Friday, October 31, 2014

Mythological Creatures That Are Real


My favorite, the Narwhal.  The unicorn of the sea.  Photo from www.worldwildlife.org

Happy Halloween to everyone!

Although I've had a relatively good day today, I'm running out of steam and ready for bed.  I did, however, come across an interesting listing that goes along with my cryptid collection of blogs.

I just happened across it, but it does show that there is a lot about our world that we still don't know and/or are still learning.  The article shows many animals that we know of now that were once considered mythological in many cultures: those creatures that would be called cryptids.

Click on the link and enjoy!   Mythological creatures that are real.

I also have a small collection of pictures showing here.

Until next time, have a happy and safe Halloween!


The Okapi, once only known by tribes in northeastern Zaire.  Photo from stlouis.cbslocal.com
The Platypus.  Thought of more as a hoax than anything else.  Photo from www.environment.nsw.gov.au
The Devil-bird.  An omen feared by Sri Lankans.  Photo from wereblog.com
Giant Panda - I'm surprised it was not mentioned in the article.  The first living specimen seen by a Westerner (and therefore recognized by science) was in 1916.  Photo from listverse.com

Thursday, October 30, 2014

The Psychopath Next Door

Now, I know that online tests are just for fun.  Think BuzzFeed and such.  There's no scientific proof behind them.  It's an algorithm where you plug in a value for each answer, add them up at the end and the final value falls into a spectrum of outcomes.  You find them all over the web and in various magazines.

We've all taken them.  I like the ones that test my video game knowledge at the back of Game Informer.  I've also wondered which Disney villain I am, what color my personality is and what kind of mythological beast I would be.

The answers come out like a newspaper horoscope.  However you read it, some parts fit and some don't.  Each answer can usually be fit to your personality.


Jeffrey Dahmer   Picture taken from www.nydailynews.com


It turns out I would be a centaur if I were mythological.  In the afterlife, I would be Death.  I am also the third to die in a horror movie.  Of all the My Little Ponies, I identify most with Fluttershy.

Yes, I've taken my share of online quizzes.

Today I took a rather interesting one that, I'll freely admit, freaked me out a little bit.  This was one from Playbuzz.com called Are You a Psychopath?  Click the link to try it out.

According to the test, I am.

While watching Stalker on TV, I got to thinking.


Ed Gein, the original and inspiration for Leatherface (Texas Chainsaw Massacre) and inspiration for Norman Bates (Psycho) and Buffalo Bill (Silence of the Lambs) among others.  Photo taken from en.wikipedia.org


Maybe it's just the fact that Halloween is right around the corner.  Fear is in the air.  The world is in turmoil.  We have ongoing wars with terrorist groups.  People are getting killed everyday.  Children are being kidnapped.  Bodies are being found and identified.  And some aren't.

Maybe it is any one of those things.  Maybe it's something else.

If someone took a look at what I am interested in, the books I read, the television series I watch...  If someone took a look at me and didn't really know who I was, would they see a Psychopath?  Would that person think a Serial Killer lived in my house?  Could a Sociopath be watching my TV?

I'm not sure I wouldn't be convinced.

For one thing, I do root for the anti-hero.  One of my favorites is Lestat, the vampire.  Not the one Tom Cruise played in the movie - he was more protagonistic than he should have been.  Besides, Interview with the Vampire was more about Louis.  I also wasn't a big fan of Queen of the Damned.  Yes, it was fun to watch, but not a good representation of the characters.

I liked the Lestat from the books.  I enjoyed the Lestat that was mysterious, dark and philosophical.  I craved the Lestat that understood the evil in the hearts of men and the darkness within his own.

Our actual bookshelves may not be a good example of my tastes, though you can definitely tell which are mine.  You will find Jaws and The Exorcist next to The Cat Who... series.  Patricia Cornwell's study on Jack the Ripper sits next to Adam Richman's food bio.  Need I say more?

I also tend more toward stories about the chaos of dystopian society than the order and organization of the utopian.


Ronnie and Reggie Kray, the infamous Kray twins.   Picture from www.telegraph.co.uk


If one were to take a look at my Netflix listing, they might find some more questionable picks.

Sure, I like my share of Disney movies and comedies.  But next to those few peppered into my listing, they are the light amidst a much darker selection.  Reefer Madness, Cannibal the Musical, The Ed Gein Story.  I like my horror stories.  Even better, I like scary fiction based on real life.  I really get a kick out of it when they take a horrible real-life story and make fun of it.  Do I have a sick sense of humor?

My DVR captures American Horror Story: Freakshow, Stalker, Hannibal, The Following, The Strain, The Walking Dead.  All of them have one or a selection of psychopaths to choose from.  I love Bates Motel!  That's the prequel to the original Psycho!  One of my absolute favorites is Doctor Who.  Sure, you say.  Nothing wrong with that, right?  Other than the Doctor is the definition of a Psychopath, albeit one with a more positive agenda: a person with a psychopathic personality, which manifests as amoral and antisocial behavior, lack of ability to love or establish meaningful personal relationships, extreme egocentricity, failure to learn from experience, etc.

I also have a fascination with documentaries.  Not just any documentaries, either.  I like the ones about disasters and epidemics through history.  I've watched all kinds about Hitler and the Nazis.  I could tell you all about H.H.Holmes and the Chicago World's Fair.  The stories and ideas presented about Lizzie Borden are all very interesting.  When they made a TV movie about Bonnie and Clyde, I couldn't wait to watch it.


Lizzie Borden took an axe, Gave her mother forty whacks.  When she saw what she had done, She gave her father forty-one.  Picture from www.crimearchives.net


Give me a crime solving documentary series and I will eat it up!  Not only am I interested in unsolved mysteries, but I find it interesting to see how a crime was committed and what kind of forensics were used to solve it.  One episode of a show was about a murder in an area near where I used to live in Pennsylvania.  That hit close to home.  And then to find out that they proved the guy's alibi was wrong because they were able to prove that the angle of the sun and shadows in the pictures he provided were totally wrong for the time of day he said he was out on the lake.  That's pretty cool stuff!  He didn't think about that.  I doubt I would have in his place, at least not until I saw that show.

Add all of that to my bizarre and maybe somewhat morbid interest in the supernatural, paranormal and all things cryptid and I'm a virtual playground for some psychologist.

Is this normal?  Am I a little crazy?  A lot crazy?

Or will my neighbor be talking to Pat Collins on NBC News4 saying, "I never would have guessed.  He was such a nice quiet man.  Kept to himself.  Never caused any trouble.  I've talked to him a few times - he seemed quite friendly.  He'd say hello whenever he saw me.  Who would have known?"

Who, indeed?


John Wayne Gacy as "Pogo the Clown".   Picture taken from www.freeinfosociety.com




Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Angels in Our Midst

I was raised in a religious family.  My father went to Gettysburg Seminary to become a Lutheran minister.  My mother taught at a Franciscan private boarding school and a Catholic high school.  My brother attended the Franciscan high school and I went to a Catholic high school.  We were raised Lutheran in a small town that either went to the Lutheran church or the Methodist church.  We all have spent time singing in the choir and reading lessons from the Bible during services.

Both of my parents are well known in their church.  They are members of the church council.  My father will step in to help with services.

My brother has married a beautiful Jewish woman and has converted to Judaism.  They have raised three wonderful children who carry a great respect for their faith.

I carry my own beliefs.  Being raised Lutheran, attending Catholic school, observing my brother and sister-in-law's faith, I've had a chance to observe a couple different takes on religion.  In high school, I did a comparative study on several other religions vs. ancient religions/mythologies.  While I do believe in an Ultimate Good and conversely, an Ultimate Evil, I am not willing to give either a name or label like God or Goddess or Devil.  When I do refer to God or the Devil, it is in respect to my Christian upbringing.  It also makes my religious references easier to understand by the more common names.

That being said, what about angels?


Winged Figure by Abbott Handerson Thayer c.1889  Picture from galleryhip.com


Traditionally, angels symbolize the seraphim and the celestial hierarchy.  We recognize them in art and symbiology as humanoid beings with wings, a halo of light around their heads and white robes.  Some are shown as cherubs, usually male baby angels with wings, though also shown sexless in many references.  Angels are normally recognized as being sexless, though for the sake of humanizing them, some artists have made them male or female.

I'm not going to get into the celestial hierarchy here.  While it is an extremely fascinating subject, it has nothing to do with the subject of my post.

I am more interested right now with angels on earth.

We've all heard the Nativity Story as it is told in the Bible.  One doesn't need to be a Christian to know it and most Christians can recite it to some degree.

In the story, the angel, Gabriel, came to the virgin, Mary, to deliver the news of her pregnancy.  A choir of angels announced the coming birth of the Messiah to a group of shepherds.  Most nativity scenes show an angel as being present at the birth of Jesus.  This is when many Christians may tell you the angels were first documented as sharing our space on Earth.

If you take a look at the Old Testament, you will find that angels were present at the Creation.  You may also remember that Lucifer was originally an angel, the Morning Star fallen from Heaven to become Satan, the Adversary.

Those, among others, are the stories of the Bible, but what of angels today?


Photo from angelghosts.com


We hear stories of angels appearing across the world.  People have reported seeing angels during near-death experiences.  Others claim to have caught an angel on film.  These pictures can be found across the Internet.  Whether they are random cloud formations, light caught just the right way, spirits caught on film or real life angels, I can't say.

I can only tell you of the angel I have encountered in my own life.

My story happened about 13 - 14 years ago.  A lot was going on at that time, so I can't really pinpoint the day, let alone the month.  I was in a very bad relationship.  My job was good, but it was my first as a manager and my boss had her favorites, of which I was not one.  I went through three cars in a year.  Alcohol was again becoming a solution to my problems.  With all of these as factors, it's no wonder I can't remember the full circumstances of the incident.

What I do remember is that I locked my keys in my car.  I was supposed to be somewhere that evening - I think I was visiting a friend for some much needed support.  Her husband was going to drive me to their house and had followed me home.  Getting out of the car, the keys got left and I needed them to get something from my apartment before we went to their place.

I had Roadside Assistance, so I called.  I was told they would be there in about an hour, so we settled in the husband's car to wait.  Two and a half hours later, it was starting to get dark.  We needed to get going and my assistance was still 45 minutes out.  We decided to take matters into our own hands.

Digging around his car, we found a wire hanger and a small flashlight.  We went to work, taking turns trying to break into my car with no luck.  Darkness was quickly closing in.

It was the beginning of a bad joke: A Lutheran and a Seventh-Day Adventist try to break into a car.

After about 20 minutes, a car came flying down the street and screeched to a stop behind my car.  A guy jumped out of the driver's seat, went to the trunk of his car to grab a jimmy set and used it to pop my car lock open.  Without even waiting for a thank you, he jumped back into his car, backed out of the driveway and sped on his way.  Afterward, we called Roadside Assistance, thanked them for their "effort" and told them we no longer needed help.

To this day, I have no idea who this man was.  He was young and I think there was a young woman in the car next to him.  He barely said a word, only that he saw we needed help and that he had the jimmy to open the car door.

He didn't drive past and back up to see if we needed help.  He barely even slowed down.  He didn't even park directly behind me.  He was speeding down the street and screeched to a stop at a diagonal behind my car.

I don't know how he even knew we needed help.  When he pulled in, we were standing at the car, taking a quick break from our break-in.  My friend's husband and I were talking and didn't see the car until it stopped, its headlights illuminating us and the car.  He couldn't have seen any indication of what we had been doing.

Yet, somehow he knew.  Maybe he saw some indication that I can't put my finger on.  Maybe something told him we needed help.  I'm inclined to think of him as an angel.


Picture from m.kosmixmedia.com


I may not be religious in the Christian sense.  I hold strong to my own beliefs.  I know there is good and evil.  I believe in the spiritual, the paranormal and the supernatural.

My angel didn't have wings or a halo.  He wasn't even wearing white.  He didn't float down from Heaven in a shaft of bright light.  There was no celestial chorus.

My angel arrived in a fast car.  He left tire tracks across a corner of my lawn.  His radio was blasting heavy metal.  He jimmied my car like a professional thief.

My angel showed me proof of angels in our midst.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Spooks in the Dark

My bedtime routine is pretty, well, routine.

When I a) realize I'm getting tired or b) realize the time and need to get to bed, I shut down the computer, TV and living room light to head off to slumber.  I'm fairly night-blind once the light goes off, but thankfully there is some residual light that comes from the street through our living room window.

So after lights out, I feel my way down the hallway.  I make a quick stop in the restroom, blind myself again when that light goes off, and shuffle into the bedroom.  Once there, I close the bedroom door far enough to leave a finger-width opening so the dog can paw open the door when he needs a drink or the cat can push her way in to join us on the bed (or wake us in the morning!)

Once in the bedroom, there's enough residual light between the cracks in the curtains and the digital alarm clock to find my way to bed, fit my CPAP mask (with the machine adding a little more light when it is turned on), plug in my earplugs, give the dog and husband a goodnight pat and settle in for the night.

OK, it's pretty boring and possibly more than you really wanted to know.  The point is that it is a routine and doesn't change.  When something is different, it is noticed.

Sometimes, I get a chill that sends the hair on the back of neck standing on edge.  Another time, the hallway is a little darker than normal.  Occasionally, I get a little creeped out before turning on the bathroom light to see there's nothing there but me and the bathroom.

Most of this can be attributed to a couple of different things: 1. I like horror movies and TV shows, 2. I do some late-night research on monsters and creepy legends, 3. humans have a primal fear of the dark and things that go bump in the night.

Not everything can be explained away that easily.

Everyone in our house has seen a human-size figure pass by out of the corner our eyes.  Our roommate's bird, who normally doesn't make a sound unless he hears or sees someone nearby, will start making a racket when no one has gone downstairs.  The 18-year-old cat sits in places Morningstar would lay and caterwaul, as if mourning his passing.  Jack has stared at a space under the dresser and barked his head off - unusual because he's not a barker and the space was a favorite hiding space for my well-loved cat.  I will occasionally toe-bump a lump pushing out the bed skirt and hear a small mew.  Strange? No, unless the only cat we have is sleeping in the living room.  Also, she's not one to lie half hidden by the bed skirt.  That was Morningstar's hiding place.

One night, I left the cat snoozing on the couch and headed toward bed.  I followed my nightly routine, closing the bedroom door behind me and preparing to settle in.  Sitting on the bed, I could hear the twin snoring of dog and husband.  After I fitted my mask and plugs, I picked up the dog so I wouldn't kick him off the bed when I laid down.  He moved off my chest and settled back into his state of ragdogness between me and my husband.  I don't think he even woke up!


Not my bedroom... just setting the scene.  Photo from ticket-to-deepness.blogspot.com


That's when things got a little strange.  I could see light coming from the direction of the living room - the bedroom door had apparently come open.  This is not unusual because the door will sometimes open a little due to a draft, but this time the door was open the whole way.

I can also fully see the digital face of the alarm clock from where I lay.  Every couple of minutes, the numbers disappear as if something is passing in front of the clock.  It is quick; they are only gone for a second.  At this point I am fully awake with no desire to sleep - only to watch.  I can feel that primal fear and try to push it down, all the while chanting in my head, "Close the door and go away. Close the door and go away."

My husband rolls over, shifting his snore.  The dog spreads out to claim the new open territory.  I can hear that Zippy is awake, now caterwauling in the hallway.

The shadow figure passes in front of the clock a couple more times, pacing a total of six times before the numbers stay visible.  I do a quick check of my blind spot - I find it, but not in the position I was laying and looking at the clock.  I can feel a cold spot to my right, beside the bed.  Looking toward the ceiling and the patch of dim light cast by my CPAP machine, I notice that it is partially obstructed, but not by a static shape.

I can see that the door is still open, by the dim light cast from the living room window.  As I watch, it starts to close again.  As that patch of light narrows, the area of luminescence on the ceiling grows to its normal size.

Zipity caterwauls one last time from the kitchen and all is back to normal.  That primal fear creeps back to its lair, deep in the recesses of my mind.  The whole experience lasted about twenty minutes.

Despite the primal fear of things unknown, I felt that there wasn't anything that could hurt me.  I didn't feel endangered.  Mostly, I was in awe.  It's been a long time since I've had anything like this happen to me.  I'm out of practice.  I'm no longer used to it.  I was caught off-guard.

I'm no stranger to the paranormal.  The supernatural has always been a great interest of mine.  I believe in many things that haven't been proven real.  I also believe that many of those things have not yet been disproven.  Of those things I have seen, I can't say how many were honest-to-goodness experiences compared to those few that may have been trumped up by an overactive imagination.  I do not have physical evidence to share; I have only my memories.  Those I share here are the clearest.

I grew up in a haunted house.  Our home had been around since the mid 1800's.  It has plenty of history, has most likely seen the Civil War, and has been home to many families.  It has been a farm, apartments and a Bed and Breakfast.  My parents still live there and do not wish for it to become a hot spot for paranormal investigators.  In my own opinion, there are better places to find proof.  To my knowledge, there haven't been any record-worthy incidents in the since I left home.

We had a guardian spirit.

At some point in its history, our house was home to a farmer.  We aren't sure of the full story, but one record suggests he was killed in an accident not far from the property.  My guess is that he loved his land enough to watch over it in the afterlife.  We've always called him Joe, though we've since learned the two owners were separate people.

Originally, the five-acre farm consisted of a large two-story barn, a carriage house and the old two-story farm house.  People have reported seeing a figure watching them from a window in the upper part of the barn.  Whether a reflection or a spirit, no one knows for sure.

Shortly after my parents took possession of the property, that barn was destroyed in a wind storm.  Anything that was light enough, i.e. the tin roof and some of the boards, was blown toward the residence.  The only thing that stopped them from doing any damage was the clothes line set up in the yard between the house and barn.

By the time I came along in '75, there was a smaller barn for the goats and later, the sheep.  The large barn and carriage house had come down.  The foundation of the barn would be used for pigs.  A small hen house had been erected and a summer house turned garage stood next to the house.

In the twenty years I lived there, I can't recall ever hearing strange noises.  Things weren't moved around and there was no poltergeist activity.  Aside from a couple of times that will not be discussed tonight, I never really felt in danger.  The only areas of the house I didn't like going to were the basement (spiders) and the attic (it was very creepy).  Otherwise, my childhood home was a safe haven.

My first memory of seeing anything strange was a figure crouched behind my parents' bedroom door.  I couldn't have been more than five or six years old.  I think I may have been playing hide and seek.  Because someone was there (I felt no danger), I went to find a different hiding spot.  By the time I was found, my mind had moved on to other things and I never told anyone about the person I saw.


My childhood home, today.


The most sightings I can recall were between 1984 and 1989.

During that time, my mother was a teacher at the Franciscan high school my brother attended.  Most of the teachers were the priests who lived on-campus.  In an effort to help them get some time off-campus, some of the staff meetings were held at lay teachers' homes.  Our home was large, so it was ideal for some of these meetings.

A couple of the most notable sightings of Joe were by these teachers and men-of-the-cloth.  Several teachers had been asking who the new teacher was.  They had seen a man wearing glasses, black pants and a white shirt standing on the upstairs balcony.  Mom had to change pace and explain about Joe and how he was seen around the property.

I saw him again in either '88 or '89, but I can't say for sure.  It was a clear and beautiful day.  I know I hadn't reached high school, because I hadn't moved into my brother's room over the garage, yet.  I still had the room we shared until he hit high school.  There was a window facing the barnyard and another facing the road.

One day I stayed home from school, sick.  I don't know what prompted me to look outside.  Maybe something just caught my attention, maybe I heard a noise.  I looked out to see the goats and sheep had broken through a gate near the barn and were moving into the yard.  I turned away from the window to try and figure out what to do.  When I turned back, there was a man wearing glasses, a white shirt and black pants putting the gate back on its hinges.  Once he herded the animals back into the pasture and closed the gate, he turned, looked up and waved directly at me.  It was as if he knew I would be at the window looking at him.  He then walked across the yard toward the road.

By the time I crossed my room, maybe eight feet from window to window, the man was gone from view.  There was no trace of a vehicle or of him walking down the road.  By the time I crossed the room, he shouldn't have even made it to the road.  And he was gone.

I told my mom about it a few years later.  Even though she knew about him, how could I tell her a flesh-and-blood man fixed the gate then disappeared into thin air?  Needless to say, she believed me and said it must have been Joe.

I don't know of any other physical manifestations from Joe since that time.  I have seen other apparitions around the house, though.

We had two dogs while I was growing up.  One, my brother's, was a Dalmatian named Nipper.  Every year, I would visit my grandparents in Hornell, New York and every year when I got home, Nipper would curl up beside the foot of my bed and spend the night beside me.  The last time I visited my grandparents was also the year after Nipper passed.  I came home like normal and went to bed that night.  I woke in the middle of the night to use the bathroom.  There, sleeping in a pool of moonlight beside the foot of my bed, was Nipper, taking his post as he had for so many years.  He was still there when I returned from the bathroom.  He didn't move and I didn't dare touch him.  I went back to sleep knowing my sentinel was protecting me.

The other animal spirit at my parents' home is more easily observed than physically seen.  When our poodle, Ani, passed, we spread her ashes around the pond my parents had dug in the pasture when the goats and sheep were gone.  Their home was a favorite of hers.  Even when her little body was filled with cancer, she would get excited when we arrived and would leap out of the car to run down to the pond.  Before greeting anyone else, Ani would run around the pond a couple of times.  This was the most exercise she would ever voluntarily take.

The first time she visited, she even explored the edge of the pond, finding one particular spot where she could get close enough to inspect the water.  The poor puppy got too close and fell right in!  She got out safely, but never needed to get a close up look at the pond or koi living in it again.


Looking across the pond.  Both dogs fell in just to the left of the long grass.  Photo taken by J. Wachhaus.


Jack, our Shih Tzu mix, followed Ani into our lives.  Jon has told me of his dream in which Ani was playing in a meadow as if to say it was OK to take in another dog.  Shortly after, Jon decided to visit the local animal shelter and found Jack.  Out of all the dogs barking to get his attention, this one just sat staring at Jon, as if to say he took long enough to get there.  The two went into one of the play rooms and the pup peed on him - another good sign, as good choice dogs in his past had done the same.

Jon came home to consider the decision he needed to make.  He had another dream of Ani, this time playing with the new dog.  He took this as a sign that she approved.  Jon told me about the experience and we decided to go pick him up.

Jack adjusted well to the family.  During his first visit to the farm, we took him down to the pond to run around.  He inspected the edge just as Ani had done and fell (maybe got pushed?) in at the exact spot she had done.  Afterward, he started running around the pond, looking over his shoulder as if he was playing with another dog.  We believe he plays with Ani every time we visit the pond.

I've had several other experiences outside my home that are worth mentioning.

During a time after high school when I felt more in touch with my spiritual self than ever before, I was driving with several friends.  During that night, I saw a male figure in the rear view mirror, sitting  between the two girls in the back seat.  He stayed with us for a good portion of the ride, but was gone by the time we reached our destination.  I was the only other male in the car.

You may have also heard stories of hitchhiking ghosts.  While I've never witnessed one of these and I don't think the one I just mentioned counts, I have seen what I call "runners".  These are similar to those shadow people we see out of the corner of our eyes; those dark figures slightly blacker than the shadows of the room.  These runners are out as a warning to drivers.  I have seen them during the day, but mostly at night.  They tend to remain on back roads and move across the road in front of the car.  I suppose their purpose is to slow the car down to a safe speed.  It's almost as if they want to get hit, only to disappear by the time they reach the opposite side of the road.

My final story is of another guardian.  This one would watch over me when I lived in the Scranton area.

I was living in a house owned by my fiance's grandparents.  They lived downstairs while I had the second floor.  My apartment consisted of four rooms.  Coming up the stairs, the kitchen was at the back of the house, the living room in the middle and the bedroom at the front.  A long hallway ran beside the stairwell connecting all three.  The bathroom was at the front of the house on the right, behind the stairs.

I give you the layout so you can understand what I heard at night.  It was disconcerting at first, but after my fiancee explained what was going on, it became comforting.

Most nights, though not every one, I would hear footsteps in the hallway.  They would start by the kitchen and work their way down the hallway, pausing at the living room and again at my bedroom door.  The first couple of times, I would stay in my bed and stare at the door.  I like to sleep with my door closed.  I think I would have been more scared if the door opened, but it never did.  After the pause by my door, the footsteps would head back to the kitchen.  This would only happen once during the nights when it did happen.


The Scranton house.  Picture from Google Earth


The house had been previously  owned by my fiance's great grandparents.  The bedrooms were all originally on the second floor, where I lived.  The largest room, the kitchen, was presumably the master bedroom.  Every night, her great grandmother would check the childrens' bedrooms to make sure they were safe in bed.  I took comfort that she still had her ritual and was making sure I was safe and sound in my bed.

There are some crazy horror stories out there.  I take heed when I hear them or tell my own as cautionary tales.  My stories tonight are only of those spirits I never felt threatened by.  While I know there are harmful ghosts out there, I believe there are more that watch over us protectively, both human and animal.  They may not make their presence known all the time, but when they do, thank them for watching over you.






Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Maryland's Modern Day Wolfman

Stories of the wolfman appear throughout history across our planet.  The best known is Hollywood's representation in the movies.  A man is bitten by a werewolf and becomes one himself.  The only way to rid himself of the curse is to be shot with a silver bullet, due to the Lycanthropes' allergy to that metal.  Lycanthropy has been a popular subject since that first offering in movies and shows like American Werewolf in Paris, the Underworld series and SyFy's Bitten.

Where do the stories come from?  Is there something out there that made nightmare reality?  Did the wolfman come from a primal fear of the wolf packs lurking in the darkest shadows at the edge of the campfire?  Has another creature emerged from the darkness to frighten us in our sleep?


Photo from darkstories.info

In my own backyard, we have the Dwayyo.  This bipedal monster reportedly has shaggy black fur, a bushy tail and the head of a wolf.  It is as capable of walking on its hind legs as it is running on all fours.  The creature lives and hunts in and around Frederick and Washington Counties in Western Maryland.  It is supposedly the mortal enemy of the Snallygaster, also sighted in that region.  Students of the University of Maryland have traced its origins back to the Dway, a wolf-like creature that hunted the upper Amazon River, and the Yo, an Asian creature that came across the glacial bridge spanning Russia to Alaska.  If this is true, it would explain the nationwide sightings of similar creatures through history.

The majority of the reports concerning the Dwayyo are from late 1965.  Individual citizens from Ellerton, Jefferson and near Gambrill State Park reported seeing a large dog-like creature hunting or lurking in the area, sometimes on two legs, sometimes four.  The man from outside Gambrill State Park said he had been attacked by the monster and had to beat it off to get back to the safety of his house.  Stories were even printed in the Frederick News Post until the creature sightings died off at the end of the year and it was believed to have moved on to different hunting grounds.

The earliest story of the Dwayyo goes back to the 1890's, in which a farmer saw a 9-foot tall dog-like creature at Camp Greentop, near Camp David (yes, our presidential retreat Camp David) in Catoctin Mountain National Park.  Reports surfaced again in 1944, when residents of Carroll County reported hearing the beast's screams and found footprints.  This is also the first reported time that the name, Dwayyo, was used.


Photo from devids.net


Since the multiple sightings in 1965, the creature seems to have disappeared until the mid-70's.  In late 1976, a couple of men out spotting deer between Cunningham Falls State Park and Catoctin Mountain National Park reported the creature running in front of their vehicle.  According to an article by Pittsburgh Paranormal Examiner, Robin Swope (http://www.examiner.com/article/the-dwayyo-werewolf-of-the-northeast), they described it as:
at least 6 ft tall but inclined forward since it was moving quickly. Its head was fairly large and similar to the profile of a wolf. The body was covered in brown or brindle colored fur but the lower half had a striped pattern of noticeable darker and lighter banding. The forelegs (or arms) were slimmer and held out in front as it moved. The back legs were very muscled and thick similar to perhaps a kangaroo.This was not a hominoid type creature; it did not have the characteristics of an ape. It was much more similar to a wolf or ferocious dog however it was definitely moving upright and appeared to be adapted for that type of mobility. I was particularly impressed by the size and strength of the back legs, the stripes on the lower half of the body and the canine-wolf-like head.
I don't think there are many people with better powers of observation than a hunter with a spotlight.  They definitely saw something out of the ordinary.

In 1978, two park rangers also witnessed the monster running on two legs in the vicinity of the previous sighting near Cunningham Falls State Park.

A sighting as recently as 2009 is, to me, one of the most fearsome.  A woman was driving on Coxey Brown Road on the outskirts of Gambrill State Park.  She was off to visit a friend in the area.  As this woman was driving, she had an eerie feeling that she was being watched, which grew as the forest grew denser.  After turning onto Hawbottom Road, where her friend lived, she caught sight of something moving through the woods alongside of her old rusting Subaru.  Out of the corner of her eye, she was able to see a brown blur between the trees.  Wondering what it could be, she slowed down to get a better look to her right.  As she did that, the creature jumped out in front of the car.

This scared woman remembers seeing its sharp fangs and the saliva dripping from its huge mouth as it growled deeply at her.  Its eyes were a deep black with no white showing.

When the monster leaped at the car, she hit the gas and didn't stop until she reached her friend's home.

For a more detailed rendition of the story, click the link for Robin Swope's article.

Since this story included specific roads this woman was following, I wanted to see where it happened.  Thanks to Google Earth, that's possible!  Now, it doesn't say which direction this young lady was coming from - only that she was travelling on Coxey Brown Road.  That's not a very long stretch of roadway, only 1.92 miles with a 749 foot climb from its Westernmost point at Harmony Road to its Northeastern point emptying out at Gambrill Park Road.

The only clue to her direction I have is that the forest started to get thicker as she drove.  That leads me to believe that she was coming from Harmony Road.  From this direction, she would have had some farmland on the left and forest on the right until gradually, the forest overtook both sides of the road.  It would also make sense from this direction as she felt watched  and the creature jumped out from the right after she turned onto Hawbottom Road.

That's a lot of details, but bear with me.  I'm only setting up the scene.  Coxey Brown Road is an unlined narrow two lane road.  I would bet that two vehicles could pass each other, but barely. Most cars probably drive carefully down the middle, until they meet traffic - which would be doubtful.  Once the woods take over, its a lonely drive as there are very few homes along that road.  Below is a picture from Google Earth of the turn she would have made onto Hawbottom Road.




I'm not kidding when I say she turned off the paved road.  This witness would have been driving toward us on Coxey Brown (to the right) and made a sharp right turn onto the one lane unpaved road.  Yes, that is Hawbottom Road.  It does eventually have a paved surface (I was curious and had to look), but it seems to me that, shortly after the bend to the left, she would have seen the Dwayyo.

Her story in the article says she thought she was travelling around 25 miles an hour down that road.  I doubt that.  Maybe on Coxey Brown, but she couldn't have done more that 5-10 mph down that dirt road.  That would also explain how it was so easy for her to notice a creature pacing her car.  Certainly this monster wouldn't be able to pace her at 25 mph while dodging trees and bush.

Regardless of whether this story is true or not - only the woman knows for sure - this would make a very spooky drive at night.

Be careful when you are out driving through the dark wooded mountains between Gambrill State Park and Catoctin Mountain State Park.  Keep your eyes peeled, for you may catch a glimpse of the Dwayyo on the prowl.

Notes taken from http://en.wikipedia.orghttp://www.examiner.comhttp://www.mapmyride.com

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Snallygaster: In which similarities are drawn between multiple legends

I've got to say that I have had a lot of fun researching all of the monsters and legends that I have been posting about.  Whether truly legend or actual creatures, I've never enjoyed a project as much as this!

That being said, I bring you a legend that I only learned about over the past year.  This story comes from one of my favorite shows, Mountain Monsters.  For those unfamiliar with this program, it follows a team of West Virginian good old boys trying to hunt down the monsters of Appalachia.  Most of it is very comedic and while I believe there are some very good down-to-earth people in the deep county of West Virginia, they are unfortunately the butt of many jokes for the rest of the country.  Despite all this, these guys put on a good show, try to come up with fine evidence from their witnesses and want to take us on their adventure to track down and (unsuccessfully) trap the week's quarry.  Do I believe it possible to encounter a monster for every show?  No.  There's a good possibility that there is a crew making sounds, throwing rocks and raising hell off-screen.  There's also a slim possibility that the encounters that make the air are one in ten that don't have any results.  Unless we are out trekking the mountainside with these guys, we'll never know for sure.  I laugh to think of a day that they might prove all of us wrong for watching their antics as pure entertainment.

True or not, the legends they are chasing down are very real.


Picture from www.endoftherow.blogspot.com

The Snallygaster legend has a couple of different beginnings.  One story has Pennsylvania Dutch origins.  The name is believed to come from the German "Schneller Geist", meaning "quick spirit".  While this description may typically be used to describe the cold breeze that knocks papers off a table or the wind that slams a door shut, it came to name a winged creature that prowls the mountains of Western Maryland.

This creature, the Snallygaster, is described as having large wings like a dragon, a half-reptilian/half-avian body, a metallic beak with sharp teeth, and sharp claws.  Some descriptions even give the Snally octopus tentacles to help it snatch up its prey.  Such a creature is pretty hard to swallow with so many creatures mashed together, but thus is the stuff of legends.

Many believe that the Snallygaster was more of a story to keep children and ne'er-do-wells disciplined.  "Don't go out after dark or the Snallygaster will get you!"  "Get in bed before the Snally eats you up!"  Many of the farmers may have thought that it could have been a real thing.  Driving through Western Maryland, you will find a seven-point star hex on the side of many barns.  This was believed to keep the Snallygaster away from the crops, animals and family.

Reported sightings of this creature are proliferate around 1909, though stories of it go back as early as 1735.  It has been suggested that stories from the 19th century may have had a dark purpose.  These tales may have been manufactured as a last warning for slave headed up the Underground Railroad for the Mason-Dixon line, telling that any crossing through Western Maryland would be snatched up by the Snallygaster and meet death instead of freedom.  In fact, many of the stories published after the turn of the century tell that the first sighting was by a colored man who disturbed it as it slept on the warmth of an outdoor kiln.  Some say it screeched angrily and flew away; others claim he became the first victim, thrown off a cliff to his death.

This story is not to be confused with the Snoligoster found in the swamps of the south, mainly in the area of Lake Okeechobee, FL.  That creature is a long crocodilian creature with a spike on its back.  The Snoligoster uses its tail to toss its victims onto that spike to their death.  Stories tell of this creature attacking escaped slaves and impaling them to their deaths.


Picture from www.hagerstownmagazine.com

Snoligoster aside, this was the first encounter of many reported in 1909.  Enough stories were published that hunters grabbed their rifles and set out to bring the beast down.  Interest in this beast became so popular that the Smithsonian Institute offered a reward for its hide - $100,000 per square foot to whomever could bring it down.  Rumor has it that even Theodore Roosevelt considered postponing an engagement in favor of mounting the Snally on his wall.

There were many sightings told to range from Western Maryland in the South Mountain region to West Virginia, parts of Pennsylvania and Ohio and even out to New Jersey.  Coincidentally, these sightings are at the same time period and locations as another cryptid with large bat wings, a long fearsome face, a spiked tail and cloven feet - the Jersey Devil.  Is it possible that people were seeing the same creature?  A rose by any other name is still a rose.

Whatever was being reported, stories tell that this monster which could not be shot down by hunters had a wide-ranging territory.  No one could say where it was roosting, though some claim to have found an egg in at least two different locations.  The first is reported to have been laid near Sharpsburg, where a group of men supposedly tried to hatch it with a makeshift incubator.  The second was said to be laid somewhere between Gapland and Burkittsville.  This egg ranges in size from "large enough to catch a pony" to "big enough to hatch an elephant".  The eggs were believed to have an incubation time of twenty-three years, as this was the amount of time between the disappearance of the Snallygaster in 1909 to the arrival of another set of sightings in 1932.

This new set of sightings ended with a supposed witnessed death to the creature in December of '32.  Stories tell of this incarnation flying over a vat of moonshine and being overcome by its vapors.  The poor creature fell to its drowning death in the vat, the lye of the mixture eating away its flesh and leaving only a skeleton.  Authorities that responded to the scene blew up the vat with dynamite, leaving nary a clue that the Snallygaster was real.


Photo of article from www.baltimoreorless.com

Now, these are the reported sightings of the Snallygaster, be they true or manufactured.  Some will say that the story of the monster was a complete farce dreamed up by an Ohio author by name of Thomas Chalmers Harbaugh, a son of Middletown, MD.  He was best friends with George Rhoderick, the editor of the Middletown Valley Register, and was a regular contributor to the paper.  Some might say that he started the stories as a ruse and ended them with a bang of the dynamite when he felt he could no longer carry the stories on.  Others may say that the articles were made up by rivaling editors of the local papers, but again, no one can say for sure.

Stories of the Snallygaster continue on even to this day, placing the Snallygaster in the mountains of West Virginia.  If the stories are to be believed, the creatures' eggs have been reported again.  Whatever it might be, it is breeding and living well in its roost.  Maybe it is being held in check by its natural enemy, the Dwayyo - a fierce wolf man that also supposedly ranges the mountains of Western Maryland and West Virginia.


Picture from viergacht.deviantart.com


Is it possible the Snallygaster is out there?  It could be.  Based on descriptions given, it has been seen in many different areas here in the Northeast.  It is some type of winged creature that may also have a sufficient means of locomotion on the ground, if stories of tracks being found are to be believed.  Could the Snally and the Jersey Devil be the same monster?  They are told to be sighted in the same areas.  What if we take away the fear of the witnesses.  Shed away the octopus tentacles that could instead be raptors' claws.  Change the long horse's face to an extended beak.  Do we have a large fearsome bird that remains unidentified?  Could we instead be witnessing a Thunderbird in action?  Might there be a colony of surviving Pterosaurs living in Appalachia?   Is it something else?

Whatever is out there, we will one day find out.


Notes taken from http://en.wikipedia.orghttp://wesclark.comhttp://books.google.comhttp://cryptidz.wikia.comhttp://www.njdevilhunters.com

Monday, October 13, 2014

Bigfoot Among Us

Hairy Man.  Ohio Grassman.  Woodbooger.  Yowie.  Old Man of the Woods.  Yahoo.  Skunk Ape.  Sasquatch.  Honey Island Monster.  Momo.  Fouke Monster.  Yeti.  Old Yellow Top.  Quiken.  Tano Giant.  Forest Devil.

Worldwide it has many names, but we know it best as Bigfoot.


Patterson still from theeway.com




According to legend, this creature is anywhere from 7 to 9 feet tall with long, often matted, shaggy hair.  It's coloring ranges from white, through blond and red to brown.  Older creatures have even been reported with gray fur.  They have characteristic primate features, with long arms a broad forehead and deep-set eyes that often reflect red in the night.  Its most notable feature is the size of the feet and length of its stride.

The Bigfoot can move quite easily and quietly through wooded areas.  It is an expert at hiding and is very stealthy, rarely showing itself to humankind.  When it does reveal itself, many reports show that it is around women and children - most likely because they don't seem to pose as much of a threat as men.

Despite the many reports of this legendary creature in nearly every state of our country, many do not believe that it exists.  Many cynics, as well as members of the scientific community, will not recognize its existence until there is physical proof brought to the foreground.  People want to see remains, a body or a live monster before the myth becomes reality.

Footprint casts from mythortruth.com
There are many groups and organizations dedicated to finding this elusive animal.  Communities have been set up on social media sites specifically for those that have had encounters and found possible proof.  Some want to hunt the creature in hopes of providing a body.  Others seek only the scientific evidence that this creature exists among us.

I have my own fascination with this master of hide and seek.  I have never had an encounter of my own, nor have I seen any evidence with my own eyes.  This is, however, one of the most wide-spread legends out there.  Many stories of cryptids that are circulating overlap with reported incidents with a Sasquatch.  My own belief is that quite a few of the monsters reported out there are indeed cryptids, but misidentified sightings of a Bigfoot.

Fear can do strange things to the human mind.  A creature that a person is not accustomed to seeing this creature - most of humankind fits into this parameter - can easily take the form of that person's worst fears.  While remaining a perfectly "normal" 8' tall ape man, a terrified mind may give it horns, wings or a weapon, turning it into something even worse - the stuff of our darkest nightmares.

Now, I am not discounting the stories out there, but the imagination is a wondrous thing.  We can take what we "see" and give it a back story, an origin and a brand new monster crawls out of the proverbial closet.  Some of these stories may indeed be actual.  At risk of being the skeptic myself, we will not know until we have the proof.

I am a member of several of those social media groups.  Like I said, I don't have any evidence.  I've never seen any proof with my own eyes.  I just like to be nosey.  I want to see what others are looking for.  I want to see what they see in the pictures and videos they post.  I'd like to think I can weed out the hoaxes from the proof.


Comparison slice of coyote on left and possible Bigfoot carrying young Bigfoot on right from bigfootevidence.blogspot.com
Of the other resources I follow, there are several shows on television that I love.  OK, this may not be the most scientific approach to the subject, but it's fun to watch.  I'm a big fan of Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot, Destination America's Mysteries and Monsters in America and Mountain Monsters, and this past year's new offering, Spike TV's 10 Million Dollar Bigfoot Bounty.

Mysteries is interesting in that it covers stories across the states about different creatures.  I can't say that it has any factual information to it.  It merely covers the stories that have been gathered by "eye witnesses".  It is sort of like the Unsolved Mysteries for monsters and things that go bump in the night.  The re-enactments and creatures portrayed leave something to be desired.  Some of the information, however can be linked to existing legends through history.

Bounty, in my eyes, is just another reality show, but with an interesting twist.  From the beginning, the contestants seem to be doomed.  They are taken to areas where the creature has been reported to have been seen and tasked with finding scientific proof (and photographic evidence) that Bigfoot exists.  The judges are reputed scientists (and Dean Cain) that evaluate the evidence to see what these outdoors men, hunters and survivalists can find.  Most times, they could only uncover the regular animals that exist, but they had hopes of finding something else out there.

Mountain Monsters remains one of the most interesting and entertaining cryptid hunting shows that I watch.  What more could you want than a group of good ole boys from West Virgina tracking through the Appalachians to catch the likes of the Snallygaster, the Wampus Beast and the Yahoo.  I can't say they are the most scientific of fellows.  Most people probably can't take them seriously, especially judging by the tweets on their "Uncaged" episodes.  But if any if the evidence they are showing is true, they have something going for them.  These guys do seem to have the knowledge to do this correctly.  Although I don't agree with many of their strategies, there's no one I would trust more in the lonely mountains than a group of hunters and trackers that spend most of their lives in the brush.  Also, if any of the evidence uncovered from their witnesses is accurate, there may be something living deep in the countryside other than moonshiners and ginsengers.

Mountain Monsters witness video of the Ohio Grassman from Youtube.  Is it real?

My favorite above all is Finding Bigfoot.  These four are gung-ho about finding a Bigfoot.  They go out, have town hall meetings, gather evidence and stories and head into the wilderness to try to make contact.  Matt Moneymaker, the leader of the the foursome, also founded the BFRO or Bigfoot Field Research Organization in 1995.  I would personally love to become part of this organization and be a part of history when Bigfoot is proven to exist.  My only issue with the show is that it is rumored that they cannot reveal any physical evidence on Animal Planet until it is proven to be true.  Until that happens, many see the program as being the same old same old, week after week.  This is understandable, as they would not want to broadcast the information without the proper proof.

As for what I think: well, something is out there.  Cryptozoology is a rough science.  It requires one to chase stories and legends, hoping to find an actual witness and possible proof to be able to track down an elusive creature that no one else is willing to believe in until it is shoved under their nose.

We've got the stories out there.  They've been handed down through generations upon generations from ancestors in time gone by.  Our earliest recognition of Bigfoot's existence is on Painted Rock located on the Tule River Reservation.  Local Native Americans say the story of these cave paintings has been handed down since approximately 500 A.D.  The painting shows, among other known animals, a Bigfoot family - male, female and a youngster.

This picture shows the Bigfoot family represented at the Painted Rock.  Photo from bigfootproject.org
This picture is a representation of the above cave painting.  Photo from bfro.net

According to various Native American folklore, Bigfoot is a protector of the forest and its creatures.  He is constantly around, yet stays hidden from the eyes of mankind.  Some tribes believe there is an agreement between the Natives and the Bigfoot tribes to keep the integrity of the forest and one will not interfere with the other.  Of course, with the coming of the White Man, we are encroaching upon his habitat and that of the animals he protects.

Should we go even further back in time, we might come across Sasquatch's predecessor, Gigantopithecus.  Though there were three species of Gigantopithecus, I wish to focus on one in particular - Gigantopithecus blacki.  Unfortunately, we don't have a lot of evidence of G. blacki.  That which we do have is in the form of fossilized teeth and pieces of jaw.  Scientists can only make approximations of what this creature looked like.

What we do know is that Gigantopithecus blacki was a super-sized primate.  This ape stood approximately 9 - 10 feet tall.  Its large hairy form stood upright like its human contemporaries, making it a possibility for our missing link.  Its arms spanned nearly 12 feet.  They inhabited our planet for nearly one million years and are believed to have gone extinct about 100,000 years ago.  That means they spent time living side-by-side with the first Homo sapiens for several tens of thousands of years.  Before that, they were contemporaries of H. sapiens predecessors, Homo erectus, the upright man.


Photo of model Gigantopithecus blacki from uiowa.edu


The fossil remains we do have of Gigantopithecus blacki show that it lived in South China and Vietnam.  Some believe that these great primates may have migrated across the land bridge between modern day Russia and Alaska.  This would explain the population diversity through every continent.  It would also explain the larger population of reported Sasquatch in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, as opposed to the smaller populations toward the East Coast as they spread out across the land.

Speaking of migration, it is believed that Bigfoot migrates with the season.  Typically, he follows the food, moving north for the summer months and heading back south for the winter.  Though we are not completely clear on his diet, research shows that Bigfoot is omnivorous.  When he can, he will prey on deer, elk and caribou.  In good weather, he may also supplement his diet with nuts and berries.  When near water, frogs may join the diet.  Reports nationwide have shown this elusive creature feasting on all of these.

Some observations have shown that Sasquatches may stop moving for a period of time and settle into a territory.  It is not known why, though could be for several reasons.  A solitary Bigfoot may have found a temperate zone with sufficient resources and claim that area as its own.  Another possibility may be that a mated pair is forming a family group.  The young seem to be similar to our own children and, while not completely helpless, may not be able to survive long migrations without too much assistance.


Upside-down trees from sasquatchinvestigations.org

Observers also believe that these creatures mark out their territory with structures.  In Alaska, though also found in other areas, there are a group of famous trees that have been uprooted and planted trunk first back into the ground.  In most other areas, people have found structures of sorts made from meticulously placed branches and trees.


Tree structure from sasquatchinvestigations.org

One needs to be  careful when entering one of these territories.  I believe that Sasquatches have individual personalities as different as those of humans and any other animal, at that.  You don't know what the creature will be like.  It could be having a good day and might be curious as to what is invading its home.  On the other hand, it might be one mean old SOB and be very protective of its home.  And watch out if you make it too close to its nest.  You wouldn't want to meet the business end of his fists or have a rock thrown at your head.

While there aren't many documented cases of a Bigfoot attacking people, there is evidence.  If footage of any of the AIMS team's encounters on Mountain Monsters is to be believed, the Ohio  Grassman and the Yowie of West Virginia are not to be trifled with.  Both are very protective and territorial creatures and have a mean throwing arm.  

If you don't want to believe the good ole boys of the mountains, then look to our 26th president, Teddy Roosevelt.  As an avid hunter and frontiersman, he didn't take much guff from anyone.  While he could tell a good story, he also wasn't one to tell a tall tale.  There are unconfirmed stories that Roosevelt met a Bigfoot out in the wild.  Some say he was attacked, others that he only saw the beast.  But there is a story in his book, The Wilderness Hunter, about a man who encountered the monster.


Photo of Theodore Roosevelt from ericdockett.hubpages.com


The book refers to this as a goblin tale, as the term Bigfoot didn't start being used until the 1950s.  This man, Bauman, was a fellow hunter, tracker and frontiersman.  He and his partner were hunting on a mountain.  After setting up camp, they went searching for a good location for their traps.  Upon coming back, the camp was destroyed.  Naturally, they though it was a bear that did the job.  When they found the tracks, they discovered that the "bear" walked away on two feet.  That night, they were awakened by noises in the woods made by a large creature.  When they fired at it, the beast ran away.  The next day, they checked their traps only to return to a  destroyed camp again.  That night, they had a similar experience - a large creature making a ruckus in the woods, but it wouldn't come close to the fire.  The third day found them deciding that enough was enough.  Bauman went alone to collect the traps.  When he returned to camp, he found it not only destroyed, but his partner had been killed by a large creature that apparently threw him bodily around.  Bauman left everything behind and fled the mountain.

It's a pretty scary story.  I would definitely not like getting on the wrong side of a Sasquatch.  That won't stop me from wanting to discover if any of these stories are true.

What is really out there?  Is the Goatman responsible for the attacks in Prince George's County, MD or was it really the Bigfoot that was seen around the same time?  Are the Batsquatch and Sheepsquatch actual hybrid monstrosities or has a Sasquatch taken to using "tools" to make itself more menacing?  Do skinwalkers haunt the American West or has Old Yellow Top taken to stealing sheep from the ranch?