Oregonbigfoot.com
Newsletter
March 2005

Issue: March Year: 2005
Editor: Autumn Williams
© 2005 Oregonbigfoot.com
Sign up! It's Free!
IN THIS ISSUE
>> EDITOR'S NOTE
>>
WEBSITE UPDATES - INCLUDING
NEW AUDIO RECORDINGS!
>> UPCOMING CONFERENCES
>> THE ULTIMATE
GAME CAMERA
>> WILDMEN IN NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE
>>

FINAL THOUGHTS...

For Your Collection:

Meet the Sasquatch
Chris Murphy, with the help of John Green and Thomas Steenburg, as well as many others, may have produced the best Sasquatch/Bigfoot book since Green's "Sasquatch: the Apes Among Us" in 1978.

This book is deceptively thin, but holds within over 640 pictures, some of which have never been published before.


Walking With the Great Apes: Jane Goodall, Dian Fossey, Birute Galdikas


In this study of three great female primatologists, science journalist Montgomery moves beyond biography into ethnology, taking a step that goes well beyond even her subjects' research. Goodall, Fossey and Galdikas each made a similar leap, the author contends, moving from observers and recorders to an almost shamanistic quest to enter the world of the apes they studied.


Bigfoot Action Figure
They're big, they're hairy, and they're notoriously elusive! This 7-inch tall, hard plastic Bigfoot Action Figure has stamps on the bottom of its feet and comes with a stamp pad so you can leave mysterious footprints on letters, walls and skin.


Cryptozoology Action Figure: Bigfoot
Another one for your collection from Mezco toys.
They're going fast!

Speaking of replicas...
Check this out

An unbelievably LIFELIKE Sasquatch replica from
Nimba Creations!

Eerie, huh?

Money for research?
It's not bigfoot-related, but it's fun. For those of you who are on the computer all the time like I am, this is a great way to make some extra $$$ for being opinionated. <grin> These guys pay $3 for each market research survey you complete. And yes... you can be honest! I guess it's cheaper than hiring locals to come down to the office or paying a telemarketer to call people to ask what they think of this or that ad campaign or product. :)
Check it out


Meet Obie,
Official Mascot of Oregonbigfoot.com!

Thanks to artist Scott Davis once again for his incredible artwork! Add Obie to your bigfoot collection. :) He's available on mugs, mousepads, buttons and more. Also check out the cool new bumper stickers!



Autumn Williams with John Green and Bob Gimlin
Willow Creek Bigfoot Symposium 2003

>> Editor's Note:

There's lots of great stuff in this month's newsletter! Don't miss the NEW AUDIO RECORDINGS, information on upcoming conferences (I'll be speaking at the Bellingham conference, so come by and introduce yourself!), new artwork by Peter Oberdorf and Scott Davis in the art gallery and the free (yup... FREE) trial membership offer to the Oregonbigfoot.com members section (our content is growing by leaps and bounds).

I am currently working fervently on getting everything prepared for our month-long field expedition and doing pre-production for the accompanying documentary in mid-June. Trying to plan an extended expedition AND a documentary on a miniscule budget is an enormous task, but it's one that I believe in... so it'll happen come hell or high water. <grin> However, it means that I'm busier than a one-legged gal in a butt-kicking contest, so if you email me and I don't respond right away, please understand. Still, I'd love to hear from you so don't be afraid to send an email.


Autumn Williams
Oregonbigfoot.com
info@oregonbigfoot.com

Autumn Williams
Oregonbigfoot.com
Your comments are always welcome.

The legend lives.

WEBSITE UPDATES:
OREGONBIGFOOT.COM UPDATES
MEMBERS ONLY UPDATES

More phenomenal artwork has been added to the bigfoot art gallery!

"Stare Down"
New artwork from
Peter Oberdorf

"Big Eyes"
New artwork from
Scott Davis

NEW REPORTS ADDED
15 new reports have been added to the recent reports section

FEATURED ARTICLES including insider information on the Puyallup Screams, a look at the end of The Bigfoot Research Project and the FBI Freedom of Information Act files on Bigfoot.

EXCLUSIVE NEW AUDIO RECORDINGfrom Georgia. Recorded November 2004 by Bobby M. Several loud, low moans recorded at close range. You won't hear this anywhere else! Also, I've added 9 of the 12 full-length Snohomish recordings.

Subscription to the Oregonbigfoot.com Members Only section is $4.95 per month. Your monthly subscription fee helps support Oregonbigfoot.com!

UPCOMING CONFERENCES

SASQUATCH RESEARCH CONFERENCE - Bellingham, WA

Dates: May 27-29, 2005
Time: Check-in starts Friday, May 27 at 6:00 p.m.
Location: Hampton Inn Hotel, Bellingham
Admission: Pre-registration $40 before May 14, 2005, $50 after
$25 per day at the door, Saturday and Sunday
Friday Reception FREE with paid admission

SPEAKERS:

 
  • Loren Coleman
  • Dr. Jeff Meldrum
  • Lloyd Pye
  • Autumn Williams
  • Owen Caddy
  • Jimmy Chilcutt
  • Rick Noll
  • Thom Powell
  • Dr. Robert Alley
  • Christopher Murpy
  • Thomas Steenburg
  • Al Berry & Ron Morehead
  • John Andrews
  • Todd Neiss
  • John Kirk

For more information and pre-registration, visit: http://www.sasquatchresearch.com/src.html
or contact Jason Valenti at jason@sasquatchresearch.com

17TH ANNUAL BIGFOOT CONFERENCE/EXPO - Cambridge, OH

 

 

Date: May 7th, 2005
Time: 4:00 p.m.
Location: Salt Fork State Park near Cambridge, Ohio
Admission:
Free

SPEAKERS:
Larry Lund
Ron Schaffner
Eric Altman
Dr. Paul Johnson
Joedy Cook

For more information, visit:http://www.angelfire.com/oh/ohiobigfoot/abc.htm

 

The ULTIMATE Game Camera:

SnapShotSniper DOES what other game cams WISH they could do!

4.1 Megapixel Sony Digital Camera. Waterproof Case. 10 degree detection zone. What else is there to say?

A LOT. How about multiple sensitivity settings, motion detection at 90 feet or more depending on the weather and the ability to review your shots quickly and easily right in the field? But wait... there's even more.

Frankly, I've used other game cameras and just haven't been happy with them. With most trail cams, the picture quality just isn't up to par - especially with a picture as important as the one we Bigfoot researchers want to get. Sure, you can buy a cheap game-cam at Walmart. But you get what you pay for.

These cameras take beautiful pictures both day and night. Stunningly crisp, clear photos. Pictures so clear I had a hard time telling them from 35mm shots - and the best part? The camera works as a regular digital camera, too. And a high-quality one at that.

Setup is as simple as pressing a couple of buttons on the LCD Controller and a red-light, walk-test fuction lets you know if you've got it aimed just right.

I've looked everywhere for the PERFECT game camera - and I finally found it.

http://www.snapshotsniper.com

 

 

WILDMAN RESPRESENTATIONS IN NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE

I received the following infomation from Richard Beeler in Atlanta, GA, who found some interesting photographs on the Library of Congress Website while researching a book he is writing. These are from the Edward S. Curtis Collection, circa 1914, published in his book, The North American Indian.

Tsunukwalahl--Qagyuhl
Person wearing Mask of Tsunukwalahl, a mythical being, used during the Winter Dance.
Hami--Koskimo
Koskimo person wearing full-body fur garment, oversized gloves and mask of Hami ("dangerous thing") during the numhlim ceremony.

Richard writes:

"Now I am already familiar with the Native American myth/legend of Tzonokwa/ Tsonokwa/Dzonokwa/the Giantess/The Whistling Woman/The Wild Women Of The Woods. It is said that North Coast Native American parents warned their children not to stray into the woods or the giantess Tsonokwa would carry them away. It has been suggested that this (along with many N.A. Legends) is a reference to the Sasquatch and their relationship with them. N.A. masks have depicted Tzonokwa with pursed lips as if it were whistling. Sasquatch vocalization research and study have some evidence that they use whistling, which lends to the possibility that Tzonokwa is a representation of Sasquatch... Now I realize that at first the costume construction is somewhat crude but if you look at what they are trying to depict...
- Hami translates as meaning 'dangerous thing'
- Large Hair/Fur cover humanoid biped
- Large Hands
- Large Head
- AND pursed lips as if whistling
...I feel that this is a significant representation of the Sasquatch by a Native American tribe as most animal and spirit representations that I have researched are just masks."

Fascinating find, Richard, thank you! After receiving Richard's email, I continued searching through the records and found more potential candidates for Sasquatch-like representations:

Paqusilahl--Qagyuhl
Dancer representing Paqusilahl ("man of the ground embodiment"), wearing a mask and shirt covered with hemlock boughs, representing paqus, a wild man of the woods.
A Tsunukwa at Kwaustums
A Dzoonokwa (or Tsunukwa) totem pole measuring over 20 feet tall, depicting a figure with hands outstretched to receive dowry from the wife's family.

 

FINAL THOUGHTS...
ANIMAL... OR HUMAN?

Often, and perhaps erroneously, Bigfoot creatures are referred to as animals. "North America's Great Ape".

But I often wonder just how "human" the Sasquatch really are.

"Human", by definition, is having the qualities or attributes of a man. Language, a sense of self, bipedalism... these and more are the things that make us human, and that we ASSUME separate us from all other creatures on this planet.

The patent assumption that Sasquatches are simply "another stupid animal" may be misleading researchers to the point that their research techniques are useless. And that, regarding those researchers who wish to capture or kill a creature, is ok by me.

Suppose a live creature were captured. Would we treat them as we have other large primate species? Would we personify them, dress them up in clothes and make them smoke cigars and ride funny little bicycles in a circus act? Would we stick them in cages and infect them with the AIDS virus to see how their immune systems react?

Suppose one were shot dead? How much can we truly learn about a species from its corpse? Granted, if you dissect a Sasquatch, you'll know where its vital organs are located or how much brain mass it has... but what about TRULY understanding their essence as a species? How they interact with the environment, the world... with us? Perform an autopsy on a human being and tell me their favorite color, what languages they spoke fluently, whom they loved, what was important to them or what their dreams were made of.

Based upon what I've learned in 15 years of research, I lean towards the notion that they are exactly what we humans would be had we not gone the way of industry and artifact... that they possess a modicum of intelligence much like our own, just focused on different aspects of life. If humans had relied upon their intuition, instincts and physical prowess, rather than their ability to create "stuff" for survival and profit, we may have turned out much as the Sasquatch did.

What, exactly, is "intelligence"? Intelligence, is, by definition, the capacity to acquire and apply knowledge. Certainly, these creatures show intelligence then. They have acquired the knowledge that we are dangerous and apply that knowledge by avoiding us.

We perceive intelligence as the ability to make things, to change (and often damage) our environment to fit our needs rather than adapting ourselves to the environment. But how "intelligent" is it, really, to damage that which we depend upon for our very survival? At the risk of sounding like I'm looking for a tree to hug, that doesn't sound like survival to me... it sounds like a very slow, methodical demise of our species.

Not very smart.

Autumn Williams
March, 2005