Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Bigfoot "Trap"
Bigfoot Forums > Bigfoot/Sasquatch Discussion > Media
tugboatwa
http://www.jacksonvilleoregonnews.com/arti...208110&cp=10989
QUOTE
[SIZE=7][/SIZE]Southern Oregon Bigfoot Lore
E-Mail a Friend
Voice Your Opinion
Order Printed Copies

By Jane Sauls
Staff Writer / SouthernOregonNews.com

While tales about the legendary Bigfoot are scattered around the world, southern Oregon has its very own claim to fame thanks to a decades-old Bigfoot Trap nestled within the Applegate Ranger District of the Rogue River National Forest.

As primitive as it may sound, the giant contraption was built only in the early 1970s as an attempt by some locals to validate the elusive creature's existence as well, allegedly, as to spare them its wrath.

The one-of-a-kind trap has waited decades for a furry creature with 18-inch feet and a larger than life shadow, outlasting many of the men who built it.

The trap was constructed, according to forest service records, when a short-lived group dubbed the North American Wildlife Research firm applied for a special use permit in the early 1970s.

It stands today, almost-but-not-quite as solid as the day it was built, measuring 10x10-square-feet and of heavy wood slats and reinforced steel bolts and plats, anchored to huge lumber pillars.

Former Applegate resident Sharon B. remembers vividly an uncle who could not let tales of the eight-foot monster fade away.

"My uncle was convinced to the day he died that Bigfoot existed and that he smelt him once when he was out hunting deer," she said.

"Did he? Who knows. Some folks think its kinda fun to believe, but some were more passionate than others, God rest their souls."

The now Medford nurses aid recalls being told she could not go on a camping trip with a group of friends in the Applegate as a teenage for fear Sasquatch may strike.

"Everyone had a friend of a friend who swore they'd heard proof he was real... a friend of a friend had seen a footprint, smelt something, heard noises in the woods. I thought it was pretty ridiculous as a teenager. Thirty years later, it borders somewhere between that and a little creepy."

Jeff LaLand, historian for the Rogue River National Forest, said interest had hardly faded in the trap that never seemed to net its eight-foot tall target. Interest in the trap, he pointed out, seemed to outlast interest from those obsessed with Bigfoot's capture.

"They were granted permission to build this thing in early 70s. They would hang a deer carcass or something real stinky and the critter was supposed to go in after it and when he pulled it the trap would come down and set off an alarm," LaLand explained.

"I think they might of caught a bear at some time. The thing was in operation for just a few years then they didn't renew their special use permit. I think the whole thing kind of went belly up."

LaLand said the trap's construction was nothing to scoff at.

"The trap has remained all this time. It's built very, very solid with creosoted planks and posts... these people were evidently sincere in what they were trying to accomplish," he added.

"After almost 40 years or so of Bigfoot lore, the more information that comes out, the more indication that all this Bigfoot stuff was, well... the film, the footprints, maybe they all were hoaxes. It's too bad I guess not to have that little bit of mystery out there. We have it up there on the trail because it's just a nifty thing, kind of an interesting little symbol of southern Oregon history."

To get to the legendary Bigfoot trap, Take Highway 238 from Jacksonville onto Upper Applegate Road towards the Applegate Dam. A pull-off along the right side of the side the road is used for parking. Hike just over a half mile to an abandoned miner's claim and follow a dirt trail to the 1974 structure.

You might not find any large hairy creatures, but it makes for a nice afternoon drive, gorgeous countryside and some interesting southern Oregon history.

Bigfoot sites:

Oregon Bigfoot Sightings and other news from around the state and country - http://www.oregonbigfoot.com/index.php

http://www.n2.net/prey/bigfoot/ - an independent site with scientific information on the creature himself

Bigfoot, Fact or Fantasy? http://www.rfthomas.clara.net/bigfoot.html

The Museum of UnNatural Mystery and its take on Sasquatch - http://www.unmuseum.org/bigfoot.htm
belleoftheball
Too bad it didn't work! sad.gif
A must see sight. Will add to my long list of things toooooooooo seeeeeeeeeeee!


Belle
Kimble
I remember this trap...well, not personally. There is a photo of it in Marian T. Place's On the Track of Bigfoot c1972,1978. The photo is credited to the Medford Mail Tribune, Medford Oregon.

Place attributes the trap to Ron Olson, a later associate of Roger Patterson. Apparently, Olson came upon the miner mentioned in the article above. The old miner said he'd seen Bigfoots several times in the area. When the miner died (?) Olson hired someone to live in the cabin and then built the trap.

It's 5:30 am, Eastern and I'm on my way to work. If people can hang on, I'll quote the passage in the book tonight. I also have some information on what became of Olson.

Kimble
moregon
I thought I had posted pictures of the trap on this board before, maybe I hadn't. The trap remained active until 1980, when the group stopped paying their annual permit fee of $20.00 about the same time the group disbanded. At that time the Forestry Department went in and bolted the door open to make it inoperative so that no wandering hiker or animal would get caught in it by accident. In my own personal opinion, although the sides are well constructed, the roof timbers are fairly thin, and I think even I could force my way through the roof if the need arose, so I doubt it would have ever held a bigfoot for long.

QUOTE
To get to the legendary Bigfoot trap, Take Highway 238 from Jacksonville onto Upper Applegate Road towards the Applegate Dam. A pull-off along the right side of the side the road is used for parking. Hike just over a half mile to an abandoned miner's claim and follow a dirt trail to the 1974 structure.


Those directions are not accurate and too vague to get you to the trap. Take Highway 238 heading WEST from Jacksonville, until you come to the small town of Ruch. Turn left onto (I believe the sign says Applegate Road, not Upper Applegate Road). The road is directly across the road from the shopping center. Ruch Grocery is in this little shopping center, and if you're not sure, just stop in and someone will point you in the right direction. There is also a little Tourist Information Center on the SW corner of this intersection. Make sure to watch your signs, as there are a few turn-offs that could confuse you. stay on Applegate Road, it follows the river all the way to the park. When you pass the dam on the left, about 1/2 mile further you'll come to the Hart-Tish Picnic Grounds on your left this is where you want to park. Across the road is 2 trailheads, the one you want is to the left and called Collings Mountain Trail. The trail starts out with switchbacks to the valley floor, then you start a long moderate climb of about 1/2 mile in length. Here you should see the collapsed cabin of the Collings Brothers, gold miners from the mid 1800's on the right side of the path. Keep following the path until you come to the dirt path that cuts off to the left, and you'll see the trap further up the hill.

When standing at the trap, and looking down onto the valley floor, you will see a seasonal creek, which keeps pools of water most of the year where springs flow into it. If you head down to the creek, and turn to your left following the creek for about another 1/4 mile, this is where I found my first track in a pile of creek gravel. The reason why the trap was built here was it was an area where a number of sightings had been reported to the rangers by hikers. Some of the locals who still remember the trap, said that a local college was also involved in it's construction with a number of students participating. My guess is that it would have been Southern Oregon University located in Ashland, OR, but have not been able to verify that information. Don't waste your time stopping at any tourist info stand to find it's location, when I did after first hearing about it, they looked at me like I was nuts. I found it after doing a lot of online research into old newspaper articles etc, and finally came across it's exact location at an obscure online site about hiking trails in Oregon.

It's not a real rugged hike, but as I said it is all uphill, so take your time and most people should be able to do it with no problem.
moregon
I did a search and found the post I did regarding the trap pics, and found I had posted a link to a now defunct web site. Here's a couple more pics of the trap I took.
moregon
This is the view you'll have of the trap as you come up the dirt path...
bigstinkyfoot
Nice pics. thanks, Tugboatwa and Moregon. I would love to see it, next time I am in Oregon. I. also, would be less than 100% certain that a wooden box would be able to contain a creature as strong as he (BF) is supposed to be for long. It would have to be very stoutly constructed, with no weak points (as the roof).
Enkidu
I'm almost of the opinion that BF is too smart to fall for a trap of this nature. If a chimp or kid wouldn't fall for it, BF wouldn't either.

I really can't think of any reason other than curiousity that a BF would enter this trap anyway. No bait, it's small, has no value as a den greater than what would be available elsewhere in a pine forest, and it reeks of man. I know there are stories of BF habitating in abandoned barns and houses, but this trap doesn't even have the attraction of those.

I'm really suprised they didn't catch a bear with it though.
The QuatchWatcher
Thanks guys for the info...

Next time I'm down there, I will CHECK THAT OUT!

-TQW
new_thumbsupsmileyanim.gif
Kimble
Here is the exceprt I promised:

Place, Marian T. On the track of Bigfoot. New York: Archway paperback. 1972,1978 pages 119-121.

"By this time Roger Patterson had a new associate named Ron Olson because Bob Gimlin could no longer all his energies to the search. Ron Olson was working as a film distributer at the time the Patterson film appeared on the market, and offered to assist him in arranging exhibition dates. As Gimlin withdrew, Olson took hisplace in the actual performances. But this activity ground to a halt when Patterson became ill with cancer and died in 1972. Then, with the consent of Patterson's family, Ron Olson moved the non profit organization headquarters to Eugene, Oregon, and continued its activities under the name of the North American Wildlife Research Association. Six months of each year he travels about, showing the film on Bigfoot. Proceeds from this finance the field expeditions which he and others carry on the remaining months of the year.

"While prowling the wilderness areas of south-western Oregon, Olson stumbled onto the cabin of a recluse, and old man, a gold miner, who lived alone for fifty years. He asked the much-repeated question: had the man ever seen any big hairy creatures in the forest?

"He certainly had, the old-timer answered positively. He pointed across a shallow canyon to a grassy clearing on the far side. Right there, he stated. The creatures, a family group, used to stand there and watch him work about his place. They never bothered him, nor came closer. In turn, he left them alone. He didn't like company anyhow, human or monster. Olson took the hint, and after a diligent search of the area, went on his way. But he kpet the place and the conversation in mind, even though months passed before he returned to talk further with the hermit. Unfortunately, by this time the old man had died. So Olson hired another person to live in the cabin, to follow the same daily routine as the former occupant, and to check on electronic sensing devices installed shortly after. Then Olson constructed a strong boxlike trap equipped with a steel-barred gate. For the frame he used poles seven inches in diameter, sinking them three feet deep in the ground, and used 2 x 12 inch planking for the walls. he hung strong smelling bait from the ceiling to attract the creatures, so that the moment one of them stepped over the threshold, the gate would drop swiftly. Olson also posted a sign on the trap, warning visitors to stay away. Although the caretaker, armed onlywith a camera and tranquilizer gun, checks the trap regularly, so far he has seen no footprints near the trap nor found a monster trapped behind the bars. Olson is not discouraged because he feels that the creatures must first get used to the new man's presence and scent, as well as the sight of the trap. He is confident that sooner or later Bigfoot will be lured into it."

I've read that Olson now lives in Oregon and makes a lving as a small business man. He has no interest in Bigfoot any more.

Kimble
Huntster
QUOTE(Enkidu @ Aug 17 2004, 08:32 AM)
I'm almost of the opinion that BF is too smart to fall for a trap of this nature. If a chimp or kid wouldn't fall for it, BF wouldn't either.

Even though humans are collectively smart enough to land their own kind on the moon, I am relatively sure that there are many of our species who could easily be caught in that very trap (and even if you had an emergency release latch prominently labelled inside the trap, wouldn't be capable of extricating themselves).
Enkidu
^ T R U E

Thus, the evolution of the Chinese finger cuff ...
winston
moregon - when did you see those tracks? I saw a few indistinct but interesting tracks last spring in virtually the same place as those you just mentioned.

-winston
tugboatwa
There was another picture linked to the story in the paper... but it didn't seem to fit. After looking at it, I'm unsure as to whether the trap still stands.
damndirtyape
The last picture doesn't look like the trap pictures. The wall side boards seem to be going in the wrong direction and the shingles on the roof seem to be made for a more peaked roof. Maybe this is the miners shack?
winston
tugboatwa - that pic is of the old miner's cabin, referenced in the article and posts above. The trap is about 100 yards past the fallen cabin.

-winston
moregon
Yep, that's the Collings Brothers Cabin or what's left of it. Also in this area there are a number of mine shafts in the hills on both sides of the valley where they looked for gold, so if you do leave the trail be very careful. It's not recommended that you enter any of the shafts either as the timbers shoring them up have been in place for well over 150 years and no telling how solid they still are. You may also run into critters you'd rather not run into in the dark ie black widow spiders, rattlesnakes etc.


Winston...
The first track I mentioned I came across about 4 years ago.

Since you've been in the area, if you go across the dam, and follow that road through French Gulch you'll come to Squaw Creek that starts up at Squaw Lakes which that road will dead-end into about 12 miles further. I've come across some possible but inconclusive tracks along that creek as well. At Squaw Lakes there is a primitive campground as well, and I've talked to a number of people who were camping there that claim to have heard "Unfamiliar" sounds at night, but no visual sightings as of yet that I'm aware of.

Another place in that area I want to check, is a group of forestry roads that run off of Carberry Road at the other end of the park. If you follow them in the right sequence you will come out on the back side of the Oregon Caves, where Dr. Johnson had his 2000 sighting of Bigfoot. A lot of Wilderness between those two locations and lots of places for bigfoot to hide. I won't do it without at least 1 other 4x4 to tag along though, break down out there and it will be a long wait before someone comes along with any help. The geography of the land will also probably make cell-phones practically useless to call for help.
winston
moregon - I've had the same thought: Sightings at the Oregon Caves, a history of sightings around Applegate trap, and all that uninhabited land inbetween. But those roads are far too rugged for me and my little car...

And thank you, tugboatwa, for bringing up something that I actually had some experience with so I could finally delurk!

-winston
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2010 Invision Power Services, Inc.