Wallowa County Incident
My first memory of sasquatch discussion was the 1st of April 1959 when I was 10 years old and living in Northern Idaho.
Here is the article from the front page of the Lewiston Morning Tribune – 1st of April 1959.
Oregon Men Say "Abominable Snowman' Seen In WallowasLa Grande, Ore. (AP) – Three La Grande men swear there is a home-grown said they saw it through binoculars when they flew over the mountains for another look as soon as clouds disappear, perhaps Wednesday. Ray McFarland, who was piloting their light airplane on a pleasure ride Sunday, said he sighted what at first he thought was an animal near Horseshoe Lake. He put the binoculars on it.
“It was the shock of my life,” he said. “The best I can describe it is as half-man, half-beast.”
McFarland said it was hairy, but patches of skin appeared. “The hind legs were longer and it was tearing at the carcass of a small animal. Doug Holman and Leonard Knight, who were along, said they also saw the half-man, half-beast creature. All three are La Grande businessmen.
Horseshoe Lake in the Wallowa Mountains of Northeastern Oregon
As a child in Idaho I read this article in our local newspaper about this sighting in North-east Oregon. My uncle, Roy Carper, lived in Wallowa County, Oregon and he was a friend of Leonard Knight’s. Uncle Roy said his friend wanted the pilot to rent a small helicopter and go back and have another look but the pilot, apparently shook up about the sighting refused.
I vividly remember this incident as my relatives lived close to the sighting area. The description as “half-man, half-beast” really scared me as a kid, actually it still does.
This story is written about in:
John Green’s book – “Sasquatch: The Apes Among Us.”
And the incident can also be found in John Green’s Database here:
John Green Database – Wallowa County, Oregon – # 10011009
Illinois Gets No Respect
The great Rodney Dangerfield made a career out of the phrase “”I get no respect, I tell ya”.
In many ways I feel that the state of Illinois is the “Rodney Dangerfield” of the bigfoot / sasquatch world.
From novices to certain college professors there has always been a bias that if they even accept the existence of  sasquatch that it only lives in the vast forests of the Pacific Northwest and most certainly not Illinois.  In fact, when I first started researching in Central Illinois I received an email from a famous researcher in Michigan who’s advice was “Stan, you need to be quiet about bigfoot activity in Illinois, everyone knows that Illinois has only cows, and you will hurt your reputation.”
But what about the history of sightings in Illinois. The first known newspaper article concerning sasquatch in Illinois was dated 1883 concerning a “monster in St.Clair County, Illinois.” Since that time there have been close to a hundred articles about Illinois sightings. Certain names for the “Monsters of Illinois” have become famous such as Bachelors Grove Monster, Cohomo (Cole Hollow Monster), Dutch Henry Monster, Du Pont Monster, Enfield (Wabash Monster), Farmer City (Salt Creek) Monster, Kickapoo Monster, Murphysboro Big Muddy Monster, Piasa Monster (Piasa Bird), Sangamon River Bottoms Monster, Tuttle Bottoms Monster and Weed Monster. Even the New York Times carried an article about the Big Muddy Monster.
But perhaps all these monster names never translated into the term bigfoot or sasquatch.
If one looks at the various groups that post sightings for Illinois the number is close to 200 reports. The BFRO (Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization) lists over 160 sightings and Illinois is ranked 7th in the nation, and only 3rd place for states east of the Mississippi.
So then, Illinois does have the reports, but what about the land? Is it not known that Illinois, if not being mostly urban sprawl, is a land of corn and soybeans. Â On first glance that may appear true. To the casual traveler on one of the states interstate highways massive agricultural landscapes appear to predominate.
If one looks past first impressions and looks at the statistics things appear somewhat different.
According to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources Illinois has  4.9 million acres of forest. Although these forests tend to be of smaller acreage and not like vast areas in the West they do harbor a massive amount of game. Illinois has an estimated 800,000 white-tail deer,Â
Illinois also has 87,990 miles of rivers and streams.
So it would appear that Illinois, although not a wilderness does have a very large network of forested rivers and streams. Even Cook County, Illinois (the third most populated county in the U.S.) has 67,880 acres in the Forest Preserve District of Cook County. And unlike in many states, sightings in Illinois are not concentrated in any one section but stretch from Jo Daviess County in the extreme northern part of the state to Alexander County, the southernmost county.
Presently are there are reports from over 70 of the 102 counties of the state
One of the most interesting witnesses I ever spoke with had a sighting in Kankakee County, Illinois just 50 miles south of Chicago. You can read his report here. When we talked on the phone he said that he could give me a dozen reasons that bigfoot could not exist in Illinois but there was one problem, and that was that he had seen one. No amount of arguments or rationale could move him past what he had seen with his own eyes and he knew was true.
That Weird Sound, Pt. 2
Last year I posted about a strange sound that I had recorded using a remote recorder. That post can be found here:
That Weird Sound, Pt. 1
Someone mentioned that the sound clip could be possibly related to an earlier sound that I had shared on Facebook.
This earlier sound was recorded on the 19 of September 2009. Â The location was also here in Central Illinois in an oak-hickory forest. The one remote access road was several hundred yards from the location. I had hidden the recorder close to a log with the microphone draped over the top.
Sound clip of the 19th of September 2009 – Â Weird Sound 2009
Both sounds were recorded using a Samson H-2 recorder and a small remote microphone.  The locations were about a mile apart. The internet is a wonderful resource and I posted it both on naturerecordists, which is a Yahoo Group made up hundreds of folks interested in recording the sounds of nature, and also on Facebook.
I received many responses ranging from cicadas to frogs to tiger salamander.
If anyone has a suggestion please leave a comment.
Weed Monster
Newspaper articles:
Sasquatch is real to some and myth to others
Books & websites:
Tuttle Bottoms Monster
Newspaper articles:
Shadows of the Shawnee investigates Tuttle Bottoms Monster
Web site tells of five southeastern Illinois bigfoot encounters
Books & websites:
BFRO Report # 13070 – Saline County, Illinois
BFRO Report # 14802 – Saline County, Illinois
Sangamon River Bottoms Monster
Newspaper articles:
Central Illinois man on watch for Bigfoot
Web site sorts Bigfoot stories to seek truth
Books & websites:
BFRO Report # 15251 – Sangamon County, Illinois
BFRO Report # 28370 – Sangamon County, Illinois
BFRO Report # 28545 – Sangamon County, Illinois