Saturday, July 3, 2010
To Tanner
We would like to see the photos that were taken of this animal. We would like the government to admit that this animal walks the forests. We want to be able to "talk bigfoot" openly without people thinking we've gone off the deep end. The animal exists, the government knows it. Everyone should know it! This evidently requires this classified file of the Columbus Day Storm animal to be opened to the public.
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P.S.
We appreciate your comment. We have on this blog posts from a person or two that was actually there when this animal was found in '62. So regular readers of this blog know the facts. We almost had a photo of it, until we found it was against the law to post the photo. In the search tool for this blog type in Columbus Day Storm '62 and you will also find this information. Thanks again. Keep commenting. ...Linda Newton-Perry
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Tanner has left a new comment on your post "To Tanner":
Mrs Perry it was not my intent to complain about your blog, it's great! What I was referring to is the Bigfoot people out there that can't seem to agree on anything. I have read your entire blog from day one and find it disturbing that some people seem to want to discredit others for writing their account of the dead bigfoot.
It would seem to me if everybody worked together to find the evidence we need to prove bigfoot real, it would be a better thing for all. For instance, I read hear where someone tried to say your attorney Debbie does not do what she said she does. It was and is amazing to me this lady is trying to help us all free of charge and still people have ridicule for her Also in several instances someone tried to discredit others bigfoot sighting. We all need to calm down and work as a team not fire shots at each other.
This Columbis Day of 1962 is near and dear to me because my uncle was workng for the ****** and told me of it in 1966. All ot these people simply cannot be lying about this.
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I understand and I agree it is frustrating that some people "muddy" the waters as it were in our quest for the truth about bigfoot. But let's keep at it until bigfoot is substantiated as real. ... Linda Newton-Perry
Bigfoot: "...true as the sky is blue."
Regenna has left a new comment on your post "comments welcome":
This bigfoot thing is so confusing to me I needed to do some research. #1. I called the Oregonian Paper and confirmed that Tom McCall of Oregon did in fact talk of a dead bigfoot on the evening of December 3rd 1962. He was a guest host at a dinner for then Governor Mark Hatfield.#2. Hatfield also spoke of a dead creature found in November of that year. #3.I ask the paper if they have any articles on the dead animal and was told I can buy any article from DSE of Portland. #4. Melany Gibson of DSE will return my call on Wednesday next week. DSE is a company that collects old articles from now defunct papers. I feel this story is true as the sky is blue.
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Great research. I was just looking these two men up on the internet. Found nothing on the speechs about bigfoot. So this is wonderful. If we can get proof that these men spoke of the '62 animal, then (perhaps) the news originizations will take bigfoot seriously. It may be the beginning of openly "talking bigfoot" without the public thinking we've gone off the deep end. Thank you for this post. We hope you will share it with this blog so we can be armed as well. ...Linda Newton-Perry
This bigfoot thing is so confusing to me I needed to do some research. #1. I called the Oregonian Paper and confirmed that Tom McCall of Oregon did in fact talk of a dead bigfoot on the evening of December 3rd 1962. He was a guest host at a dinner for then Governor Mark Hatfield.#2. Hatfield also spoke of a dead creature found in November of that year. #3.I ask the paper if they have any articles on the dead animal and was told I can buy any article from DSE of Portland. #4. Melany Gibson of DSE will return my call on Wednesday next week. DSE is a company that collects old articles from now defunct papers. I feel this story is true as the sky is blue.
____________
Great research. I was just looking these two men up on the internet. Found nothing on the speechs about bigfoot. So this is wonderful. If we can get proof that these men spoke of the '62 animal, then (perhaps) the news originizations will take bigfoot seriously. It may be the beginning of openly "talking bigfoot" without the public thinking we've gone off the deep end. Thank you for this post. We hope you will share it with this blog so we can be armed as well. ...Linda Newton-Perry
Labels:
1962 Dead Bigfoot,
A Bigfoot opinion
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A new bigfoot short story, by Linda and Christopher Perry
Friends, Best and Vinn
(Fiction)
by
Linda Newton-Perry and Christopher Perry
Best, neck and face reddening fast, simply stopped talking and chewed slowly and long on a piece of homemade bear jerky. He studied the jerky, turned it in his fingers. Vinn had been with him when he shot the bear the jerky was made from.
Vinn was still talking, still laughing. But he wasn’t laughing at Best anymore. He’d glanced at his friend and noticed the bear jerky and realized what he’d done. He had humiliated him in front of these clods that they both worked with. Vinn lobbed his soda can into the trash and stepped to Best’s side. “Look bros,” he said to the three men still eating, “I believe Sam here saw the bigfoot. Okay?”
Best immediately felt better. He couldn’t believe it of himself, that is that he was so touchy about being laughed at when he said he’d seen a bigfoot. A guy learns something about himself every day, he guessed.
The conversation rallied for a few minutes. One of the guys told about a cousin seeing what he thought was a bigfoot, late one night. He’d been drinking a little, so only told a family member or two, this guy being one of them.
Both friends forgot the incident. It wasn’t difficult to do. Vinn and Best were good friends.
Saturday next, the two men were scouting for deer stands at their favorite hunting area, thirty or so miles from home. For the first time, they were planning to try bow hunting. They’d both had a little experience with bows as boys. They stood practicing now, shooting at a homemade target, propped against a Madrone about twenty feet away. Neither came anywhere close to hitting it. Vinn shot the last of the arrows. While they gathered them, they laughed nonstop at their ineptness with the bows.
The clouds were darkening; it was going to rain. A cool wind blew softly in fits and starts. When it blew, paper-dry leaves whirled loudly between them and the target. A blue jay landed loudly in a tall, scraggly Douglas Fir to their right. Another jay joined the first. They were angry about something: a clump of grey-green moss fell to the ground just under the birds, and one blue feather floated slowly down. Brush Creek rushing nearby and the dry leaves rustling on the ground and in the trees prevented the two men from noticing the sounds that were coming from a huge oak to their left, ten or so feet away.
When they finally heard the groaning and huffing, both men jerked their heads up to determine where it was coming from. Best, the father of three, flung an arm out as if preventing a child from stepping off a curb into traffic. Vinn, eyes on the tree, walked into the extended arm, abruptly aware that Best meant for him to stop.
Vinn breathed out a string of expletives when he stepped into a hole. He fell, loudly, catching himself with his hands. Best, keeping eyes on the tree, awkwardly waved an arm around searching for one of his friend’s hands or arms to help him up, but failed. Not making contact, he glanced down. Vinn sat, rolling down a gray work sock to examine the fast swelling ankle.
It now misted fine rain. The blue jays again sent up a ruckus. This time they dove for the animal in the tree where the noise was coming from. Evidently, the animal was near the jays’ nest. Crack! The bear broke off a dead limb. It fell. Thud. He was quickly moving down the tree, almost to the ground.
Best shook Vinn’s shoulder to get his attention and get him to his feet. But first Vinn twisted onto his side and searched frantically for the animal in the tree.
“Can you walk, Dan?”
“Sure. I’m okay. What is that anyway?” He scrambled, with Best’s help, to his feet.
“A bear, what else?” Best said, as he caught his friend’s cap before it hit the ground.
“That’s no bear! Look!”
The animal was now on the ground. It resembled a bear. It was on all fours, but it had feet, not paws.
“God in heaven, what is it? ... Sam?”
The men stood quietly, frozen in place. They knew they shouldn’t run from a bear. The animal reached a huge hand for the tree as he stood up, standing slightly bent.
“How’s the ankle?” Best asked Vinn again. “Can you walk on it? Dan, it’s a bigfoot! We got ‘t run!”
The noisy blue jays dove at the animal, again and again.
“Come on, let’s get.” Best offered an arm to his friend, knowing the ankle was weak.
Before turning in the direction of their rig, they watched the massive being calmly, as if in slow motion, turn, step over the broken limb and lumber behind the fir, heading in the direction of a near blackberry thicket. He, from time to time, looked back, apparently to check if they were following.
Once back in Toka, sitting in lawn chairs in Best’s cluttered garage, new tire smell heavy in the air and with icy beers in hand, they hashed over every detail of that amazing beast. It was jointly decided that they wouldn’t make a report to anyone, but they did believe they’d return and try to find prints and maybe get one in plaster.
And most important of all, they agreed not to talk about “their” sighting with the boys of the Toka Park’s Department. Why? Because they both agreed, that animal was no laughing matter.
The End
(The men’s names are fictional as well as the town, Toka, Oregon. That is, as far as the authors are aware.)
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