Michigan Bigfoot Expedition Update

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on July 14th, 2007

Believers hear Bigfoot’s howl

50 who paid $300 each to prowl U.P. woods for the beast weren’t disappointed.

MARQUETTE, Mich. — In the middle of the night, a group tried to lure an elusive beast from its lair deep in the woods.

A man banged on a tree with a stick. Another beat his chest, Tarzan-like. Another uttered deep guttural screams.

And then, seconds after the last yell, from the blackness surrounding them, came a low-pitched howl that made the searchers shiver:

“Aaaaiiiieeeeeee.”

Bigfoot!

The searchers not only believe the legendary mannish ape is frolicking through the forest east of this Upper Peninsula community, but also captured its mournful yelp on tape Thursday night.

The Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization, a California group running the search, will add the audio recording to what it said are footprints, sightings and other mounting evidence from past expeditions.

“I’m not a believer. I’m a knower,” said the group’s president, Matt Moneymaker. “You’ve had to be in total denial to say that none exist.”

At the very least, the big ape is a big draw.

About 50 people from the Midwest gladly forked over $300 to join the four-day Michigan search that ends Sunday. It was sold out, as are expeditions planned for Utah and New Mexico.

The paying investigators say the cost is small compared to the chance of spotting a legend.

They’re among the legion of true believers whose views are bolstered by a growing number of Internet sites reporting sightings and some prominent academics who won’t rule out the possibility that the beast exists.

Don Young, 43, a hunting and fishing guide from Phillips, Wis., said he has wanted to prove the existence of Bigfoot ever since spotting one near his home a second time in 2004.

“It’s a need,” he said. “There’s a need for me to prove it.”

Since the last sighting, he has devoted 60 hours a week looking for the beast.

Why the U.P.?

Why the Upper Peninsula? Why not?

Once relegated to supermarket tabloids and the Pacific Northwest, Bigfoot or Sasquatch has been turning up everywhere lately: the cornfields of the Midwest, the swamps of Florida, the piedmont of North Carolina.

The ultimate loner, it was just a matter of time before it discovered the remote wilds of the U.P., where residents live far from each other and like it that way.

Still, some residents are dubious.

“Bigfoot?” laughed Toni Peake, 34, who lives near the woods being searched by the group. “Is he single?”

Local officials were tickled pink to host the search.

The Convention and Visitors Bureau of Marquette County, which has been getting calls from out-of-towners about the quest, said the monster could draw tourists to the area.

Director Pat Black said downstate residents probably aren’t surprised to learn that Bigfoot toils in the U.P.

“We’re the place that has psychic moose,” she joked.

According to Moneymaker, who has been studying Bigfoot for decades, Marquette County’s newest denizen could be 11 feet tall, weigh 2,000 pounds and have feet that reach 20 inches.

It’s shy, nocturnal, eats meat and plants, and makes nests from trees and brush, he said.

He believes there are thousands of Bigfoots (Bigfeet?) roaming the Earth.

Other searchers, like Erik Beckjord of Berkeley, Calif., believe it’s an extraterrestrial.

“It is more of a space-time creature, ala Einstein and parallel universes, rather than a trappable being,” he said.

Whatever its size, number or universe, the primate has held a primal allure that spans oceans and centuries.

Since the 1800s, places as disparate as Australia and Tibet have worried about being attacked by some type of mammoth creature under various rubrics, Yeti, Yowie, the Abominable Snowman.

Even today, a handful of anthropologists and zoologists, such as Jane Goodall, said it’s possible such a beast is roaming the Earth.

Preparing to search

Stalking a ghost, even a big, hairy, smelly one, takes preparation.

On Thursday, Moneymaker talked to four residents who claimed to have seen Bigfoot locally over the past 40 years.

“My one brother thinks I’m nuts,” said Kathy Morrison, 40, a Big Bay resident who said she saw the creature nearly 30 years ago.

“She believes in ghosts,” interrupted her son, Joey.

After learning the locations of the encounters, Moneymaker used a topographical map to figure out the best place to listen to the beast’s “echoing vocalizations.”

A few searchers ventured into the woods to look for tracks, scat, nests, any signs of what they call Squatch.

They studied the terrain to learn what type of habitat it most enjoys, but discounted the significance of a nearby casino and golf course.

At night, the searchers broke into groups of three to five at an RV park and campground along Lake Superior.

The 50 attendees are mostly middle-aged men from neighboring states whose jobs range from teachers to computer programmers to a lawyer.

Half are first-timers, while some have gone on a half-dozen expeditions.

Larry Lacke, 53, a chemist for a Milwaukee brewery, said he has been curious about Bigfoot ever since hearing a bizarre howling on a Texas hunting trip seven years ago.

“I’ve heard a lot of animals but none like this,” he said. “I’m trying to keep an open mind.”

The smaller groups moved gingerly through the blackness. Approaching a targeted area from different angles, they communicated through walkie-talkies with ear pieces.

They lugged all types of high-tech equipment: night-vision goggles, motion-detective devices, digital audio recorders and a helmet-mounted thermal-imaging camcorder.

Before capturing Sasquatch on tape, however, the searchers needed to lure it toward them.

They banged on trees with sticks and emitted long howls, trying to pique what Moneymaker said is the creature’s innate curiosity.

They also spread various types of bait on rocks: apples, sardines, licorice, even gorilla pheromones.

“We’ve laid out entire banquets before,” Moneymaker said.

The searchers seemed eager to believe that any incident was a sign that Bigfoot was among them.

After hearing the low-pitched howl Thursday night, they quickly dismissed the possibility that it came from an owl or coyote.

The next night, a searcher driving to camp said his car was struck by a bitten shrewmouse. When he got out to investigate, he saw the silhouette of something that quickly disappeared.

Bigfoot again!

By 2 a.m., most searchers called it a night and headed back to base camp. But not Don Young. The Wisconsin hunting guide pitched a tent in the middle of the woods to await what he believes will be another encounter with American folklore.

“People laughed at me, called my wife Mrs. Sasquatch,” he said. “That’s why I want to prove it. Then I can laugh at them.”Francis X. Donnelly
The Detroit News

To read daily updates from the expedition, you can read Fox News journalist Griff Jenkins live blog from the expedition at Griff’s Notes.

Griff was finally allowed to tag along on the expedition as noted previously here on Cryptomundo by Loren at BFRO: “Come Along With Us” For $300*

About Craig Woolheater
Co-founder of Cryptomundo in 2005. I have appeared in or contributed to the following TV programs, documentaries and films: OLN's Mysterious Encounters: "Caddo Critter", Southern Fried Bigfoot, Travel Channel's Weird Travels: "Bigfoot", History Channel's MonsterQuest: "Swamp Stalker", The Wild Man of the Navidad, Destination America's Monsters and Mysteries in America: Texas Terror - Lake Worth Monster, Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot: Return to Boggy Creek and Beast of the Bayou.


10 Responses to “Michigan Bigfoot Expedition Update”

  1. calash responds:

    I am aware of but don’t know the details of the politics involved with the BFRO.
    From my internet visits to their site it seems that they have tried to maintain a high quality sightings report data base.
    There is an old saying “If you want less of something tax it , More of something subsidize it. “$15,000 in gross fees to have an expedition with 50 people seems to be a good incentive to keep these going. I only hope that they maintain high standards regarding proof or encounters. Any fakery will kill creditability forever
    It’s just a matter of time before the world is amazed and believers are vindicated.
    It will surely be a different world when the “Legitimate”( I hate that word in this context) scientific community takes up the pursuit and study.
    Regards

  2. gridbug responds:

    After being blatantly ridiculed on Faux News, why would Moneymaker agree to allow one of their “journalists” on the expedition?!

  3. ddh1969 responds:

    gridbug,

    Probably because when everything you do and stand for is called into question and ridiculed on national televison he/they felt it the best thing to do for the cause. Challenge the critics and the naysayers.

    Personally, I don’t like the entire situation. When one agrees to go on national television to discuss, of all things, bigfoot research, you KNOW you are opening yourself up to mockery. To save face he is almost forced to do this or something like it. Where he expects this to lead or what exactly he thinks he will prove, I have no idea. As for the ‘why’ I pretty much get it.

  4. bill green responds:

    hey craig & everyone wow great new update article about the bfro resent michigan expedition. i hope they do find possible evidence & activity etc. good afternoon bill green wow i realy like the pithy above replys as well. 🙂

  5. proriter responds:

    Eleven feet tall and 2000 pounds. And they call Illinois the Sucker State!

  6. swnoel responds:

    As I sit hear and read responses, I amaze at the hostilities toward those that attempt to capitalize on this enigma.

    It seems to me that the success of the BFRO expedition is an example. 50 people at $300 each equals a $15,000 windfall. I don’t think anyone is being taken advantage of, it’s just what the people who believe in BF want. Give the people what they want!!!!

    I equate this with Walt Disney building his empire of fantasy , he built it and the people came!

    Moneymaker, Biscardi, and many more, and yes Loren… all are making money from this enigma.

    I see nothing wrong with any of them attempting to succeed in making a living and at the same time getting the public excited and making them informed about the possibility of a real animal, even though I may not always agree with some of their methods.

    Unless I’m missing something, I can only assume there is currently no real scientific investigating in regards to the BF phenomena by any governmental agency.

    And for that matter, that’s where these expeditions become, for the most part, the only real attempt to locate and prove the existence of this animal.

    I don’t know about the rest of you, but I certainly wish them all the best of luck with their endeavors and hope just maybe one of those expeditions may prove the existence of BF.

    Even if it doesn’t, the excitement of just the possibility will keep BF alive.

  7. mystery_man responds:

    While I am skeptical of the BFRO’s scientific methods, I so have to admit it is better to have some motivated people out there looking. I don’t like the idea of groups of weekend warriors going out looking, but It has been brought up on Cryptomundo before that there is a good chance that sasquatch will not be discovered by any scientific team, but rather by an amateur hunter or hiker, maybe even someone that wasn’t even looking for cryptids. So I guess having a bunch of well equipped, enthusiastic amateurs out there looking on one of these expeditions is basically a good thing. While my stance on the BFRO has been somewhat harsh lately, I have to say that the end goal is to prove the existence of this creature, so if their methods work and they are the ones to find a live sasquatch or even stumble across a carcass of one, then more power to them. I don’t agree with charging people, but I suppose it isn’t like there are scientific grants going into Bigfoot research. I’d like to see more teams of real scientists out there looking, but that isn’t happening to any great extent, so we have to work with what we got.

    By the way, swnoel, Loren has made it very clear many times before that he isn’t exactly raking in cash doing what he does. For most people, this is not a field to be in if being rich is your goal. And let’s also remember that I’m sure that for every huckster like Biscardi out there making the big bucks off his antics, there is another serious researcher holding down a day job, paying for his research out of his or her own pocket.

  8. swnoel responds:

    MM I don’t doubt Loren isn’t getting rich off his books, etc., nor do I think Biscardi is.

    All I was attempting to exchange, is the fact that it requires money to get into the field with the proper equipment.

    Especially if your objective is to prove BF exists.

    What better way to get the $$$ … get BF believers excited enough to cough up what you need.

    Main stream science is not interested in this enigma, so I say let the amateurs get it done, and if they make a few bucks in the process so be it.

  9. bill green responds:

    hey loren & craig i was just at griff blog he was mentioning his news segment about the resent bfro michigan bigfoot expedition will be on fox & friends on fox news channel today around 835am or sooner it should be interesting indeed. lets keep are fingers crossed lol on this new interview. until then patients is a definety a opinions. thanks bill green 🙂

  10. tapper responds:

    $15K was generated from this expedition alone? Now we know why he changed his name to Moneymaker. Cha-Ching!!

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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