Save the Skunk Ape

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on March 2nd, 2007

David Shealy Skunk Ape

A photo taken by Dave Shealy, a tracker of skunk apes, in Florida’s Big Cypress National Preserve in July 1997. Shealy claims to have three sightings of the mystery creature since 1974. REUTERS/Dave Shealy/Handout

Skunk ape tracker seeks to protect the creature
Fri Mar 2, 2007 7:33AM EST
By Nick Carey

OCHOPEE, Fla., March 2 (Reuters Life!) – North America’s Pacific Northwest has Bigfoot. The Himalaya region of Nepal and Tibet has the Yeti.

But in Florida’s swamps, Dave Shealy is on the lookout for the skunk ape, hoping to prove the smelly creature does actually exist and win it government protection.

Shealy, 43, claims he saw his first skunk ape — a creature similar to an orangutan or gorilla but with a foul odor — in 1974 and has been searching for more ever since.

“All of a sudden there was this big, hairy creature walking like a man through the marsh,” said Shealy while on a cigarette break from fixing a water pump at his Trail Lakes Campground, some 70 miles west of Miami.

“I didn’t see another one until the summer of 1997.”

Shealy claims three sightings of the skunk ape and boasts to be the world’s leading researcher of the mystery creature. He also runs a small roadside shop stocking skunk ape memorabilia like T-shirts, rudimentary clay models, and a DVD film he has made about his work.

He is not alone in his belief in the skunk ape. There was a wave of sightings in the 1970s, all describing the creature as about seven feet tall, weighing about 300 pounds (136 kgs), and bringing a foul odor as it emerged from the swamp.

But the U.S. National Park Service, which runs the 720,000 acre Big Cypress National Preserve where Ochopee is located, says there is no evidence that any such animal exists.

Big Cypress spokesman Bob DeGross said there had been no confirmed sightings.

“Many years back someone left a note for us claiming to have spotted one of these creatures,” DeGross said. “But we were unable to verify it.”

SHY AND SMELLY

Shealy said he aims to prove skunk apes do exist and get them government protection, partly to atone for crimes committed in his youth. He spent three years in prison after being caught in 1987 in the swamp acting as a lookout on a $13 million shipment of Columbian marijuana.

His second sighting of a skunk ape was in July 1997 after he had waited day and night for five months in a 20-foot high tower in the swamp to see a skunk ape.

Not long before sunset, something appeared about 75 feet away moving fast that was “exactly like what I saw when I was a kid.”.

Shealy shows a photograph he took that day of swamp land with a distant, reddish-brown speck. When magnified, it appears to be a blurry hairy creature that could be an ape walking upright — but it is too unclear to be positive.

Shealy said his third and most recent sighting was in 1999 when he spotted a smaller animal than the first two which he caught on video. He said skunk apes are very shy and the name comes from its strong, unpleasant odor.

“The smell is like rotten eggs,” said Shealy. “There’s a lot of methane in the swamp, which could explain the stink.”

But critics claim Shealy’s photos are fake and question his sanity — and motivation.

“I get a lot of nasty e-mails,” Shealy said. “But I don’t see my critics spending months in the swamp proving me wrong.

“People think I do this to make money, but what I raise is not enough to cover my research.”

He estimates he needs $250,000 to complete that research.

“With that, I can prove skunk apes are out there,” Shealy said. “Then I can get them the protection they deserve.”Nick Carey

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.


8 Responses to “Save the Skunk Ape”

  1. Doug Higley responds:

    With $250 grand I’d prove that I don’t exist. Watch me…

  2. lastensugle responds:

    If he wants to save the skunk ape in the picture, I suggest he tells his friend to take of that suit!

  3. joppa responds:

    For $250.00 I can rent a better monkey suit.

  4. things-in-the-woods responds:

    Is it just me or does the line “acting as a lookout on a $13 million shipment of Columbian marijuana” not suggest some kind of explanation here?

  5. alvininnaples responds:

    I saw a Black Panther that was every bit of six feet long on the trail in 1966 when I lived at Remuda Ranch. No one believes me. Have you ever seen an Everglades Mink? Dave Shealy has lived in the glades all his life and if he sez there a skunk ape, you can bet your sweet ass there is one. Ever hear a panther scream? You have to clean your pants afterwards. Before you post, ask yourself (when was the last time I spent a night in the glades?)

  6. DWA responds:

    Having been in that part of Florida, all I can say is: I wouldn’t be where that fella is, period, much less wearing an ape suit.

    You’d have to spend a whole lot more than the best ape suit. You might as well buy me the vehicle that I’d purchase with the money. Or the house. Or both…

  7. mystery_man responds:

    I think anyone out in an ape suit in an area where people are looking for the skunk ape is kind of asking for trouble. I always wonder when some jokester out there in a suit is going to get himself shot.

  8. JustinC responds:

    In 1995 a friend and I who enjoy hiking and extreme camping wanted to walk through the biggest open space in our native Florida. It turns out that the furthest distance between two roads in the state is in Big Cypress. We found a small airstrip on a USGS map, and had an ex-military friend who is a pilot fly us in. We couldn’t find the strip on the map, but we found another, and landed. The walk took us about 7 1/2 days to complete. We walked every day till sundown, and slept in hammocks at night. Incredible country out there. It is vast to the point of making you feel insignificant. We got out in 7 days of straight walking by compass bearing, deviating by no more than 20 degrees, and only to the west. This trick keeps you from drifting. If you just wandered it could take weeks to exit the park to a road. The point of all this? I think there is plenty of space for stuff to hide. I walked for seven days and did not see a single Alligator. There are, I venture to say, thousands there, yet we saw none. Humans are loud and smelly, even if you attempt to be low impact like my friend and I with no tents or fires. Animals hear us coming. Imagine now trying to spot a critter that numbers maybe five or ten, maybe less. From my experience in swamps, I’d say good luck unless you had a gabillion dollars of National Geo game cameras everywhere. I don’t know if that fella above is nuts or not, but whole airliners have been lost around the glades. Be real easy to lose a smelly monkey. Just my two cents.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

|Top | Content|


Connect with Cryptomundo

Cryptomundo FaceBook Cryptomundo Twitter Cryptomundo Instagram Cryptomundo Pinterest

Advertisers



Creatureplica Fouke Monster Sybilla Irwin



Advertisement

|Top | FarBar|



Attention: This is the end of the usable page!
The images below are preloaded standbys only.
This is helpful to those with slower Internet connections.