50 years ago today, Roger Patterson filmed a Sasquatch
meandering through a dried river bed in Bluff Creek, California.
Patterson, who was to die of cancer five years after
the encounter, was an avid Bigfoot buff who’d regularly go out hunting for the
giant cryptid, after first reading about it in 1959. He even published a short
book of his sasquatchian musings in 1966.
On Friday, October 20, 1967, around 1:30 in the
afternoon, Patterson and his friend, Bob Gimlin, on horseback, rounded a bend
in a dried creek marked by a large overturned tree. Patterson’s horse spooked
and nearly threw him. He got off, steadied the animal, and began filming a
large, hairy, upright creature approximately 25 feet away, who seems itself to
get spooked and bustle away.
The film in its entirety lasts 59.5 seconds.
Myself, I probably first saw this clip on one of the
Leonard Nimoy-narrated In Search Of episodes
in the late 70s. That launched a pre-adolescent fascination resulting in many
hours studying Bigfoot books in an untraveled nook at the library where my mom
worked. Though lost to my memory, I must have easily devoured ten or twelve
books of varying degrees of difficulty and seriousness on the famously shy
hominid. To this day, when in the grip of insomnia, I’ll creep down to the laptop
at the writer’s desk in the basement, throw on the headphones, and watch
endless Bigfoot videos and documentaries, everything from obvious hoaxes to that
greatest documentary of all time, another Nimoy-narrated Sasquatch bio by Ancient Mysteries.
Now – does Hopper believe in Sasquatch?
Uh, dunno. Normally, I’d shout emphatically “No!”
Despite a fascination with all things paranormal, cryptozoological, and downright
weird, a fascination spawning in part from the countless hours of enjoyment
reading and watching science fiction in my childhood, I am at heart a
pragmatist. UFOs do not travel here from other galaxies; the Greys do not
abduct campers and single moms in trailer parks. Hundreds of eight-foot-tall,
500-pount hairy man-apes do not inhabit the forests of the continental United
States.
And yet … I recall reading about how the existence of
the African gorilla 150 years ago was roundly mocked and belittled until, uh, a
gorilla was actually captured (probably killed). I guess I’m saying Bigfoot’s
existence is plausible, though unlikely. Maybe a 5 percent chance of actually
being an actual being, were I a betting man.
A common rebuttal to the Sasquatch question is, why
haven’t any bones been discovered? Then I read and hear hunters talk and say
things like, bears exist, but we don’t find bear bones out on the trail. Dying
animals hide, and then other animals dismember and ultimately digest the body.
Then again, I’ve seen plenty of photos and videos of bears.
So, I don’t know. I’d like to think Bigfoot exists. I
even thought I saw one, for a split second, peripherally from my ground-level
bedroom window as a boy. Turned out just to be my mother, taking out the trash.
I’ve tried to get my girls interested in the creature,
if only for the campy, creepy, “what’s that staring at us just beyond the
treeline?” effect, but no dice. They ain’t buying it. Perhaps if they were
boys, I don’t know. My oldest likes watching the occasional Finding Bigfoot, but only to make fun of
the quartet of nerds on the show endlessly not finding Bigfoot and using the
cringe-worthy word “squatchy” whenever possible.
Do I think the Patterson film is legit? That the
creature filmed is really a Sasquatch, and not some dude in a Hollywood special
effects costume? Again, probably not. Breathless affirmations that the suit is
lifelike, that “muscles can be seen undulating beneath the fur,” that it’s too
realistic to be faked, don’t convince me. One thing, though, does: the fact
that when the creature turns to look back at the human intruders, it throws its
shoulder and arm back too. This is what gorillas do, because, unlike man, their
chins do not rise above their shoulders, and to look back they have to move
their entire body 45-90 degrees to one side. Would amateur hoaxers realize
that?
So … mostly I know, but there’s a tiny, childlike part
that still says “I dunno.”
Creepy, regardless.
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