Florida’s
version of Bigfoot is called the Skunk Ape, for its terrible odor. It’s
been sighted for many years in the swamplands of the Everglades. Dave
Shealy is the Skunk Ape’s biggest fan. He was only ten when he first saw
a Skunk Ape, and that wasn’t his last sighting. Shealy runs the Skunk
Ape Research Headquarters on his property near Big Cypress National
Preserve. He was happy to tell author Joseph Stromberg the history of
the ape.
“Local Native American groups from around
here, the Seminoles and the Miccosukee tribe, they’ve known and told
stories about the skunk ape for centuries,” he said. Over the past 60
years or so, Floridians of all stripes began reporting that they were
seeing the creature. (A similar pattern happened in the Pacific
Northwest, where indigenous beliefs in the Sasquatch eventually led to
the skunk ape’s better-known cousin, Bigfoot.)
In one of the
earliest well-publicized sightings, a pair of hunters claimed the ape
invaded their camp in 1957. It’s unclear who coined the name skunk ape,
but it appears to have surfaced sometime during the '60s. During the
1960s and '70s, the period when Shealy had his first sighting, more and
more reports trickled in, as far north as the Florida panhandle, but
most often in the Everglades. The skunk ape eventually attracted
mainstream attention, including a bill introduced (but not passed) in
the Florida legislature in 1977 that would have made it illegal to
“take, possess, harm or molest anthropoid or humanoid animals.” It was
around this time that Shealy, a teenager, spotted evidence of the
creature for the second time, in the form of enormous four-toed
footprints left at night near his hunting camp deep in the Big Cypress
interior.
But that’s just the beginning of the many
sightings. Shealy even has a video from an encounter in 2000. Stromberg
looked over the evidence -or rather, the
lack of real, physical
evidence- and decided the Skunk Ape must be as apocryphal as Sasquatch.
But then he latched onto a clue that might explain the sightings
reported over the years.
Read the rest of the story at Smithsonian.
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