Archive for the 'Cryptozoology' Category

Ligers and Tiglons and Wholphins

Posted by KirkUltra7 on September 1st, 2010

Link

Ligers on Wikipedia

Tiglons on Wikipedia

And what post on cross-species mating would be complete without a video of whale crossed with a dolphin, also known as a wholphin.

The Octopus Took The Camera

Posted by KirkUltra7 on April 24th, 2010

A diver is surprised by a very playful octopus. . .

Dolphin Equality

Posted by KirkUltra7 on January 9th, 2010

Scientists say dolphins should be treated as ‘non-human persons’

Dolphins have been declared the world’s second most intelligent creatures after humans, with scientists suggesting they are so bright that they should be treated as “non-human persons”.

Studies into dolphin behaviour have highlighted how similar their communications are to those of humans and that they are brighter than chimpanzees. These have been backed up by anatomical research showing that dolphin brains have many key features associated with high intelligence.

Anyone who disagrees has clearly never experienced SeaQuest.

See also:

The Pink Dolphin

UPDATE:

Heroic Animals More Common Than Previously Thought, Say Scientists

The Mysteries of Port Chatham, Alaska

Posted by KirkUltra7 on December 18th, 2009

(Image by FroweMinahild)

What really happened in Port Chatham (specifically Portlock), Alaska, where an entire village was abandoned for fear of a mysterious white-faced woman in black, and her bigfoot-like accomplices.

Port Chatham Left to the Spirits

What frightening situation caused John and Helen Romanoff to take their children and flee to Nanwalek?

“We left our houses and the school, and started all new here,” Malania said in a recent interview, speaking in her traditional Sugt’stun through translator Sally Ash. “There was plentiful land here for gardening and people. My parents built a house on the beach.”

What had frightened Malania’s parents hadn’t been a single event. Over a “long period of time,” a nantiinaq (Nan-te-nuk) – or big hairy creature – was reportedly terrorizing villagers. And Malania also told of the spirit of a woman dressed in draping black clothes that would come out of the cliffs.

“Her dress was so long she would drag it,” Malania said. “She had a very white face and would disappear back into the cliffs.”

The Nantiinaq is described by many as being analogous to the sasquatch which, given the description of the Nantiinaq in this account, is perfectly understandable. The Nantiinaq does have it’s own unique history though, which may (or may not, depending on your beliefs regarding bigfoots) separate it from other such creatures.

The book Where Bigfoot Walks gives a brief, yet interesting, description of the Nantiinaq. It also mentions a tale similar to the one above, about a town being abandoned because of encounters with a hairy biped.

Martha Demientieff, a native Alutiiq writer and teacher whose family runs a river transport company, told me of a Yukon village deserted as recently as 1992 because of the appearance of the Wood Man, sometimes known as Neginla-eh. And on a recent trip to Homer, Alaska, I became acquainted with a rich lode of Bigfoot tradition on the Kenai Peninsula. The residents of English Bay tell of many encounters with Nantiinaq, who could change from Bigfoot into any other form. Some of the stories were collected in a magazine called Fireweed Cillqaq.

Link

Is this Yukon village, abandoned in the 1990′s, somehow the same village abandoned in Port Chatham? The same story retold until the details have changed? Or have multiple settlements been taken by these beings?

The excerpt from Where Bigfoot Walks compares the shape-shifting Nantiinaq with the Neginla-eh, or Wood Man, while the comment section from this post on Cryptomundo draws parallels with the Hoolaq, and the legend of Headless Valley.

The comments on the original news article link the story to sightings of giant otters in Alaska, and from there the research quickly lead to the discovery of my new favorite cryptid, Land Otter Man.

“Do not sneak around here for I can see you.” They could not get at them. These land-otter-men had come to the women to turn them into land-otter-people also.

Link

At first I thought Land Otter Man was a single entity, but it turns out they are an entire race in Northern mythology. It appears that the Land Otter People have a fondness for large scale encounters as well.

As for the white-faced spirit-woman in black, who lived in the cliffs and accompanied the Nantiinaq; her identity remains a mystery.

See also:

Mysterious Beings in Alaska

Giant Platypus in Alaska

Bigfoots and UFOs

(Image by Galim)

The Crow Summoner

Posted by KirkUltra7 on October 2nd, 2009

A man in Nepal is threatening to shut down an airport with thousands of crows if the government does not help him get into the Guiness Book of World Records.

Bird terror threat from record-breaking crow summoner

Speaking at a press conference in the eastern Nepal town of Dharan on Friday, Mr Sapkota gave a three month ultimatum to the government of Nepal asking them to help him get his name registered with the record book.

“If the government does not listen to my request, I will gather thousands of crows from all over the Kathmandu valley at the Tribhuwan International Airport , the only international airport of Nepal and bring the air services to a halt. This would indeed cause a chaos,” Mr Sapkota warned.

. . .

Last year, Mr Sapkota had surprised hundreds of people by reportedly gathering thousands of crows at the Tundikhel Open Ground in Kathmandu and making two way conversation to them. Mr Sapkota can make sounds like crows, which makes the birds come and fly at his own will.

(via Damn Data)

In other news. . . It turns out ravens know how to talk.

Winged Humanoids and Flying Horses

Posted by KirkUltra7 on September 24th, 2009

(Image by JorsArt2006)

Reflections of Winged Humanoids

Despite their markedly different climatic conditions, steamy Puerto Rico and dusty northern Mexico share an unlikely common characteristic. For generations, ranging as far back as the 19th century, they have been the source of reports of winged entities of all sorts – not just “Thunderbird”-type manifestations, but flying anthropomorphic creatures that appear in waves. Popular tradition holds that such beings live in caves, whether in the hot dry Sierra Madre or limestone caves in the Caribbean karst region of northern Puerto Rico, which would offer great shelter for the creatures described. But what would they eat? Are they responsible for animal mutilations, or worse yet, reports of missing humans? It is likelier that we are dealing with a truly interdimensional phenomenon that is able to manifest itself “when the stars are right”, in true Lovecraftian fashion.

Sightings of winged humanoids and flying humanoids have been on the rise in the last few years, but I have to say, what I find especially cool are the tales of the flying horses.

The man who said he videotaped from his 6th floor apartment balcony in Milan described the “flying horse” as large and alive.

What could possibly be realer than a flying horse?

Werewolves as Evil Sorcerers (and Modern Sightings)

Posted by KirkUltra7 on August 7th, 2009

(Image by Direfly)

The Gralien published an article recently on werewolves and their differences from traditional cryptids, specifically focusing on their origins in the occult.

Werewolves, Lycanthropes, and Hypertrichosis

In the study of cryptozoology, most reports of bipedal half-beasts consist of those falling into the “Bigfoot” category. Occasionally, there are from time to time reports of creatures which differ in various ways from the typical “ape man” and which, by all other accounts, could only be likened more to werewolves, the mysterious monsters of European folklore.

There are, however, various issues that come paired with the presentation of such claims, especially the fact that a werewolf, by definition, is something more likened to a by-product of magic, rather than an alleged flesh-and-blood animal. Historically, the werewolf is merely a man who, if attacked and bitten by another lycanthrope (a word derived from the greek words for wolf and man). Other sources describe the transformation as being the result of a satanic ritual, much like Richard Verstegan’s fifteenth century description which likened them to being evil sorcerers:

“(Werewolves) are certayne sorcerers, who having annoynted their bodies with an ointment which they make by the instinct of the devil, and putting on a certayne inchaunted girdle, does not only unto the view of others seem as wolves, but to their own thinking have both the shape and nature of wolves, so long as they wear the said girdle. And they do dispose themselves as very wolves, in worrying and killing, and most of humane creatures.”

Link

This description, from the fifteenth century, of spells to transform oneself into a werewolf reminded me of a modern version of such a satanic ritual from The Devil’s Notebook by Anton Szandor LaVey, in the chapter entitled How to Become a Werewolf.

Attire yourself in a manner conductive to the change that is to be effected. Legends of Berserkers donning the skins of wolves and bears hold substantial meaning, in view of the importance of costume in ritual. Dress in the most stereotyped, “Corny” manner, as the second skin that you wear is a potent element in complete transmogrification. This is hermetic or sympathetic magic exemplified (as above, so below). If you wear the mask of a wolf or the skin of a beast, it is preferable if it is not genuine, as you can better infuse a facsmile of the chosen animal with your own personality, while drawing from the known attributes of the species represented. The skin or mask will serve as a catalyst, a blue print, for what you will become as you merge with it.

Enter the blighted area with eager anticipation. When you approach the spots where you would have previously been the most frightened, allow yourself to revel in the thought of how terrifying it would be to another if they were to feel the same fear that you had felt, plus the added terror with an actual manifestation of an unfarmiliar and grotesque creature. In short, it is now your role to contribute to the fearsomeness of the place.

. . .

As you progressively become more imbued with the sensation of being an animal, you will actually feel certain areas of your body responding in a manner alien to the human anatomy. Your legs will become haunches. Your amrs will become forelimbs for claws or paws that crave to grasp at the nearest thing. Your countenance will change. Your facial muscles will began to twitch in bestial grimaces. All of your senses will besome more acute.

. . .

At the moment of orgasm, a complete and irrevocable encompassing of the animal within must occur, with whatever abandon to this level may ensue. It is at this tune that the change will take place, and if one should be unfortunate(or fortunate?) enough to witness your metamorhposis, you may be assured they will never forget it.

Frequently referred to as the P. T. Barnum of religion (a title he himself was always pleased with), I think it is unlikely that LaVey ever used this technique to achieve a full lycanthropic transformation (though he did know his stuff, so you never know). The similarities between his werewolf magic and the kinds listed above and below, however, are still certainly worth noting.

Wikipedia’s entry on werewolves provides a wide variety of origins for lycanthropes of all types, with many European beliefs heavily associating them with the devil. This particular account, however, stands out in fantastic contrast:

A notable exception to the association of Lycanthropy and the Devil, comes from a rare and lesser known account of an 80-year-old man named Thiess. In 1692, in Jurgenburg, Livonia, Thiess testified under oath that he and other werewolves were the Hounds of God. He claimed they were warriors who went down into hell to do battle with witches and demons. Their efforts ensured that the Devil and his minions did not carry off the gran from local failed crops down to hell. Thiess was steadfast in his assertions, claiming that werewolves in Germany and Russia also did battle with the devil’s minions in their own versions of hell, and insisted that when werewolves died, their souls were welcomed into heaven as reward for their service. Thiess was ultimately sentenced to ten lashes for Idolatry and superstitious belief.

As with every other account in this article, the testimony of Thiess could be nothing more than the rantings of a deranged madman. On the other other hand though, the thought an international army of holy werewolves fighting the devil for their farms is just too cool to not be solid fact.

There are a variety of werewolf origins provided on the wikipedia page:

Herodotus in his Histories wrote that the Neuri, a tribe he places to the north-east of Scythia, were transformed into wolves once every nine years. These rituals were apparently meant to symbolise earthly regeneration and rebirth. Virgil was also familiar with human beings transforming into wolves.

In Greek mythology, the story of Lycaon provides one of the earliest examples of a werewolf legend. According to one version, Lycaon was transformed into a wolf as a result of eating human flesh; one of those who were present at periodical sacrifice on Mount Lycæon was said to suffer a similar fate.

In Metamorphoses, the Roman poet Ovid vividly described stories of men who roamed the woods of Arcadia in the form of wolves.

What I found especially interesting though, was their section on the connections between werewolves and vampires.

In Medieval Europe, the corpses of some people executed as werewolves were cremated rather than buried in order to prevent them from being resurrected as vampires. Before the end of the 19th century, the Greeks believed that the corpses of werewolves, if not destroyed, would return to life as vampires in the form of wolves or hyenas which prowled battlefields, drinking the blood of dying soldiers. In the same vein, in some rural areas of Germany, Poland and Northern France, it was once believed that people who died in mortal sin came back to life as blood-drinking wolves. This differs from conventional werewolfery, where the creature is a living being rather than an undead apparition. These vampiric werewolves would return to their human corpse form at daylight. They were dealt with by decapitation with a spade and exorcism by the parish priest. The head would then be thrown into a stream, where the weight of its sins were thought to weigh it down. Sometimes, the same methods used to dispose of ordinary vampires would be used. The vampire was also linked to the werewolf in East European countries, particularly Bulgaria, Serbia and Slovakia. In Serbia, the werewolf and vampire are known collectively as one creature; Vulkodlak. In Hungarian and Balkan mythology, many werewolves were said to be vampiric witches who became wolves in order to suck the blood of men born under the full moon in order to preserve their health. In their human form, these werewolves were said to have pale, sunken faces, hollow eyes, swollen lips and flabby arms. The Haitian jé-rouges differ from traditional European werewolves by their habit of actively trying to spread their lycanthropic condition to others, much like vampires.

With all the talk of these magicians dressing up as wolves to transform, it’s hard not to think of the skinwalkers.

Modern fiction usually focuses on the viral form of lycanthropy, spread by werewolf bites, where those who manage to survive the attacks eventually become werewolves themselves. Their occult origins are less frequently addressed.

And so I have to wonder; is there a missing link between the two? At what point did these rituals begin creating the type of entity that could replicate itself simply by breaking the skin of another human?

Did some insane magician cast a spell to make them that way intentionally?

Or perhaps the phenomenon is more Dionysean in origin, with people just getting swept away by the party. . .

Lon Chaney’s character in The Wolfman from 1941 was marked by a pentagram on his hand after a werewolf bit him. A sign of his transformation. I’ll have to watch the movie again to see what it has to say about the subject.

(We all know the ones from the movies are the real ones.)

The strange sagas of the werewolves continues into the modern age. The Wolves of Hexham, for example, was an interesting discoverey.

In February, 1972 the Robson boys were weeding their parent’s garden not 10 minutes walk from where the ‘Wolf of Allendale’ stalked the woods. The pair soon unearthed two carved stone heads both about the size of tennis balls. A few nights after the discovery, neighbour Ellen Dodd was sitting up late with her daughter when both of them saw what they described as a ‘half-man/half-beast’ enter the bedroom. Although both mother and daughter screamed in terror, the creature seemed disinterested in them and walked off down the stairs. It was heard to be ‘padding down the stairs as if on its hind legs’, and the front door was later found open. It was assumed it had left the house in search of something else, but what no-one knew, or indeed was inclined to find out!

More werewolf sightings. . .

Werewolf Sighting

A Brazilian Werewolf

Hellhound or Werewolf

Werewolf Encounter

Pack of Werewolves

And for those of you with Coast to Coast accounts. . .

Nick Redfern – Cryptozoological Creatures

Nick Redfern – Mysterious Creatures

Linda Godfrey – Bipedal Canine Creatures

Nick Redfern – Cryptozoology, UFOs and Crop Circles

Linda Godfrey – Man-Wolf Sightings Near Lake Ganeva

Linda Godfrey – Michigan’s Monsters and Legends

There are two active werewolf “hunts” going on today that I am aware of. The first involves the high strangeness going on in Cannock Chase (though the werewolf sightings are only a small part of the weirdness going on in that case) – Do Werewolves Roam the Woods of England?

But quite possibly nothing compares with the incredible wave of wolfish-weirdness that has recently descended upon Britain’s Cannock Chase – a large area of forest land in central England, and a location that has become a veritable hotbed for encounters with big cats, ghostly black dogs, Bigfoot-like entities, and now werewolves.

. . .

On April 26, 2007, the Stafford Post newspaper (which covers the area in question) stated the following: “A rash of sightings of a ‘werewolf’ type creature prowling around the outskirts of Stafford have prompted a respected Midlands paranormal group to investigate. West Midlands Ghost Club says they have been contacted by a number of shocked residents who saw what they claimed to be a `hairy wolf-type creature’ walking on its hind legs around the German War Cemetery, just off Camp Road, in between Stafford and Cannock. Several of them claim the creature sprang up on its hind legs and ran into the nearby bushes when it was spotted.”

The second is a case that has been going on since the 1980′s – The Beast of Bray Road:

the story first came to light around the beginning of the last decade; that something big, hairy and wolfish roams the country roads and woods of Walworth, Jefferson and Racine Counties. The first witnesses to come forward publicly saw the creature on or near Bray Road, a few miles outside of Elkhorn, Wisconsin, and so it became tagged, “The Beast of Bray Road.” I happened to be the reporter who broke the story while working as staff writer and artist for a Delavan-based newspaper, The Week, and the beast has followed me ever since. Not bodily (I hope) but in terms of media and in people’s undying interest in the stories.

I’ve been able to document at least seventy similar sightings, spanning the years 1936 to just a few months ago. . .

(Image by Seramis)

Mermaid Sightings

Posted by KirkUltra7 on July 7th, 2009

(Image by Efira-Japan)

Modern Merbeings

16-year old Cleo Rosin had gone to her mother to the Zambezi River in order to collect some drinking water. When they arrived at the river there was a canoe anchored along the bank, and Cleo climbed inside in an adventurous way. When she sat down, she noticed that there was a small round island in the middle of the river, which was especially wide at this point. And sitting on the island, near its edge, with her lower body partially in the water, was a particularly beautiful woman with long black hair. To Cleo’s surprise, the woman was naked and she was white. At this stage, Cleo’s mother was still filling the buckets with water. She called out to her mother: “Mommy, just look at that woman over there.” Her mother looked up and said, “Sh…Sh…you’d better keep quiet.” And then she added, “Look away.” But Cleo had already seen the bottom part of the woman’s body and it was like a fish and the woman was looking directly at them. But as her mother advised, Cleo looked away, and when she looked up again, the woman was gone. Her mother told her not to tell anyone about the encounter or else the “mermaid” would return and take her.

. . .

Eric de Bisschop was re-enacting an ancient voyage from Tahiti to Chile in a replica of an old Polynesian raft. In his book, “Tahiti Nui” he claims one of his sailors saw a mermaid jump onto the deck. It stood upright on its tail and had hair like fine seaweed. The sailor tried to touch it and got punched. The creature then jumped overboard.

. . .

B. Borovikov was hunting sharks in the area and on that particular day had descended to a depth of eight meters. He then saw giant beings rising up from below. He described them as milky white, but with humanoid faces, and something like fish tails. The being ahead of its companions noticed Borovikov, and stopped. It had giant bulging eyes. Two others joined him. The first one waved a membrane hand at the diver, and then all of them approached him and stopped a short distance away. Then they turned around and swam away.

Varieties of Merfolk

[I]f you pay attention some “trends” seem to appear. The sightings can be roughly grouped in 5 broad categories (I’m not including beings like the Thetis Lake Monster). The first 3 concern human-like entities from the navel up, with some sort of tail and no posterior limbs, such as:

- Classic mermaids and mermen with scaled fish-tails (see John M’Isaac report, 1811, Benbecula Merchild report, 1833, others.).

- Merbeings with long fish-tails, exhibiting some serpentine or eel-like qualities —it is hinted that the ones able to stand upright on their tails probably belong to this category; they are eerily reminiscent of nagas—. Some accounts also mention seaweed or ribbon-like substances sprouting of their heads (see Reynolds report, 1782; de Bischopp report, 1957, Australian Yawkyawk legend??).

- Scaless mermen and mermaids often depicted with dolphin or porpoise-like tails (Henry Hudson report, 1608, mene mamma, Portgordon Report, 1814, Morotai mermaids).

. . .

The last 2 categories of merbeings:

- Assorted merbeings with fish-tails and four limbs (Exeter merman, 1737; Runan Shah?).

- Assorted animalistic creatures with arms and fish-like tails, but with monkey, fish or seal-like faces (Yell mermaid, Exmouth Mermaid). These ones are too many to describe.

Here’s the Exmouth account. . .

Read more. . .

And here is an earlier Electric Children article on the subject – The Living Mermaid

(A mermaid from 2003′s Peter Pan)

The Elephants Love the Hotel

Posted by KirkUltra7 on June 1st, 2009

Elephants March through Hotel Lobby Built on Migration Trail

Mfuwe Lodge in Zambia happens to have been built next to a mango tree that one family of pachyderms have always visited when the fruit ripens.

When they returned one year and found the luxury accommodation in the way, they simply walked through reception.

Now the family group, headed by matriarch Wonky Tusk, return every November to gorge on mangos – up to four times a day.

Andy Hogg, 44, director at the Bushcamp Company that runs the Lodge, has lived in South Luangwa National Park since 1982.

But in all his years of dealing with wild animals he has never seen such intimate interaction between man and beast.

‘This is the only place in the world where elephants freely get so close to humans.

A little more elephant news for you:

The Elephants Come to Tea

The Elephant’s Aquatic Ancestor

Unusually Peaceful Pygmy Elephants Thought to be Extinct Found Living in Borneo

See also:

Dinosaurs with Trunks

Gef the Talking Mongoose

Posted by KirkUltra7 on May 18th, 2009

I discovered Gef the Talking Mongoose while looking for tulpas on Facebook. Clearly his story was too fantastic, I had to write a link to it.

Gef the Talking Mongoose on Facebook


“I am a freak. I have hands and I have feet, and if you saw me you’d faint, you’d be petrified, mummified, turned into stone or a pillar of salt.” (Gef the talking Mongoose)

During the early 1930′s, a family living in a remote farmhouse on the Isle of Man claimed multiple encounters with an elusive 79-yr-old talking mongoose named Gef.

Gef was investigated by the two leading psychic researchers of the era – Harry Price and Nandor Fodor – neither of whom were able to draw any definitive conclusions about the case.

Whether cryptid or poltergeist, tulpa or hoax, Gef was undeniably one thing – utterly unique. Let us join together to celebrate the wit and wisdom of this archetypal trickster!

Gef- The Eighth Wonder of the World

Who – or what – was Gef the talking mongoose? Was he merely “a little extra, extra clever mongoose” as he once claimed? Or was he – as he claimed on another occasion – truly “the eighth wonder of the world”?

Some think Gef was a poltergeist. Some think he was a demonic spirit. And then again, some think he was no more than a bizarre Folie à Deux created by a lonely adolescent girl and her father.

Whatever Gef was, he deserves his place in the Fortean pantheon of immortal tricksters. For above all, he was a bringer of mischief and mirth – a challenge to authority and a subverter of mundanity.

“If you knew what I know, you’d know a hell of a lot,” Gef once remarked. Amen to that.

The Quotable Gef

“I am not a spirit. I am a little extra, extra clever mongoose.”

“I am a ghost in the form of a weasel, and I shall haunt you with weird noises and clanking chains.”

“I’ll split the atom! I am the fifth dimension! I am the eighth wonder of the world!”

From a discussion on the Facebook group

I’ve just read a good page about
Hinzelmann, a sort of house spirit that haunted a household in Germany in 1582. The page is here.

Occasionally, Hinzelmann would take the form of a black marten and boast that no one could catch him. I also offer these two quotes for comparison:

Hinzelmann:

“If thou here wilt let me stay,
Good luck shalt thou have alway;
But if hence thou wilt me chase,
Luck will ne’er come near the place.”

Gef: “If you are kind to me, I will bring you good luck. If you are not kind, I shall kill all your poultry. I can get them wherever you put them!”

I wonder if this kind of behavior is M.O. for ermine house spirits.

From Gef the Talking Mongoose’s entry on Wikipedia

Voirrey Irving, who took Gef under her wing, died in 2005. In an interview published late in life, she maintained that Gef was not her creation.

And something I discovered while researching Gef – Hoover the Talking Seal

Hoover (1971? — July 25, 1985) was a harbor seal who was able to imitate basic human speech.

Hoover was an orphan when he was found by George and Alice Swallow in Maine in 1971. George and Alice decided to take him home. At first the baby seal didn’t want to eat, but soon he ate at the pace of a vacuum cleaner (hence his name). When Hoover outgrew the bathtub, he was transferred to the pond outside their house where he began to imitate people’s voices. Again he was moved, this time to the New England Aquarium, where he told visitors to “Get outta here!” in a thick New England accent.

Thanks to this, he became famous, and appeared in publications like Reader’s Digest and The New Yorker and television programs like Good Morning America.

Where’s your precious science now?