Bigfoot Encounters.com

"The Original Apes of the Galaxy"
© Barbara Tandory, 1993


British Columbia `researchers' say Sasquatches are living in the Kootenays. . .

They're too hairy to be human, too man-like to be animals and too big to ignore. For centuries people in Alberta and the Pacific Northwest have been telling tales of mammoth bipeds.

Now, after a series of mysterious encounters in the Kootenays, Nelson, B.C. resident Terry Delorme intends to show the world what the fuss is about.

Bigfoot tracks inspired the 29-year-old nature photographer and two of his friends to conduct research on the creature. Mr. Delorme, together with fellow Sasquatch enthusiasts Brent Hastings and Robert Milner, were overwhelmed by the response to an ad they placed in a Kootenay newspaper in December seeking information on Bigfoot encounters.

Now the Sasquatch seekers are certain they are closing in on their hairy prey.Messrs. Hastings and Milner began their quest after they found a set of 13-inch-long, human-like footprints in the Lasca Creek region in the fall of 1990. "They just jumped out at me," says Mr. Hastings. Mr. Delorme saw similar footprints near Lasca Creek last July.

Mr. Hastings, however, is the only one of the three who claims to have seen a Sasquatch in the flesh. He became a Bigfoot believer during a 1979-hiking trip when he spied an ape-like creature on Kokanee Glacier.

At first he mistook it for a lone hiker but quickly realized that no human could move so fast on that type of terrain. He says the local newspaper carried a report of another Sasquatch sighting on the Kaslo side of the glacier (north of Nelson) two days later. "They're out there," he says. "They've always been there; it goes back to the Indian legends."

The first recorded mention of Bigfoot came in 1811, when explorer David Thompson stumbled upon a set of 14-inch-long footprints near what is now Jasper. When miners arrived in the Pacific Northwest in the 19th century, more giant footprints were discovered. In 1924, a miner named Fred Beck said he shot at a large, ape-like creature and was then followed by a horde of similar bipeds who left enormous footprints near his cabin in Washington State's Ape Canyon, about 60 miles northwest of Portland.

Most Sasquatch enthusiasts believe the big creatures, if they do exist, are simply an as-yet unidentified species of ape. Mr. Milner, 41, has a more exotic theory. He says the Sasquatch is "a legendary lost link to another part of the human race." Humans, he believes, are the result of inbreeding between earlier forms of the Sasquatch and hairless apes that visited from elsewhere in the galaxy.

Sasquatch expert René Dahinden of Richmond B.C. is taking a wait-and-see approach to the Nelson researchers' efforts. The Swiss-born 62-year-old has gathered evidence on thousands of Sasquatch sightings. He also helped identify what is considered the only authentic Bigfoot photo record, a half-minute-long film of a 1967 sighting at Bluff Creek, California. Still, Mr. Dahinden cautions that hoaxes far outnumber legitimate sightings.

Meanwhile, the neophyte researchers from Nelson are starting to realize just how big the possibility for error is. Last week Mr. Delorme was called upon to examine a set of Sasquatch tracks on a snowy hillside near downtown Nelson. He eventually determined a bounding deer had left the tracks.

© Barbara Tandory 1993 by United Western Communications Ltd.
Tandory, Barbara, "The Original Apes of the Galaxy, Vol. 20,
The Alberta Report / Western Reports, 02-08-1993, pp 25.


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