Is
Big Foot a tall tale? Not for this crew
By
Tom Wharton
KAMAS
- When Oakley resident Melissa Morrison used to come to Summit County as a child
for family reunions, her uncle told her campfire stories about seeing Sasquatch
wandering through the Uinta Mountains.
Those
stories terrified her, and she had to wonder: Could the large big-footed creatures
exist?
According
to members of the Big Foot Research Organization who came from all over the country
to search for Bigfoot sightings along the Mirror Lake Highway this week, the answer
to that question is, Yes, Melissa, there is a Sasquatch.
Scott
Taylor of Tacoma, Wash., says he saw a Bigfoot in 2005 while deer hunting on the
coast of Washington.
"It's
not like going out and watching deer and elk," said Taylor. "These are
creatures that don't want to be seen. But when you see one, it changes your life
forever."
At
twilight on his 2005 hunt, Taylor saw a hulking figure with a strong smell and
heard a "whoop" sound like he had never heard before.
He
was among a group of about 45 people at the Uinta Mountains gathering led by BFRO
director Matt Moneymaker. The group is using sophisticated equipment such as parabolic
microphones and night vision goggles to search for a Sasquatch.
Organization
members say there are between 2,000 and 4,000 of the large, secretive animals
residing in North America.
They
point to personal experiences such as Taylor's as well as a 1967 film by Roger
Patterson that purportedly captures images of Bigfoot walking as proof that the
creature many regard as fictional actually exists. Moneymaker said Friday that
there is more modern and better footage taken in Kentucky, but the man who filmed
it won't release it because he is planning to use it in a documentary.
According
to the group's Web site, BFRO.net, the term Sasquatch is an Anglicized derivative
of the word Sesquac, meaning "wild man" used by the Coast Salish Indians
of the Fraser Valley and parts of Vancouver Island.
The
group cites reports of 40 sightings or vocalizations in Utah over the years, the
last one in July 2006 near the remote High Uintas area where the group hiked this
week.
Moneymaker,
a lawyer from Capistrano, Calif., said he started the organization as a clearing
house for sightings from around the country. He claims to have been as close as
15 feet from a Sasquatch in 1994 in Portage County, Ohio.
"Utah
has a reputation of being a place with enough sightings and steep terrain where
it is possible to see one," he said
Because
of the Pioneer Day holiday, areas around the Mirror Lake Highway were crowded,
which Moneymaker said reduces the chances of seeing one of the shy creatures.
So he was moving his group Friday to a more remote area.
Other
members of the group claimed to have seen one of the elusive animals in the past.
Take
the story of Joe Yarborough of Rock Springs, Wyo., who was on a lonely road near
Dubois, Wyo., in 1993 when he drove around a corner and saw a large creature step
out of the shadows near the guard rail.
"It
took three steps and disappeared into the woods," he said. "It was not
a bear. I screamed like a little girl and slammed on the brakes. I was going to
follow it and then turned away from him. I didn't want to take a chance."
Taylor,
who is an engineer for Boeing, said many people have seen Sasquatch but are too
afraid of ridicule to actually report the sightings.
Acting
Kamas District Ranger Dave Ream of the Forest Service said he was not aware of
any Bigfoot sightings but was impressed with how seriously the BFRO group took
the stories. He said that campers should be more worried about bears, which are
coming closer than usual to campgrounds because of dry conditions and wildfires.
Still,
those who have heard or seen Sasquatch are never quite the same.