Lake Monroe Bigfoot
[From “Hoosier Times”. 2002.]
First
a piranha, then a python, then a monitor lizard and now an ape?
Indiana Fish and Wildlife Division officials and an Indiana University
anthropologist aren't ruling out the possibility that the creature folks have
spotted along Chapel Hill Road in remote, rugged Polk Township could be some
sort of ape.
The most recent sighting occurred at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at the house of Rick
Deckard and his sister, Sue Taylor, on Chapel Hill Road west of the entrance to
the Hardin Ridge Recreation Area, south of Lake Monroe in Hoosier National
Forest.
Two friends, Dale Moore and Penny Howell, had just driven up when they spotted
the animal about 200 feet away at the back of the cleared property.
They described it as standing in a sort of crouch on its rear legs, long front
legs hanging down in front of it. They said it was covered in very long, nearly
black hair, and guessed its height at around 5 feet and its weight at 200
pounds or more.
They said when the creature saw them, it turned and moved away, down the slope
into the woods. Howell said she saw a patch of white fur atop its head and down
its neck.
It left tracks in the damp clay - tracks still visible Thursday afternoon.
The tracks were about 4-by-5 inches, with four toe impressions and a heel mark.
As it was four-toed rather than five-toed, they ruled out a bear.
The prints were similar to cougar tracks, but for one feature. Many of the toeprints
were tipped by deep punctures in the clay, apparently from long claws. In one
print, three claws had cut deep incisions 1 1/2 inches long.
DNR wildlife biologist Jim Mitchell said later Thursday that cougars don't
leave claw marks when they walk.
While boots wouldn't dent the still-wet clay Thursday, the animal's tracks were
pressed a good half-inch or more into it. In some spots they had stripped grass
off the clay.
The prints were more than double the size of one left by Deckard's big German
shepherd.
Moore and Howell said the dog was in the back yard when they spotted the
strange animal Wednesday. The dog was only 30 feet from it, but it wasn't
barking. Instead, it was standing stock-still.
"It was twice as big as that dog," Howell recalled Thursday.
"I've never seen an animal like that in my life. It scared the crap out of
me."
Howell was still nervous Thursday afternoon. "It's got me scared,"
she said. "What if it grabbed a kid and dragged him down into the
woods?"
Moore had said by phone Wednesday evening he thought it looked and walked like
a bear. But Howell said Thursday its appearance and movements were more
"apelike."
At nearby Hardin Ridge Store, employee Christi Kline said the sighting was the
third she'd heard of in the past six months to a year, all describing the same
animal.
She said a woman had seen it at the Hardin Ridge area entrance and that it
didn't seem to show any fear and didn't run away.
Penny Howell
Kline also said that one night a delivery man came in shaking with fear and
saying he had just seen "Bigfoot." "We know it's not Bigfoot,
but whatever it was, it scared him," she said.
Moore, Howell and Deckard also dismissed any Bigfoot notions, saying it was
clearly an animal. "I don't believe in no Bigfoot or nothin'," Moore
said Wednesday evening.
Veteran state conservation officer Marlin Dodge said Thursday that a so-called
Bigfoot sighting wouldn't be unusual.
"I've had a lot of complaints over the years on a Bigfoot, a lot of 'em in
that area," he said.
Dodge and three other DNR officials and wildlife biologists offered no explanation
of what folks have seen. But they were not discounting the possibility that
some non-native animal is in the area.
At the Paynetown DNR office, Paynetown property manager Bruce Whiting reported black
panther sightings, the latest "over around Fairfax."
At the Bloomington Fish and Wildlife Division office, wildlife biologists
Mitchell and Gary Langell studied a sketch of the footprint. Given the print
and the description of the animal Mitchell got Wednesday from Deckard by phone
an hour after the sighting, the two were not ruling out an escaped exotic
animal.
Mitchell said he told Deckard that sometimes people see things and
"misidentify" what they see - an idea Deckard had related and
contemptuously dismissed earlier at his house.
"I'm a bow hunter," said the 49-year-old lifelong resident of the
Chapel Hill area. "I know a bear when I see one. I know a panther when I
see one. This isn't a bear or a panther.
"We've got a panther back there, too, but this is not a panther. It walks
on its rear legs," he said.
Mitchell was more inclined to believe the animal runs on all fours, which was
what he said he was first told Wednesday.
But he and Langell said the idea that some exotic animal had escaped its owner
was quite possible. And they said an escaped ape of some sort might be the best
explanation.
Mitchell referred the case to IU anthropologist Dick Adams, who planned to go
to the site today to see the prints. He also agreed an ape was a strong
possibility.
"It very well could be; this sounds very much like an orang," he
said, referring to an orangutan, the large, shaggy-haired ape that is native to
Borneo and Sumatra and that some people keep as an exotic pet.
But the black hair of the Chapel Hill Road animal wouldn't match the
reddish-brown hair of an orangutan, he said.
Dodge disputed the ape theory. "This doesn't sound like an ape to
me," he said. "The only ape I know of that would weigh 200 pounds is
a gorilla."
But he admitted an escaped exotic animal could be running loose.
Last year alone, a species of piranha was caught in Griffy Lake, a 12-foot
python that had escaped its Bloomington owner was recovered crawling around
Yellowwood State Forest, and a monitor lizard native to the South Pacific was
spotted and chased for several hours at Lake Lemon.
"I've taken all kinds of animals out in this county," Dodge said.
"I've taken bears, cougars, lions," - all escaped from owners.
"We'll go down there and take a look and see what we come up with,"
he said. "I don't know what it is."
WCSRO, 2006.