Occurred 9/22/1995 in Vernon Parish County, LA
Published on November 9, 2009

Former Fort Hood pilot reports dusk highway encounter a few miles east of Sabine River. Read more...
Lately it seems that every other month brings forth new enlightenment about great ape behavior. With each new and exciting observation, a question comes to mind: “What next?”
The answer may lie in the thousands of reports of alleged bigfoot encounters.
In a paper published this month in Primates, Dr. Serge Wich, Dr. Karyl Swartz and Dr. Rob Shumaker; Madeleine E. Hardus and Adriano R. Lameira, doctoral candidates at the Utrecht University in The Netherlands; and Erin Stromberg, an animal caretaker at the Smithsonian National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C., reveal new documentation of a non-human primate mimicking a sound from another species without being specifically trained to do so. Bonnie, a 30-year-old female orangutan living at the National Zoo, began whistling after hearing the animal caretaker make the sound. The authors of the paper go on to provide anecdotal information regarding Indah, another orangutan observed whistling.
The documentation of such behavior is obviously an extremely important discovery; its implications for the study of great apes’ learning capacities in the auditory domain cannot be understated. But perhaps even more fascinating, and most certainly overlooked by mainstream scientists, is the fact that the mimicking and whistling behavior of the orangutans can now be added to a growing list of other great ape behavioral traits that have long been ascribed to the putative sasquatch.
The list of such behaviors that were previously reported by alleged bigfoot observers includes swimming, throwing rocks and/or vegetation (limbs, branches, nuts, pine cones), fishing, eating omnivorously, carrying and eating swine, intimidation displays, marking trails, eating fish, building nests, making loud vocalizations, whistling, mimicking, among others. Such descriptions, when attributed to the sasquatch, were always greeted with derision and cynicism; however, it is now clear that these descriptions have been uncannily accurate suggestions of great ape behavior. The more we learn about great apes, the less incredible alleged sasquatch behavior becomes, especially when realizing that such descriptions of sasquatch behavior came long before such behavior was documented in the known great apes.
For clues to what other behavioral traits may be observed in the future regarding great apes, perhaps a crash course in bigfoot sighting reports is the first order of business.
Sources: Great Ape Trust of Iowa; Great Ape Trust of Iowa (video of whistling orangutan); Primates: A Case of Spontaneous Acquisition of a Human Sound by an Orangutan.
Former Fort Hood pilot reports dusk highway encounter a few miles east of Sabine River. Read more...
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Worker has early morning visual encounter while working on construction of Fox Sports Facility. Read more...
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