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Bigfoot
likely source of eerie sounds in Oregon swamp
Sylvia and Denise
Minthorn – Edge of the soggy wetlands where hair-raising sounds are
heard
Bigfoot or animals?
Strange sounds coming from
swamp on Umatilla
Indian Reservation
By Richard Cockle for
The Oregonian
January 20, 2013 - Nobody
ventures into this soggy wetland on the edge of Mission on the
Umatilla Indian Reservation after dark when the shrieks begin.
Resident Sylvia Minthorn once thought about plunging in to find the
source of the cries. “I used to play back there when I was a
kid,” she says. “But then I thought, ‘What if I do find
something? Then what am I going to do?’
The eerie late-night
serenades began in November and emanate from a brushy swamp on
the Umatilla Indian Reservation east of Pendleton, Oregon. The
cries range from high-pitched screams to basso profundo roars.
"It's causing an
uproar around here," said Sylvia Minthorn, who lives in a tribal
housing unit near the swamp, where she used to play as a child.
She's seen grown men's
hair stand on end when the shrieks commence.
Colleen Chance, a tribal
housing authority employee, keeps a recording of the howls on
her iPhone. "It's kind of spooky," she said. "Some
say it's foxes, some say it's a female coyote and some say it's
Sasquatch. I don't know what it is."
So far no one's pinpointed
the source of the noise on this rugged 178,000-acre reservation that
extends into northeastern Oregon's Blue Mountains and is home to
about 1,500 people. The swamp in question borders the old reservation
community of Mission, in a canyon north of the Wildhorse Resort and
Casino.
Phone calls about the
wails started coming in last month to the housing authority, and the
office has had a half dozen so far. More could come in because the
cries are continuing from time to time.
Some tenants of the
reservation's 190 rentals and 32 homes admitted being afraid and one
man reported that his dogs were too terrified to go outside,
said Josh Franken, the housing authority's interim director.
"This guy was rather
scared himself," Franken said. A rumor quickly spread
that the cries were made by "a young Bigfoot that had got
separated from the rest of his clan," he said.
It's difficult to shrug
off the accounts, said Marcus Luke, a housing authority homeownership
counselor. Many on the reservation "are woodsy-type folks,"
familiar with animals and not prone to taking fright at
nighttime commotion, he said.
Daughter and mother Sylvia
and Denise Minthorn have both heard the strange nighttime cries
coming from the brushy wetland behind them. Denise thinks whatever is
in the swamp is calling to another creature elsewhere on the
178,000-acre Umatilla Indian Reservation.
Some members of the
Confederated Umatilla, Walla Walla and Cayuse tribes believe the
noises come from Bigfoot, the mythical manlike creature said to
roam Pacific Northwest forests.
Bigfoot is part of the
tribal culture, tradition and spiritual beliefs, said Luke, a
follower of the Washat, or Seven Drums religion, and a longhouse
drummer and singer. "We have stories about it," he said.
Carl Sheeler, wildlife
program manager for the tribes, said several animals in this corner
of Oregon are known for making strange noises, including cougars.
"When they are breeding, it is absolutely hair-raising," he
said.
"And the first time a
person hears a fox calling in the night, kind of echoing around the
canyons, it raises the hair on the back of your neck," Sheeler
said. "That wetland is a perfect place to have an echoing call
sound eerie."
But many who've heard the
racket dismiss such notions. "Foxes do sound creepy,"
said Sylvia Minthorn. "But it's not the same sound, not even
close."
Her mother, Denise
Minthorn, believes more than one creature is out there in the
darkness. She's heard shrieks from two directions at once, as
if two animals were communicating.
"It was no noise
I've ever heard before," she said. "It was like barroom
brawls and laughter."
Armand Minthorn, Sylvia
Minthorn's uncle and a tribal spiritual leader, said he may
have stumbled onto evidence of Bigfoot's presence while hunting in
the Blue Mountains many years ago.
"Right in the
middle of the road was this great big footprint, perhaps 16 or 18
inches long and manlike,” he said. The enormous stride carried it
across the road, leaving one footprint in the middle, he said.
Nevertheless, he said, the current shrieks could be anything.
"We probably will never know what made those sounds," he
said.
__________
I was born on the Umatilla
Indian Reservation in the Blue Mountains of eastern Oregon.
Aileen
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