Claims
she saw Bigfoot
Jeremy
Warren, Saskatchewan News Network
Published: Friday, December 15, 2006
A
woman from northern Saskatchewan says she saw the legendary sasquatch, and it
left behind evidence described by an expert as "the find of the century."
Shaylane
Beatty thought she saw a bear by the side of the road on her drive to Prince Albert
on Saturday. But as she drove closer, the animal was walking on two legs.
"I've
heard the stories before and I didn't believe them. Then I saw the sasquatch,"
Beatty said.
Driving
from Deschambault Lake to do some Christmas shopping on a bright afternoon, the
20-year-old noticed the creature walking along the forest's edge near Torch Lake.
It stopped by the side of the road and turned to look at Beatty as she drove by.
About
two and half metres tall and muscular with long, floppy arms attached to broad
shoulders and covered in dark brown hair, the creature isn't like anything Beatty's
seen before, she said.
The
shock of seeing such an enormous beast caused a momentary lapse in concentration
and her car swerved and nearly hit the ditch.
"My
heart was beating real fast. I was getting dizzy and was short of breath. I kept
repeating, 'I can't believe I'm seeing this.' So I pulled over and called my aunt,"
Beatty said.
Returning
to the area the next day, Beatty and her two uncles found in deep snow hundreds
of footprints measuring 50 centimetres in length, she said.
"My
uncles were struggling to walk through the same snow the sasquatch just breezed
through," Beatty said.
Even
by jumping, the two men couldn't match the creature's stride, she added.
The
tracks were followed until the evening, when darkness prevented further investigation.
"What
Shaylane saw is definitely some sort of primate," said Tom Biscardi, who's
been hunting sasquatches for 33 years and runs www.searchingforbigfoot.com, where
photos of the footprints can be viewed.
The
footprints are impressive evidence of the creature's northern wanderings, he added.
"This
particular Bigfoot has found solace in that area. There's probably a cave somewhere
that the creature sleeps in," Biscardi said.
Beatty's
uncles sent Biscardi, who said he's encountered a sasquatch six times, hair sample
for analysis.
Jeff
Meldrum, a professor of anatomy at Idaho State University and author of Sasquatch:
Legend Meets Science, said three sasquatch sightings have been recorded in Saskatchewan.
"As
long as there's forest cover and an area is sparsely populated, there is space
to harbour any number of creatures," Meldrum said.
After
viewing pictures taken by Beatty's uncles, Meldrum said the length of the footprints
are in the range of others already found in North America, but the lack of detail
leaves unanswered questions about their validity.
"Given
the quality of the photographs, it's impossible to render any meaningful analysis,"
he said.
But
the combination of a personal sighting and physical evidence is intriguing and
if samples of scat or urine are found along the trail of footprints, that would
be compelling evidence, Meldrum said.
"Hoaxers
only have so much energy and dedication before the joke wears thin," Meldrum
said.