Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: article on BF museum
Bigfoot Forums > Bigfoot/Sasquatch Discussion > Media > News & Magazine Articles
tugboatwa
http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/news/10454441.htm
QUOTE
Bigfoot museum a fresh look at mysterious 'creature'


By DAVID L. BECK - San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.)

SAN JOSE, Calif. - To a nation fed on checkout-line tabloids, "Bigfoot" and "hoax" go together like chips and dip. Mike Rugg, the proprieter of a Bigfoot museum in Felton, Calif., respectfully - well, somewhat respectfully - disagrees.

"People are sent to death on less evidence than we have for Bigfoot," Rugg said.

His Felton museum opened its doors in July and is still in what Rugg calls "the analog version" of what he hopes it will be: a genuine old-fashioned roadside attraction, of the kind Rugg believes thrived before they were "put down by the Planning Department." It's a little red-painted house and assorted outbuildings on Highway 9, just down the road from the entrance to Henry Cowell Redwood State Park.

While the evidence for Bigfoot's existence is almost exclusively anecdotal, believers and even some who claim to be neutral on the issue, cite the sheer consistency of hundreds of sightings, eerie shrieks in the woods and casts of huge footprints. Even primatologist Jane Goodall has said she wouldn't be surprised if an undiscovered primate like Bigfoot exists.

Bigfoot is a Humboldt Times reporter's word, circa 1957, for the big hairy biped whose most frequent California sightings have been in that Northern California county. Sasquatch, the preferred name in some circles, is a North Coast Indian word for the barely glimpsed creature; Rugg says most Native American languages have a word for such a creature.

If he exists, he probably strode across the prehistoric land bridge between Siberia and Alaska about 13,000 years ago, says Arizona zoologist J. Richard Greenwell. An adult male is reckoned to be as tall as 8 feet and as heavy as 800 pounds, measurements deduced from strides and footprints, of which even Rugg's little museum has a few casts.

Rugg has collected enough facts to confirm his boyhood belief that Bigfoot exists, and roamed - indeed, may still be roaming - the Santa Cruz Mountains. But he understands the connection to Godzilla in the popular imagination.

Almost the first thing you see at Rugg's Museum is a collection of tabloids, many of them from the gifted writers at the Weekly World News: "I WAS BIGFOOT'S LOVE SLAVE," reads one.

"Anybody that's working on a documentary about Bigfoot goes out and buys a gorilla suit," says Rugg. "That's what I'd do, too."

If you somehow miss the big new sign - CapriTaurus' Bigfoot Discovery Museum - Art Gallery - Gift Shop - outside the museum, look for the little Bigfoot sculpture chained to the front railing, or the big one still in progress alongside.

Artist, musician, computer guy and lifelong Bigfoot buff, Rugg, 58, is a round, gray-bearded man who was laid off from his graphics job two years ago and is now happily devoted to his obsession.

He's got a digital copy of the 1967 Patterson-Gimlin film - 60 seconds of Bigfoot bliss for aficionados, sheer hokum for nonbelievers; some books for sale and lots more just for research; a collection of taped sounds; plenty of stills from "Harry and the Hendersons," a jokey 1987 Bigfoot movie starring John Lithgow as Henderson; maps with colored pins representing local Bigfoot sightings; and a huge blurry blowup of the most famous still from the Patterson-Gimlin film, on which he defies visitors to find a zipper.

Rugg is an Oakland, Calif., native whose family moved to Felton when he was 13. By then he'd been fascinated by Bigfoot for about eight years.

As an art major at Stanford, he crafted a course of study that would have led to a second major in paleoanthropology. But he dropped out in disgust after he wrote a paper, "A History and Discussion of the American Sasquatch Question," for Prof. Bert A. Gerow's anthropology class and got a C on it with the comment, "This is still in the realm of UFO."

He's still got the paper in its blue binder. "My badge of courage," he calls it.

Apres-Stanford, he set up an art studio on Highway 9 next to the woodworking studio of his brother Howard Rugg. They merged, forming CapriTaurus (Howard's the Capricorn) and began turning out a line of mountain dulcimers.

"I was the front man," he says. "I did the fairs. You can't play every song you can think of for hours" behind a counter at the Renaissance Faire "and not get pretty good." Rugg says "Bigfoot" is both singular and plural, like "moose," although in conversation he uses "Bigfoots," as in "Bigfoots come in all sizes."

This last is in reference to Homo floresiensis, the 3-foot-tall hominid whose skeleton was recently found on a remote Indonesian island. Rugg argues that that discovery makes a convincing case for Bigfoot and other so-called "cryptids" - that is, to quote TheFreeDictionary.com, "rumored or mythological animals that are presumed to exist, but for which conclusive proof does not yet exist; or are generally considered extinct, but occasionally reported."

"Now," says Rugg, "we have bones!"

Bigfoot may be related to or descended from gigantopithecus, a huge prehistoric Chinese ape. But Rugg believes he's more advanced - "smarter than a chimp, which are supposedly the most intelligent of the great apes," he says. It's not clear whether Bigfoots have language - authorities such as Greenwell say they do not - but Rugg believes they are excellent mimics.

"If you hear a night owl where there shouldn't be one, it could be a Bigfoot," he says.

Since his museum opened its doors, many locals have told him stories of Bigfoots seen and heard, such as the man who spotted one - actually his horse saw it first, according to Rugg - atop the sand quarry near Felton. Greenwell said his group recently did a statistical analysis of 1,400 sightings and found "tremendous consistency ... just really quite impressive," although he is careful to note that patterns of alleged behavior are not proof of existence.

"There's just no reason why all these things can't exist," says Rugg. "There's just a vast wilderness out there where these things can easily hide."

IF YOU'RE INTERESTED

The Bigfoot Museum is at 5497 Highway 9, just south of Felton. It's open Wednesday-Friday from 1 to 6 p.m., weekends from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Call (831) 335-4478 or see http://www.bigfootdiscoveryproject.com .
BigfootDad
Thanks for posting the article, TugboatWA!! new_thumbsupsmileyanim.gif
(and thank you, ecwool, for sending it around last week....I missed it on Sunday and resorted to copying it from the periodical section of our local library!! thanks for the "heads-up", Craig!!)

The article had some nice photos accompanying it...although the reporter's angle was abit "tongue-in-cheek". new_tonguesmiley.gif
It was a big boost in the "publicity department" for the museum and that's great!

Here's a photo I took there during the summer....
Wildman
A cool place, without a doubt! And not just because it is only a mile or so from my house! A must-see for anyone coming through the Santa Cruz, CA area. thumbup.gif
sierramadre
Next time I am in the area I will drop in. Probably next month.
Wildman
QUOTE(sierramadre @ Dec 24 2004, 01:12 AM)
Next time I am in the area I will drop in. Probably next month.

Thanks for the warning! ph34r.gif laugh.gif
sierramadre
No problem..anytime....LOL icon_really_happy_guy.gif
tugboatwa
Two more newspapers have picked up the story - The Kansas City Star and The Seattle Times.
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.