Sasquatch Summit: More Photos & Local Review
Posted by: Loren Coleman on April 13th, 2011
John Green. Photograph John Green Archives, from Chillliwack Times.
John Green (l), Al Hodgson (m), and Bob Gimlin (r), at table, sign autographs at the Sasquatch Summit, while attendees look on. Loren Coleman iPhone photo.
Al Hodgson and L
oren Coleman say hi again, after first meeting in August 1975. Photo Barry Blount.
Surprise breakfast guests on April 10th, for Michael Esordi (l), Brad Pennock, and Loren Coleman (m), were John Green (r) and his wife June. Brad Pennock Photo.
One of the few articles you may see from the British Columbia press has appeared, regarding the Sasquatch Summit. It is entitled, “Seeking Sasquatch: Local bigfoot hunter John Green honoured for his 50-year quest to find elusive biped,” by Paul J. Henderson, April 12, 2011, in the Chilliwack Times.
John Green of Harrison Hot Springs has been gathering evidence, including footprint casts, of the sasquatch for more than 50 years.
The sasquatch is shrouded in myth and mystery yet few topics of popular culture or scientific consideration induce such feelings of certainty among those who believe the creature exists and comical incredulity among those who don’t.
However, there does exist a middle ground trod upon by some who indeed think the sasquatch is likely real but for whom its existence is an open question based on evidence from all over North America.
Harrison Hot Springs resident John Green falls into this category and has become a legend in the field of sasquatch–or bigfoot–research since he began his quest to find the elusive biped more than 50 years ago.
This past weekend some of the more prominent people in the field of sasquatch research convened in Harrison Hot Springs for a conference that also served as a tribute to Green and his dedication to the topic.
The Sasquatch Summit took place at the Harrison Hot Springs Resort & Spa with lectures and displays including footprint casts, possible hair samples and images from the famous Patterson-Gimlin film. The weekend culminated with a tribute banquet to Green and was attended by leading members in the field of sasquatch research from all over North America and beyond.
In the shadows
But is there really a species of large, bipedal, ape-like creature roaming the woods around Chilliwack, Agassiz, Harrison Hot Springs and the rest of North America?
Green thinks so but he hasn’t come to that conclusion easily or without extensive research and consideration into the matter.
When confronted with the most obvious fact skeptics have for sasquatch searchers–why has no one come across a single bone of a dead creature?–the retired journalist doesn’t shy away from the legitimacy of the question.
“That’s very good evidence that there couldn’t be any such creature,” Green told the Times during a recent interview in his home. But he added there are two conflicting lines of reasoning “There couldn’t be a creature like this without a dead one having surfaced. The alternative is that somehow humans are faking all the evidence but after 50 years now for me, they can’t do it.”
And for Green, those who reject the existence of bigfoot or sasquatch out of hand, as most people do, need themselves to be more scientific about the topic.
“In this field things are upside down and backwards,” he said. “The people who investigate are called ‘believers’ and the people who believe there can’t be any such thing and therefore don’t investigate are called ‘scientists.'”
Idaho State University anthropologist Jeffrey Meldrum is one such scientist–a zoology expert in bipedal locomotion–who has taken an interest in finding out of the sasquatch could exist. Meldrum has been confronted with the attacks and dismissals from colleagues who know about his interest in the topic.
“As with most human communities, they run the entire gambit from enthusiastic interest to absolute visceral and irrational rejection,” Meldrum told the Times during a recent telephone interview. “I’m sometimes amazed at the vitriol with which some people take exception to my pursuit of this.”
A monster centennial
Green’s interest in the sasquatch began when was a stringer for the Vancouver Sun in 1957. The government was preparing to celebrate the province’s 100th anniversary in 1958 and was offering matching funds to each municipality to do permanent projects marking the centennial.
A member of the Village of Harrison Hot Springs council suggested spending the few hundred dollars hunting for the sasquatch.
Green did a story on the hunt for the Sun and the story exploded.
“I understand it now–I certainly didn’t then–any kind of an official organization taking an interest in a monster suddenly becomes a story, a huge story,” he said.
News outlets from as far away as Sweden and India took an interest in the sasquatch hunt.
“The provincial people held a press conference to announce which member of the royal family was going to honour the province and the reaction was, ‘Ya, ya, but what about the Harrison sasquatch?'” he said.
It was in the context of this hype that Green and his wife went to California in November of 1958 to look into some supposed sasquatch tracks.
He was met with serious skepticism among locals, so much so that he told the Times if it hadn’t been for the attitude in B.C. the year before they would have turned around.
But it was at Bluff Creek in northern California that Green found clear tracks on logging roads. Those prints, and many others he found and made plaster casts of, have been said to be faked, specifically by a man named Ray Wallace, something Green calls “utter idiocy.”
Just a few weeks after visiting Bluff Creek, Green went to see more tracks near a creek in hard sand that were very clear. He said that to test if those tracks could have been faked he tried jumping off a log. He found he had to land on one heel in order to get a small point of his boot in as deep as the tracks he found.
“OK, can humans make them? Deliberately fake them? The plain simple answer is ‘no,'” he said.
Read More: Chilliwack Times
Scott McClean and Loren Coleman. Photo Todd Hale.
Loren Coleman and Todd Hale. Photo Todd Hale.
Loren Coleman speaks at the Sasquatch Summit. Photo Barry Blount.
About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct).
Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015.
Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.
I had a great time at the Summit and it looked like everyone else did too. It was great meeting you again Loren and hopefully one day I can make it down to the museum. Also thanks for selling me your one and only [last conference] copy of True Giants; I think it may have been Mike’s actually, so thanks to Mike as well. I look forward to meeting you again.
Great photos. John Green still looks chipper. It’s a shame he doesn’t post on a particular internet forum to counter certain loudmouthed internet armchair warriors questioning his competence in field observation but I guess he’s got a life to lead and plus, they aren’t really worth it.
Sounds like a fantastic time was had by all at this summit.