William T. Cox and the Fearsome Creatures of the Lumber Woods…

William T. Cox was the first State Forester and Commissioner of Conservation for Minnesota. He worked as a forester for the United States Forest Service. In 1929 Cox even traveled to Brazil to organize the Brazilian Forest Service. But what William T. Cox is most remembered for now is a brilliant field guide he wrote back in 1910 about imaginary creatures, or cryptids as we now know them today. 

Image from Cox’s obituary page.

This field guide, with illustrations by Coert du Bois titled Fearsome Creatures of the Lumber Woods, With a few Dessert and Mountain Beasts features fictional creatures loggers would make up in their time in the deep forests. Often to haze new lumberers with. 

Some of the amazing creatures featured in this book were the hodag, and the brilliant creature, the hugag. The Hugag is described as being similar to a moose with an extensive upper-lip, preventing it from grazing, and jointless legs preventing it from lying down. 

The hugag

But not all were completely fictional some were just embellished from strange creatures actually reported such as the Hyampom Hog Bear and the Snoligoster.  Whether you’re reading about the fictional or the embellished critters here, it makes for a great read. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it again this weekend and definitely recommend it for the lovers of cryptozoology.

Have an awesome Sunday everyone!

Fearsome Creatures of the Lumber Woods

The Great Hunger and My Irish Family History…

Bahaghs Workhouse

One day a year we like to take our Irish out for a walk. We like to let everyone know we have the right to wear green, and have a few drinks. But this Irish heritage and history also has a darker side. That dark side has everything to do with why you are here in America now, enjoying that green beer (and regretting it tomorrow). Here’s my families tale…

Once upon a time my great, great grandfather John Creagh’s family lived in the Bahaghs workhouse, just outside of Cbaherciveen due to the Great Hunger or as most know it, The Irish Potato Famine (1845–1852). This was a devastating chapter in Ireland’s history, leading to mass starvation, emigration, and loss.

During this time, workhouses like the Bahaghs Workhouse in Cahirciveen, County Kerry, became grim refuges for the destitute. Built in 1844, it housed hundreds of impoverished families and the conditions were harsh and overcrowded. They functioned like a poor house and also a jail.

My great, great grandfather was born in 1847 during the famine and once had to go to court when he was young for “stealing” fish from a wealthy person’s pond.

When they made it to America in the early 1900s they changed their last name to Cray.

Caherciveen is In County Kerry, which is what my parents named me after. But it’s more than just a name, it meant they made it, we made it, and this family somehow survived and prospered. In a time when we take aim at immigrants trying everything they can to get here and have a better life, remember this. Remember that your family likely had to flee for survival, for their future. Don’t ever forget…

Happy St. Patrick’s Day…

Picture of the farm at the workhouse

My families birth certificate.

Stalking the Mysterious Skunk Ape of Florida’s Swamplands | OutdoorHub

Stalking the Mysterious Skunk Ape of Florida’s Swamplands | OutdoorHub
— Read on www.outdoorhub.com/stories/2025/03/07/stalking-mysterious-skunk-ape-floridas-swamplands/

The Holadeira Mystery

“In the 1990s, a strange creature emerged from the Brazilian Amazon Basin. Known as the Holadeira, or “sawtooth dolphin,” this cryptid was reportedly spotted by local and named the Holadeira and it even captured the attention of adventurers like Jeremy Wade.

Wade reportedly first saw the animal in 1994 about 100′ away from his boat while fishing. With its notched dorsal fin and elusive nature, some believe it was a unique species, while others think it might have been an injured Amazon river dolphin.  

Wade, after witnessing it again and being able to photograph it on his second expedition out there, confirmed it was a dolphin, perhaps mutilated by fisherman…

I was reminded of this little legend on Reddit , if you’d like to keep up with the conversation on it over there here is the link…


https://www.reddit.com/r/Cryptozoology/s/jigVL5uWnA

Have an awesome Sunday and keep your eyes open you never no what you mind find out there wandering the forests and the seas…

Bigfoot or a Neanderthal…

In the late 1960s, a Soviet historian became fascinated with reports of a giant ape-like beast roaming the mountains of Central Asia. His obsession led him to develop an elaborate theory that these sightings were not of a mysterious cryptid, but of surviving Neanderthals who had endured since the last ice age.

Born in 1905, Boris Porshnev was a Soviet historian who dedicated much of his career

to studying mainstream academic topics, like popular uprisings in 17th-century France and the Thirty Years’ War. However, his scholarly pursuits were later peppered with an unorthodox interest in cryptozoology, especially the strange reports of the so-called Almas.

For centuries, reports of the Almas have emerged from people living within the mountain system of Central and East Asia, including Mongolia, the Altai and Tian Shan Mountains, Xinjiang, Gansu and Qinghai in China, and the Tuva Republic in Siberia.

As reports continued to surface, Porshnev secured approval from the Soviet Academy of Sciences in the 1950s to formally investigate the Almas. In 1958, he led an expedition to the Pamirs of Tajikistan, accompanied by a team of folklore experts, geologists, and botanists. After collecting a load of anecdotal reports about local sightings, the commission compiled a 400-page report on the topic, concluding that the Almas was most likely real and residing in the region between the Tian Shan, Pamir, and Mongolia. 

After the expedition, Porshnev began to suggest that the Almas were, in fact, a living Neanderthal. He had flirted with the idea in previous publications, but it was most explicitly laid out in his 1974 book called L’Homme de Néanderthal est toujours vivant (French for Neanderthal Man is Still Alive), co-authored with explorer and prominent cryptozoologist Bernard Heuvelmans.

“One must say that Porshnev and I were both quite convinced of the existence of wild hairy men in the broadest and loosest sense,” Heuvelmans wrote in the intro to Porshnev’s other book, The Struggle for Troglodytes.

“However, there was a point on which we never managed to agree: I saw the Himalayan snowman as an anthropoid ape while Porshnev saw an actual human, more specifically a Neanderthal man survivor from the recent Pleistocene,” he added. Fossilized remains of the extinct hominin species have been uncovered in this part of world.

You can read more from IFL Science’s article Here

But what do you think about his theory? I have always been on a line believing more that what ever this creature turns out to be, they have likely been here along. After all we know now thanks to more recent findings that several different types of hominids were existing side by side, might the infamous cryptid wandering out forests be one of them. I think yes. Man? Ape? Something in between most likely.

Maybe some day we’ll know for sure, hopefully in our lifetime…

Have a great day everyone and please I’d love to hear your thoughts…

The Small Clawed Otter is Back…

A rescued Asian small-clawed otter in Dadeldhura, Nepal. Image by Rajeev Chaudhary.

As reported by Mongabay…

Scientists have for the first time in 185 years confirmed the presence of the Asian small-clawed otter in Nepal, thrilling conservationists and researchers looking for clues to its existence here.

The last time the Asian small-clawed otter (Aonyx cinereus), the smallest of the world’s 13 known otter species, was recorded by scientists in Nepal was in 1839.

“After years of speculation about its presence in Nepal, we can finally confirm that the small-clawed otter lives on in the country,” said Mohan Bikram Shrestha, the lead author of a short note published in the latest edition of the bulletin of the Otter Specialist Group at the IUCN, the global wildlife conservation authority.

https://news.mongabay.com/2025/02/worlds-smallest-otter-makes-comeback-in-nepal-after-185-years/

Butterflies…

“A girl stands In a meadow under a golden light

Around her butterflies take gentle flight

Each one a symbol, a tale taking off with the wings of a monarch’s glide

A sign of hope, a beacon, a guide

The butterfly dance weaves trails of paths anew

Where her dreams once were fading now became renewed 

Whispers of transformation are heard in the sky

Fly beauties fly 

She smiles and steps into the breeze

Her spirit soaring  like the butterfly with ease

For every butterfly, every hue

Is a piece of her, timeless and true

Each one a story from her life, from her soul

Each one flying off with a part of her to remind others too

That some endings are beginnings in a clever disguise

So try to live your life to the fullest at every sunrise…”

Poem by me…