What, There’s No Bigfoot in Texas ?

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on February 13th, 2006

The article that originally ran in the San Antonio Express-News titled "Group busy stalking Big Thicket Bigfoot" and was discussed here on Cryptomundo at the time, was picked up by the Beaumont Enterprise. Thomas Taschinger, editorialist for the Enterprise wrote a piece ridiculing the notion that the Big Thicket in particular, and the state of Texas in general could harbor a bipedal primate.

The article by Roy Bragg of the San Antonio Express-News told about the Texas Bigfoot Research Center and its efforts to find the big guy. With tape recorders and infrared cameras, the group’s members occasionally roam the Thicket after dark, trying to make one of the world’s greatest scientific discoveries. So far, they have come up with the same results as other Bigfoot researchers – lots of suspicion but little fact.

Locals may be disappointed, but there’s virtually no chance Bigfoot is tromping about the Thicket or other parts of the Eastern or Southern United States where it has variously been reported. The wilderness in these places is not vast enough and the human presence is too pervasive to support a breeding population. If the creature were in the South or East, it would have been shot/trapped/photographed sometime during the past two centuries.

In the Pacific Northwest and Canada, the Bigfoot legend is a tad more believable. That corner of the continent has thousands of square miles of uninhabited or lightly populated territory. In theory, a small band of intelligent and elusive mammals could be hanging on.

It’s not easy finding and documenting an extremely intelligent, nocturnal animal that may have a population of no more than 50 or 100 in all of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana; it’s kind of like trying to find a few moving needles in a 63,000,000 acre field of hay. These are very special needles; they are mobile, rare, nocturnal (with the requisite, outstanding, night time visual acuity), can think like a chimpanzee, and are as agile as cougars.

Where do I get 63,000,000 acres, you ask? Well, since you are obviously unaware, there are "only" 63,000,000 acres of forestland in the four state region of Texas (22,000,000), Arkansas (18,000,000), Louisiana (13,000,000) and Oklahoma (10,000,000). In East Texas alone, there are over 12,000,000 acres. 63,000,000 acres of forestland is equivalent to 100,000 square miles. That is equivalent to a piece of real estate that is equal in size to the entire state of Oregon.

You made mention of the Texas Bigfoot Research Center having "little fact," yet you make statements such as "wilderness in these places is not vast enough and the human presence is too pervasive to support a breeding population." It sounds like you need to get out a little more, Mr. Taschinger. Please tell me, how is it that a "pervasive human presence" could keep a rare species from breeding in 63,000,000 acres of timber land? And how is 63,000,000 acres of timber land not vast enough?

The best evidence supporters have produced so far is the infamous 16 mm clip filmed in 1967 by Roger Patterson in northern California of a big ol’ thing striding into the woods. Its 953 frames have been scrutinized in a way that makes the treatment of the Zapruder film seem almost casual.

Some anthropologists have said the beast could not possibly be phony, showing fluid movement and an apelike stride. Some makeup artists have said it’s an obvious fake, "a man in a monkey suit." The discussion gets down to fine points like whether the creature has a water bag under the stomach fur, a trick used to make a costume ripple like real flesh. One debunker claimed to have spotted a few frames with a bell-shaped zipper fastener on the fur. Supporters call it a drop of water or a film flaw.

The cold reality is that it is extremely hard to believe that Bigfoot is real. Despite the ratio of wilderness to people – whether in the Pacific Northwest or the Himalayas -you have to wonder why no one has been able come up with conclusive proof after all these years – either a corpse or skeleton or good photos. Heck, I’d settle for droppings or hair samples that the FBI lab agrees do not come from any known animal.

You insinuated that perhaps a good photo would seal the deal for you but in the same breath, you insinuate that the image in the Patterson-Gimlin footage is nothing more than a "man in a monkey suit." You even mention that the film is so controversial that one debunker, Chris Murphy, claimed to have spotted a few frames with a bell-shaped zipper fastener. Actually, Mr. Murphy’s position is that the "bell-shaped zipper fastener" is not that at all; his position is that the image is indeed a sasquatch.

He’s large, he’s hairy and he roams the Big Thicket scaring small children.

We are not talking about your Uncle Leonard. We are talking about Bigfoot – a.k.a. Sasquatch, or the critter called the Abominable Snowman in the Himalayas.

Most Southeast Texans have heard of Sasquatch sightings in the Pacific Northwest and Yeti encounters in Asia. To the surprise of many, no doubt, a story we ran last weekend suggested that the apelike creature could be skulking around these parts.

Finally, you mentioned in your piece about how many Southeast Texans, "no doubt," were surprised to learn that a big bug-eyed monster is "scaring little children" in Southeast Texas (by the way, it’s not a "monster," as you implied, it’s an extremely rare species of primate). "No doubt" there are also many respectable Southeast Texans, of unassailable character, who have had experiences with your implied monster; I know, I’ve interviewed dozens and dozens.

Unfortunately, because of public lashings, ridicule and disdain such as that shown in your opinion piece, these witnesses (such as judges, law enforcement, wildlife biologists, pastors, hunters, nurses, journalists, bankers and many others) are highly reticent about such events and choose to keep such events highly confidential.

Well Mr. Taschinger, the Big Thicket is a vast, thickly forested area. Here are some facts about the area taken from the Handbook of Texas Online.

The Big Thicket of Southeast Texas is difficult to define geographically. The early explorers thought of it as the heavily wooded area south of the Old San Antonio Road, east of the Brazos, north of the coastal prairie and the La Bahía Road, and west of the Sabine. As pioneers began penetrating and settling the area the size became more tightly defined, but to this day it has never been absolutely delineated. Some scientists identify the thicket by soil types and vegetation and stretch it across Southeast Texas from Grimes to
Newton counties. The federal government established the Big Thicket National Preserve in twelve different units in Polk and Tyler counties and the counties to their south. The old people and old families, however, who have always known that they lived in the Big Thicket, define it as a much smaller area. This is frequently called the bear hunters’ thicket.

 

This traditional Big Thicket–the bear hunters’ thicket–is about forty miles long and twenty miles across at its widest. It is flat land, grey clay and sand, part of the Pine Island Bayou drainage system. It is a thickly wooded area that begins in the southern parts of Polk and Tyler counties, where the creeks flow out of the red dirt hills. It ends in the south below Sour Lake, where the dense woods thin out in stands of pine and in the rice farms of the coastal prairie. The eastern and western boundaries were easier to define in the old days before the loggers got hold of it, but east of Cypress Creek the elevation is higher, the land is sandy, and there used to be great climax stands of yellow pine five and six feet in diameter. The western boundary of the thicket was marked by big open pine stands along the spoil banks of the Trinity River and by Batson Prairie on the southwest. Before the incursion of the lumber and oil industries, this heart of the thicket was characterized by dense vegetation and by large numbers of deer, bear, panthers, and wolves, as well as the common varieties of mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. 

The history of the Big Thicket goes back to the time when it was covered with water. In the last sixty million years, "recent times" according to geologists, the Gulf shoreline of Southeast Texas submerged and emerged time after time, in unison during the Pleistocene Age with periodic glaciations to the north. The shore line that contained the thicket rose above the waters of the Gulf during the Ice Age, and was built up by silt washed down and deposited by some ancestral Trinity River. The woods of the thicket grew, and ten thousand years ago the thicket dwellers included mastodons, elephants, the American horse, Taylor’s bison, camels, tapirs, and giant sloths, beavers, and armadillos. Preying on these animals were the sabre-toothed tiger and the dire wolf. Their day ended around 8,000 years ago. The time of the glaciers established varieties of soils and vegetation in the thicket that remained after the glaciers retreated, and produced a unique biological crossroads of at least eight different kinds of plant communities. The Big Thicket is possibly the most biologically diverse area in the world. Cactus and ferns, beech trees and orchids, camellias and azaleas and four carnivorous plants all occupy what is called the thicket, along with the pines, oaks, and gums common to the rest of East Texas. The thicket also supports a wide variety of animal life and is especially noted for the many species of birds, around 350, that either live in the area or visit annually. The abundant rainfall and the long growing season, around 246 days, ensure that vegetation and all the animal life that depends on it thrive.

It sounds like the Big Thicket has all of the trappings of suspected Bigfoot habitat. But what do I know ? emoticon

Longtime newspaper writer, and a native of the Big Thicket area, Rob Riggs has written many articles about the "Big Thicket Wildman." He even wrote a book that was published in 2001 titled, "In the Big Thicket : On the Trail of the Wild Man." While it also discusses other phenomena, it does tell many of these stories.

In the Big Thicket : On the Trail of the Wild Man

Maybe Mr. Taschinger doesn’t know as much as he thinks he does…

About Craig Woolheater
Co-founder of Cryptomundo in 2005. I have appeared in or contributed to the following TV programs, documentaries and films: OLN's Mysterious Encounters: "Caddo Critter", Southern Fried Bigfoot, Travel Channel's Weird Travels: "Bigfoot", History Channel's MonsterQuest: "Swamp Stalker", The Wild Man of the Navidad, Destination America's Monsters and Mysteries in America: Texas Terror - Lake Worth Monster, Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot: Return to Boggy Creek and Beast of the Bayou.


5 Responses to “What, There’s No Bigfoot in Texas ?”

  1. iftheshoefits responds:

    Of course there’s a Bigfoot in Texas everythings Big in Texas; at least thats what I hear. Good job countering Mr. Taschinger ,Craig,all we need now is for the big guy himself to knock off Taschinger’s hat and STOMP on it.

  2. Questor responds:

    Mr. Woolheater,

    I applaud you and your research organization’s efforts. You must be close; people are talking about this subject like never before. That’s a good thing. Unfortunately, when that happens, the noise-to-signal ratio gets higher as a result.

    Keep up the good work, TBRC!

  3. CryptoInformant responds:

    Very well done, I am sure Mr. Taschinger is rereading his debunkers handbook right now to see why he was so easily SHOT DOWN!

  4. Mike Smith responds:

    Craig, this is very well done. Maybe Mr. Taschinger needs to go out with the team next time they go to the Big Thicket looking for the BIG GUY. He can wear a pheromone tag on his butt, and we’ll see what happens.

  5. stooge75 responds:

    Once again Craig I applaud your research and conviction. Great job as always.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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