/odor. But I was smoking at the time.

At this point the discussion died out due to the late hour back on the east coast as compared to our much more kind Pacific Time. We started it up again with one more, final question, this time luxuriously typed out on a proper keyboard.

BIGFOOT BOOKS: I am intrigued by your previous discussion of our need for at once Mystery and Certainty. I've thought about the role of the mysterious for a long time now, and the meaning of "Bigfoot" within those functional roles. You put the case very well.

In this sense, a bona fide mystery can serve the very same role as a mythological one. In fact, they blend with each other in the human psyche. But aren't the "real" things just as mysterious, especially at early points of discovery? Aren't there always mysteries, and isn't this what drives Science and exploratory quests and hypotheses?

I would argue that Bigfoot is no different from all the other things we have sought to know, and explore, and discover. The entire world at one time was a great unknown to our species, full of potent magic and mystery and, of course, fear. Fear of the unknown, fear for survival, these drove us , along with a desire for power. Now it is really much the same, as though we do know a lot, the mysteries still seem to expand at as great or a greater proportion to our discoveries and validations. Think of Cosmology and Quantum Physics, for instance. Or the exploration of Genetic mapping, of micro-processes within cells, within matter itself.

Images, above and below: Three Willow Creek Bigfoot statues, shot in one night on a low-grade iPhone camera, for "artistic effect." By Steven Streufert, 2010.

In the great Age of Exploration, and the Colonial period that followed, Europeans spread out and sought to discover, know and conquer. Strange things were encountered, including heretofore unknown beasts and monsters of mythic proportions and forms. At first these were monstrous, but were gradually understood. Hence, the gorilla becomes just another quite interesting creature of known habits and taxonomy, rather that a savage giant that rips humans to shreds and eats them, or abducts human women for breeding. Even the great sea monsters are now known to be squid, whales, manatees or sharks. Could not Bigfoot be just the last hold-out in this process, now still a monster to some, and yet to others experienced and understood as simply another living creature?

I would argue, also, that the sense of banality and absurdity in life, though at times crushingly real to us, is really just a lack of imagination and inspiration. What we know is really quite small compared to what is, and there are ample mysteries abounding in the universe beyond our small, known world. Though we cannot escape bodily physical death and the daily monotonous requirements of life, there are means for transcendence readily available to us at all times, techniques of art and vision, and technologies of the "soul" like Buddhism, which may allow us to escape the narrow bounds of a time-space bound form of consciousness.

Perhaps this is part of the appeal of Bigfoot: that it is a creature that is man-like, but not confined by mankind's narrow society and civilization. It is a creature that embodies at once the power of the natural world and a potential unknown form of consciousness and existence utterly strange to us, but strangely and deeply familiar. It appeals to our deeply known evolutionary and wild past, but also, perhaps, to our future.

Your reply? 

[ANSWER PROMISED BUT STILL PENDING. Check back here soon for the final update, coming soon to this blog entry!]

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ANGRY BIGFOOT SPEAKS! And Roars! And Munches!

Me have to admit it. Some time me can not stop self from stealing hu-man food. Me not eat hu-man, but cookie or pie hard to resist, and taste so much better. Me steal from window ledge, run off with goodie. That why sometime hu-man get to see me, even though me so sneaky other time. Me angry just because cookie no grow on tree. Would be perfect world in nature if that true. But no. No. Hu-man researcher say me evolve perfect, so no need be civilized. Me say that not all the way true. Why you think you dumb monkeys see me? Not because you clever. It because me hungry, and curious about crazy thing you do.
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HEY! Who is that crazy blue thing over there in my spot!

This blog "copyright" enough, 2010 by Bigfoot Books and Steven Streufert, that you should at least cite and link us when you are appropriating any personally generated materials from this blog web site. We write in the spirit of sharing, so feel free! But spread the word, please, so we may slowly change this old world for, if not the better, than at least to make it a more interesting place to live.