Rez Squatching Research

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on April 27th, 2017

MACY, Neb. | Perhaps what makes myths and legends so enduring is the debate that accompanies the attempts to prove or disprove them.

Television documentaries do their best to solve the mysteries, often further clouding them. Believers continue to believe and skeptics continue to scoff.

In and around Macy, a team of researchers have set out to solve the myths of the being they call Ci’tonga, an Omaha Indian name for what is commonly known as bigfoot or sasquatch.

Brothers Barry Webster Sr. and Derek Webster co-founded Rez Squatching Research seven years ago, setting out to prove the creature’s existence. Their discoveries and experiences in the woods on the Omaha Indian Reservation have convinced them that Ci’tonga is real.

“I’ve probably seen him over a hundred times. My brother, too,” Barry Webster said. “We have unveiled and uncovered the truth.”

Both Barry and Derek fully realize that when it comes to talking about bigfoot sightings, some people are going to think they’re crazy. But they and the other 10 members of their team who go out looking for the creatures a couple nights a week have seen and heard enough to know differently.

“We’re trying to protect them is all we’re trying to do, reconnect with them, coexist with them,” Derek Webster said. “We’ve reconnected, and it’s done in a respectful way.”

For Omahas, Ci’tonga is more than just a legend. He’s not the violent, dangerous creature often portrayed on TV or in the movies. When he and Derek were growing up, Barry Webster said, the prevailing attitude was to leave the creatures alone. Rez Squatching Research is about relating to them.

“Our philosophy is the Omaha approach. It’s all about respect,” Barry Webster said. “The Omaha believe he was our brother. He was our protector and he took care of our medicine. This is what we grew up with. This is what we were taught. We wanted to take it a step further. We wanted to get out in the trenches.”

The two began exploring the wooded hills and ridges surrounding Big Elk Park in the Missouri River bottoms northeast of Macy, prime areas of bigfoot activity. Once word got out about what they and their team were doing, many in Macy came to them to share their own stories of encounters and sightings, Derek Webster said.

The two said they have no doubt that Ci’tonga, bigfoot or whatever you want to call him is real. They’ve seen footprints. They hear the deep growls and howls at night. Both pull up cellphone photos they have taken of the creatures. Numerous photos of tracks, glowing eyes in the dark and tree structures believed to be built by Ci’tonga are posted on the Rez Squatching Research Facebook page. They believe there are six families of Ci’tonga with three or four members each living in the area.

“Everybody in town has bought in now,” Barry Webster said. “We still have some traditionalists that believe you should leave him alone.”

Source

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.


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