Maine Mutant #6 in 2006

Posted by: Loren Coleman on January 1st, 2007

Maine Foliage Tours

An automobile travels the sparsely used Route 4 through the Turner, Maine, area, little knowing what it will meet around the next corner. It wasn’t a Stephen King novel, but a real-life incident that captured the media, first in Maine, then more globally last summer, into early fall.

Maine Trip

Lewiston, Maine’s Sun Journal published their 2006 year-in-review on the first day of the new year. Route 4’s “Mystery Animal” (a/k/a “Maine Mutant”) was on their list.

Monday, January 1, 2007

Top stories of 2006

Tragedies dominated the tri-county news in 2006, with young people dying in car accidents, plane crashes, the war in Iraq and a hunting accident. Western Maine had the worst car crash, the worst homicide and the worst plane crash of 2006, according to state Department of Public Safety spokesman Steve McCausland.

The shooting deaths of four people in Newry garnered interest from far beyond Maine’s border. So did the discovery of a strange-looking animal found at the roadside in Turner. The Maine creature caused a media frenzy all across the country and in Europe before laboratory tests revealed it was, in fact, a dog.

(Out of a list of the top ten stories in the greater Lewiston-Auburn, Maine area or L/A as it is called locally, the Maine Mutant flap was number six. Reporter Mark LaFlamme wrote me, after he finished filling in the details of the soon-to-be published list, that its order was a newspaper-wide editorial decision: “I argued that if we were to go by newspaper sales and web hits, the beast would be number one. Easily.”)

Maine Mystery Beast

Maine Mystery Beast

Maine Mystery Beast

The three widely published Michelle O’Donnell photographs; merely click on them for larger versions.

Here the Sun Journal’s picks for top local news of the year:

(Following stories of murder and mayhem, the sixth summary captures our attention.)

Mystery mutant sparks frenzy

It was a dog. It was a mutant. It was an extraterrestrial creature.

For days in August, the media and others debated the nature of a strange animal found dead off Route 4 in Turner. It seemed half the population believed the beast was a mere dog while others were convinced it was the mystery creature that had spooked the area for decades.

Michelle O’Donnell, who found and photographed the dead beast, solicited the help of a Sun Journal news reporter, who wrote a story about the find. What followed was a media frenzy that drew interest from around the country and as far away as Germany.

Famed cryptozoologist Loren Coleman went to Turner to collect specimens from the carcass. Maine’s mystery mutant was featured on Fox News, CNN and a host of television and Internet news organizations.

A California artist designed T-shirts in honor of the mystery creature while others created cartoons and quilts.

DNA testing eventually proved the dead creature that so galvanized the world was a common dog, with possible traces of wolf.

Many people were resigned to believe that Maine’s true mystery beast is still out there.

Compiled by Mark LaFlamme

Loren on the Scene

Loren Coleman (above) examines the carcass of the Beast or more correctly, what is left of it. In the background are, from left to right, Michelle O’Donnell and Debi Bodwell. He takes samples, one of which is then passed on to the DNA team (below). Click on the photograph by Douglas Van Reeth, to enlarge it.

Maine Mystery Beast

One of the remaining samples was of the paw with dew claws, photographed in situ by the Sun Journal’s Douglas Van Reeth.

Forensics Crew

Forensics Crew

In the wake of Maine’s Mystery Beast, popular culture and art were also created, from roadside signs to a banner, from cartoons and tee-shirts to a carving:

Beast Meat

Found along Rt. 4, near Turner, Maine, rapidly photographed by Mark LaFlamme.

Maine Mystery Beast

The Mount Desert Island Marathon® banner by sideshow artist Paul Szauter, acquired by Rogier van Bakel and donated to the International Cryptozoology Museum.

Maine Mutant

Goofy as the Maine Mutant by Peter Loh.

Maine Mystery Beast

The illustration, then his tee-shirts’ logo, by Mike Lemos. A sample tee-shirt is in the International Cryptozoology Museum.

Maine Mystery Beast

The carving by artist Roland LaVallee of Crow Track Gallery. Also aquired for the International Cryptozoology Museum.

All photographs on the page used by permission.

Loren Coleman 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.


5 Responses to “Maine Mutant #6 in 2006”

  1. bill green responds:

    hey loren & everyone good morning wow definetly a great new very interesting article about the maine mutant. great above photos as well. thanks bill . im sure we will see more updates about maine mutant soon.

  2. UKCryptid responds:

    Whilst I was getting quite frustrated as more and more parts of (to me) an exaggerated story came to us, this is a nice compilation of the info to look through, nicely done Loren.

  3. UKCryptid responds:

    Oh, and of course everyone else at CM 🙂 Happy new year.

  4. Ratopia responds:

    What a fascinating story! I just happened to see a bit about this on a news site last night and before this, I had not read about it.

    I was a veterinary assistant for 10 years, a dog groomer for nearly 15 and a dog owner most of my life. And, yes, I had a lot of Chows in my lifetime. They seemed to be the entire family’s choice in dog. LOL!

    Yea, that animal was definitely part Chow. It was either mixed with something else, too, or else it was a very badly bred animal.

    I feel pretty bad for the dog, as it didn’t appear to be very attractive and that’s possibly why the original owner let it go feral, if it was, in fact a feral dog, anyway. After having been hit by a car and dead for who knows how many hours, it would have looked pretty bad, anyway.

    I don’t know where people came up with the idea it was a wolf mix or coyote mix as neither of those canines look anything like this dog did, at all.

  5. LaFlamme responds:

    The beast story caused a lot of frustration for experts and others who felt this was a dog from the start. Understandably. But ultimately, I think it raised awareness about a lot of issues some folks aren’t aware of: the work of cryptozoologists; the matter of feral dogs, and of course, the role of the state game wardens in the investigation of these types of finds. I won’t lie to you: it was one fun story to cover. And of course, many thanks to Loren for his expertise and enthusiasm.

    The beast is dead. Long live the beast.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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