Wood Knocking: More Historical Background

Posted by: Loren Coleman on June 4th, 2011

Some positive outcomes of the “Finding Bigfoot” clarifications are the solid historical research and timelines that will issue from the tracking of when specific search techniques were developed and used by fieldworkers. Too often in cryptozoological examinations, records and remembrances have vanished, inventors of techniques have died, and a history is completely lost.

With regard to detailing a clear understanding of the histories of wood knocking, a truer history is being developed. For earlier postings on this topic, please see here and here.

It will be recalled that Matt Moneymaker declared to the camera on “Finding Bigfoot” that he was the researcher to have invented the use of “wood knocks” out in the field.

What Moneymaker exactly stated follows:

“Just so you know, one of my claims to fame in the Bigfoot world is that I was the one who discovered that Bigfoots do wood knocks, and that figured out that if you make sounds that they’ll respond. No other Bigfoot researcher had ever figured that out or knew that before, because they didn’t really go into the field that often.” (Transcribed by Melissa Hovey.)

Moneymaker’s claim to this first was also documented on his biography (“provided by Matt Moneymaker, President and Founder of the BFRO” and) posted on the “Finding Bigfoot” site. The passage includes the following:

Matt Moneymaker is well known among bigfoot researchers and is credited with being…

  • … the first person who introduced sound blasting and howling as a technique for locating bigfoots.
  • … the first to formally describe the knock sounds made by bigfoots in 1992, at a scientific conference at Rutgers University for the International Society of Cryptozoology.

This has served as a research challenge to archival investigators and historians of hominology.  The research questions are, therefore, when were the first accounts of wood knocking and who first used the earliest discovery and awareness of wood knocking to entice Sasquatch to respond?

As with the research being done on the history of call blasting, we need to extend the historical investigation of the first casts, the first hair sampling, and the first notice of dermal ridges. Of course, many of us think we know who did what first and when it was done, but as has been said already and has been revealed this week, we all have different pieces of the puzzle that need to be shared so currently still-writing historians like myself, Dmitri Bayanov, Michel Raynal, Jean-Jacques Barloy, Jeff Meldrum and others can chronicle the reality behind the assumptions.

So, let’s look at look at one phase of wood knocking again, an early account of its awareness in the literature.

The Tlingit (also spelled Tlinkit) are an indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest Coast. Their name for themselves is Lingít, meaning “human beings.”


The Tlingit are a matrilineal society that developed a complex hunter-gatherer culture in the temperate rainforest of the southeast Alaska coast and the Alexander Archipelago. An inland subgroup, known as the Inland Tlingit, inhabits the far northwestern part of the province of British Columbia and the southern Yukon Territory in Canada.


Chief Anotklosh of the Taku Tribe, wearing a Chilkat blanket, Juneau, Alaska, ca. 1913.

Among the Tlingit, there exists creatures with the name Kushtaka that appear to be somewhat similar to Sasquatch. Their name is loosely translated as “Land Otter Man.”


A Kushtaka mask from the Stonington Gallery.

In a 1975 paper by Cyrus Peck on the Tlingit, these First Peoples describe tree or wood knocking produced by these hominoids:

“Kushtaka is a weird looking creature who might be glimpsed darting from tree to tree keeping out of range of the observer. it moves like the wind and disappears at will only to reappear again elsewhere, all the time keeping its hand before its face and peering out at times through its fingers. The shock of seeing it is tremendous. Whenever Kushtaka catches and breathes on its captive, he looses all sense of reality until the Kushtaka leaves.

“Hearing Kushtaka in the forest is a sound similar to that of someone hitting a tree trunk with a club.”

“‘Ahs da do hished,” the Tlingits would say. “Someone is hitting the trunk of a tree.'”

Here is a copy of this passage from this paper:

And the cover sheet with the citation of the paper:

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.


7 Responses to “Wood Knocking: More Historical Background”

  1. Redrose999 responds:

    Thank you for posting this Loren! This is exciting stuff! We often, as a society forget how important the native peoples traditions and knowledge is to us. It’s likely in the field of BF this sort of observation goes back hundreds of years.

  2. Anthony P. Christie via Facebook responds:

    Knockin ? Oak or pine ?

  3. Nominay responds:

    We must remember that the indigenous ones, our Native Americans, were the first to encounter Bigfoot and that they had a closer relationship to them than the rest of us have. It is ridiculous for any person who wants to research Bigfoot to ignore the Native Americans historical role here.

  4. William responds:

    Ridiculous and also bordering on outright lying. Moneymaker owes everyone an apology for this baloney. He deserves credit for his efforts in the Bigfoot world of research no doubt, but his claims on call blasting and wood knocking (as discovering them as techniques) are preposterous.

  5. dermal_ridges_are_proof responds:

    I like this posting.

    I think we now live in an age where many more people upon reading traditional stories and accounts sourced from indigenous peoples will be inclined to interpret them as historical eye witness testimony rather than dismiss them as baseless fantasy.

    It’s refreshing to be reminded of that thread of continuity for sasquatch sightings which stretch back from modern times into the epoch where the native Indians were the eyes and ears of the land; a time when communities sometimes overlapped!

    Thanks… …more please!

  6. trailriderresearch responds:

    I am sure that native Indians can claim many more firsts than just wood knocking. More attention should be paid to what they have said about the subject. People such as Robert Alley “Get It” when it comes to deciphering Indian legend and their descriptions of Sasquatch capabilities.

  7. Kahil responds:

    well folks…let’s keep in mind that no one has ever documented a live bigfoot doing this knocking. until it is proven, all it is is a guess.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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