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Bigfoot Finds Fame in Hocking Hills
The Logan Daily News ^ | Jan 22, 2022 | Keri Johnson

Posted on 01/24/2022 11:35:08 PM PST by nickcarraway

He’s everywhere: in yards, on T-shirts, mugs, stickers and even tail lights. He’s big, hairy and sometimes frightening — and he may not even exist. Though elusive, he, she or it is Bigfoot — and has become somewhat of an unofficial symbol of the Hocking Hills.

According to data from Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO), there have been at least six recorded Bigfoot reports in Hocking County, the earliest dating back to 1979.

There are three classes of Bigfoot reports, according to the BFRO: A, B and C. All six of Hocking County’s reports are Class A and B. Class A encounters are “clear sightings in circumstances where misinterpretation or misidentification of other animals can be ruled out with greater confidence.”

Class B encounters are “incidents where a possible sasquatch was observed at a great distance or in poor lighting conditions and incidents in any other circumstance that did not afford a clear view of the subject.” Class C encounters are second- or third-hand reports or stories with “untraceable” origins, “because of the high potential for inaccuracy.”

However, encounters with the legendary creature do not seem to be what’s fueling all of the Hocking Hills’ Bigfoot imagery.

An area native

For Hocking County native Matt Pippin, deer were not the only animal on his mind during his first hunting trip.

“It’s funny because we were very aware of Bigfoot, as kids,” Pippin told The Logan Daily News Thursday. “The first time (my dad took me hunting), I went out; I remember going out on my own and just being so nervous, excited, but like, ‘Am I going to see a deer or am I going to see Bigfoot?’”

Pippin attributed his mindset to established Bigfoot stories he heard growing up, he said.

“It’s been rumored for – I mean – I’ve lived here all my life. It’s been rumored that there have been Bigfoot sightings here in the Hocking Hills,” Pippin said. “It’s almost like he’s old folklore for here, too.”

Pippin, who now co-owns hockinghills.com, a local tourism business, thinks of Bigfoot as Hocking Hills’ mascot, he said. “He’s recognizable. He’s big. He stands out when you’re out in the middle of the woods.”

Bigfoot’s established local reputation was reflected in 2014, when, according to a previous Logan Daily News report, the Hocking Hills Tourism Association (HHTA) commissioned a series of short videos by a local performing arts group to create “mockumentaries” promoting tourism.

The videos feature “Hocking Harry,” Logan’s own Bigfoot. The videos were uploaded to YouTube: “Hiking with Hocking Harry,” “Hocking Harry Takes to the Sky,” “Hocking Harry Conquers the Hocking River,” and “Hocking Harry joins the fun at the Washboard Music Festival,” among others.

HHTA Executive Director Karen Raymore said in October that the videos were made to build the HHTA’s digital footprint and to champion a local organization.

“We thought it might be something kind of fun (to) build out content for YouTube and (at the same time) there was a community theater group, called the Logan Theatre Group, and we wanted to support the community theater group and create content, and Hocking Harry just seemed like a fun way to do it,” Raymore said.

Raymore said that the videos received a lot of local involvement, including one interaction with Martin Irvine, who was the mayor of Logan at the time. However, Raymore doesn’t credit Hocking Harry for Bigfoot’s rise in the county.

“I don’t think Hocking Harry is the reason we’ve seen the increase in Bigfoot interest — not at all,” she said, stressing that the videos were to support the theater group. “So no, I don’t think that has had any influence at all.”

Instead, Raymore, who’s been HHTA executive director for 14 years, thinks that Bigfoot’s local rising fame perhaps reflects a larger, nationwide interest in the creature. There are countless Bigfoot reality television shows, including “Finding Bigfoot,” which aired on Animal Planet for seven years; and “Expedition Bigfoot,” which began in 2019 on the Travel Channel.

“I think different things kind of go through their popularity — and I think right now, it’s Bigfoot’s time,” Raymore said, adding that “probably any of our Ohio state parks (that are) heavily forested, like Hocking Hills, are going to be a natural attraction for Bigfoot enthusiasts.”

Raymore isn’t sure exactly why Bigfoot is seeing explosive fame in the Hocking Hills, but she isn’t surprised.

“There’s obviously, not just in the Hocking Hills, all over Ohio — there are reported sightings of Bigfoot. So we’re no different here, with all the forest land, (it’s) not really surprising,” Raymore said. “The folks that are Bigfoot enthusiasts are quite passionate about it. So I’m not surprised it’s become a thing or an attraction or a legend in Hocking Hills.”

Additionally, tourism has increased in the Hocking Hills since the pandemic began. The Logan Daily News previously reported that 2020 was a record-breaking year for the county’s tourism industry.

Visitor expenditures, calculated by lodging taxes and other factors, were $74.1 million in 2019’s first two quarters; in 2020, that dropped to $65.4 million, Raymore told the paper in August 2021. However, 2021’s first two quarters expenditures were $144.6 million. According to Google Trends, from 2004 to the present, searches for Hocking Hills (topic) were the highest ever in August 2020.

Pippin thinks that the area’s tourism industry and the possible cryptid’s popularity parallel each other in their rising trajectories.

“The more people that we have coming to our area, the more exposure we get, and Bigfoot gets, because you go to Walmart, you see (that) there’s a Bigfoot right in the center of Walmart,” Pippin said. “He seems to pop up all around the Hocking Hills.”

Raymore said she thinks Bigfoot’s fame will persist for at least a couple of more years, as long as Bigfoot continues to appear on TV. To her, there’s perhaps a bit of a romance to a “mythical” creature that thrives tucked away from civilization. During the pandemic, Bigfoot has been labeled the “world champion of social distancing.”

What’s for dinner

Bigfoot stands tall outside Logan’s Pizza Crossing, 58 N. Mulberry St. The cryptid has resided outside the restaurant for about a year now, Pizza Crossing owner Eric Cullison told The Logan Daily News Wednesday.

“It’s been amazing,” Cullison said. “We’ve had all kinds of people taking pictures with it.”

Pippin’s hockinghills.com approached the business about placing the Bigfoot outside, which also has a QR code attached. The Bigfoot cut-outs are made in-house, Pippin said. Businesses can approach hockinghills.com about placing one at their location.

Bigfoot can be spotted via hockinghills.com at three other locations, Pippin said: Brewery 33 Hocking Hills LLC, 12684 College Prospect Drive; Adventure Pro Outdoors, 1299 E Canal St., Nelsonville; and hockinghills.com’s office, 38 W. Main St. The point of the Bigfoots and their respective QR codes (and treasure hunts that follow) is to get people out and about into the community, Pippin explained.

“Around the Hocking Hills... the Hocking Hills chairs, the Bigfoots - (those) things are just kind of fun things for tourists to do to stop and take their picture with,” Pippin said. “Just so when folks are there at their establishment, they can take a picture and say ‘Hey, we were here.’”

The photo-ops and treasure hunts also sometimes come with rewards, Pippin said. “So when you go out and you (take pictures in) all five chairs, and you come back to our office, you get free shirts or hats, things like that. And that’s a way of getting people to venture around to the different establishments in the area.”

Other Bigfoot appearances in Hocking Hills food and drink include in-person sightings at the Hocking Hills Oasis Coffee Shop & More, 26850 U.S. 33, in Rockbridge, as well as on its signature orange and black T-shirts.

Additionally, Mam’s Rusted Skillet, 15842 OH-56, in Laurelville features a “Squatch” burger, a 1/3 pound patty with cheddar cheese, bacon crumbles, smoked pork, coleslaw and Yummers barbecue sauce. Inside, Bigfoot imagery adorns the walls.

Both Raymore and Pippin agree that Bigfoot’s allure stems from his elusiveness in the natural world.

“I think it’s fascinating to a lot of people to think there’s this mystery creature living off the grid, so to speak,” she said. “I’m sure that people have come (to the Hocking Hills) for the Bigfoot folklore.”

Raymore said she’s “not arrogant enough” to say Sasquatch doesn’t exist: “Either Bigfoot gets around big-time, or he’s got a huge family.”

Bigfooting for a cause

Another notable recent addition to Bigfoot’s role in the Hocking Hills is the annual Hocking Hills Bigfoot Conference, which founder and Ohio Certified Volunteer Naturalist Bea Mills first organized in 2016.

The conference benefits Camp Oty’Okwa in South Bloomingville, which is owned and operated by Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Ohio. In the summer, the camp provides a free provides free summer camp experience to children whose families cannot afford to send them to traditional camps, according to a previous Logan Daily News report. While at camp, children — from central Ohio, Athens, Hocking, Pickaway and Vinton counties — get to explore the area’s natural resources and undergo mentoring; portions of the camp are also dedicated to children with trauma. In a typical year, the program serves more than 50,000 meals to its campers.

The Bigfoot conference has been successful since its inception and sees 200-300 attendees each year, Mills said. The fifth annual conference, held in October 2021, raised $2,404.70

But Mills’ relationship with Bigfoot began years before she began her charitable, cryptid cause. Her interest was piqued in 2013 after she attended a large Bigfoot conference which included speakers and scientific presentations on Bigfoot.

“Listening to that, they made sense,” Mills said, admitting her initial hesitation. “I guess they gave enough, like, information to support these outlandish theories that something like this could exist.”

A lover of nature, she thought of it as an excuse to get back out into the woods again, Mills said. Shortly after, camped out at Salt Fork State Park in Guernsey County — famous for its Bigfoot sightings and encounters — where she was to meet fellow Bigfooters. However, she had an electronic failure at her camp that spooked her enough to drive two hours back home.

Later, she found out that a police officer and his son had a similar experience nearby the site where she camped. She returned to the park to do a Bigfoot site investigation; however, this time, she wasn’t alone.

“I think it was May 2013. We went down to the lake there. And (my colleague) had thermal vision. And he was showing me different things to look at through these very expensive pieces of equipment, and we saw two deer,” Mills said. “And we’re passing it back and forth, and he shows me. He (handed) it to me and I was like, ‘Okay, great. I see the two deer. But what’s the third thing?’”

She handed the camera back to her colleague, who replied and said there was no third being.

“‘And he goes, ‘Oh s—t. It just stood up. It just took two steps.’” Her colleague then handed the thermal camera back to her, Mills said, where she saw the “tall thing” walk up the bank, past the deer and disappear into the tree line.

“It made no sense,” Mills said of her encounter. “It was all in the course of, like, 10 minutes. You go from two deer, to something else — to it standing up, and you could see the separation in the legs. It was just like, ‘That didn’t just happen.’”

Now, Mills is an established name within the Bigfoot community. Since her first visual encounter, she’s been Bigfooting countless times and is currently in the midst of a four-year study. She’s cast more than 20 potential Bigfoot tracks and claims to have one of the world’s largest collections of Bigfoot-related audio recordings in the world. In 2019, the Bigfoot Times newsletter named Mills ”Bigfooter of the Year,” making her the first woman and only the second Ohioan to win the major accolade, she said.

Sasquatch afoot

Ohio consistently ranks top five in the nation for Bigfoot sightings, Mills said. In 2014, The Philadelphia Inquirer listed Ohio number five in the country for Bigfoot encounters. Four years later, The Vinton-Jackson Courier reported that, according to BFRO data, Ohio again ranked fifth with most reports of alleged Sasquatch sightings or interactions in the country. Like Pippin, Mills said that Bigfoot is no stranger to Hocking County.

BFRO’s six Hocking County reports vary in location and types of encounter; in 1979, a family reportedly witnessed a Bigfoot on the edge of Wayne National Forest in Haydenville. The next year, hunters near Ash Cave reportedly saw footprints and a creature as well. In 1998, a woman reported seeing a “6 1/2 to 7 feet tall carmel (sic) blonde creature” in Marion Township.

As for more recent reports, in 2011 a woman on Goat Run Honey Fork Road reported whistling back and forth with an unknown entity, and also seeing “a tall hairy creature” stare at her. In 2017, two different reports within six weeks recorded hikers’ encounters with sets of large footprints in Rockbridge State Nature Preserve.

For those seeking out the big, hairy ape-man himself, Mills advises Bigfoot hunters to “learn as much as you can about whatever area it is that you want to go to take and tons of photos.” She also recommends Bigfooters to learn about their ecological environments and to stay safe. But above all, she stressed prospective Bigfooters to “have fun. This is a hobby.”

Mills noted that towns across the country have made spectacles out of their legendary creatures and lore — for example, elsewhere in Ohio, the Loveland frogman and the Minerva Monster; nearby, the Mothman in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.

“But no one in Ohio has claimed Sasquatch,” she said. “Why not Hocking County?”

View a gallery of Bigfoot images from around the region at https://tinyurl.com/2p8dtt8v.


TOPICS: Local News; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: bigfoot; cryptobiology; hockingcounty; ohio; sasquatch
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1 posted on 01/24/2022 11:35:08 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Nonsense. Everyone knows Bigfoot lives down in the Arkansas.

2 posted on 01/24/2022 11:44:11 PM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: martin_fierro

Maybe he had a summer home?


3 posted on 01/24/2022 11:45:29 PM PST by nickcarraway
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Hocking county:

Density is 66 people/sq mile

20,000 total pop.


4 posted on 01/25/2022 12:19:36 AM PST by campaignPete R-CT (I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go ...)
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To: nickcarraway

Well....I see the Mothman every time I walk to the post office, and also the great numbers of Mothman hunters from all over the country. We love our Mothman. Before Covid he drew 10,000 people every Sept. for the Mothman Festival. Sure hope we can get back to that this year.


5 posted on 01/25/2022 12:32:40 AM PST by WVNan
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To: nickcarraway

Roswell,1947....


6 posted on 01/25/2022 1:26:06 AM PST by Lean-Right (Eat More Moose)
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To: nickcarraway

Coshocton county Ohio is also a hotbed of sightings.


7 posted on 01/25/2022 1:38:02 AM PST by MachIV
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To: martin_fierro

Fouke, AR has a festival every June honoring the “Legend of Boggy Creek”.


8 posted on 01/25/2022 1:39:28 AM PST by MachIV
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To: campaignPete R-CT

I lived in Hocking County when I went to Ohio University in the early 70’s. Yeah, I saw Bigfoot, Sasquatch and a whole range hallucinations during my misspent Hocking County days.


9 posted on 01/25/2022 3:20:54 AM PST by hardspunned (former GOP globalist stooge)
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To: martin_fierro
Finally.. some real news... and you'd be wrong. Bigfoot lives in North Georgia and we have a Bigfoot Expedition Museum.


10 posted on 01/25/2022 4:03:23 AM PST by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: nickcarraway
“Hocking Harry,”


11 posted on 01/25/2022 4:56:51 AM PST by lowbridge
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To: nickcarraway

He’s definitely the world hide and seek champion....


12 posted on 01/25/2022 5:00:01 AM PST by Hot Tabasco
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To: Hot Tabasco

At the risk of sounding like a crazy guy I have something that lives on my property that leaves tracks, throws rocks and does other things. If I’m nuts then so are at least 20 other people who have been to my property. By the way, this is completely remote, a 25 mile boat ride on the ocean to get there here in Alaska. I’m an agnostic towards the subject…


13 posted on 01/25/2022 5:40:38 AM PST by Bigbrown
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To: MachIV
Fouke, AR has a festival every June honoring the “Legend of Boggy Creek”.

The "Monster Mart" in Fouke is a great road-side stop. Loved it.
14 posted on 01/25/2022 5:42:23 AM PST by Antoninus (Republicans are all honorable men.)
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To: maddog55

Further South you have the Wooly Booger and the Skunk Ape...


15 posted on 01/25/2022 6:48:25 AM PST by Alas Babylon! (Rush, we're missing your take on all of this!)
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To: Bigbrown
leaves tracks, throws rocks and does other things.

Start throwing them back, maybe whatever it is will stop.........LOL!

Have you considered setting up any trail cameras or tracking it in the winter snow?

16 posted on 01/25/2022 10:11:53 AM PST by Hot Tabasco
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To: Bigbrown

I also live in the sticks in the mountains of Kentucky and have something that is about my property. I haven’t seen anything but I have had my house beat on with wood in the middle of the night. I hear wood on wood knocks at various times and howls I can’t account for. Not coyotes, fox, raccoons or bear, I don’t know what they are. Strange chatter which sounds like a samauri movie on tv which we have heard several times. Working in the yard and hear a rock go whizzing by your head.

When the house was beat on the first time I was on the front porch that night about 10:45 and went around to the back and heard numerous, heavy footfalls in the backyard. I verbally challenged whom or whatever it was and threatened I had a gun and they were about to get shot and eventually fired off several rounds from an M1 carbine into the ground where I had a sliver of light. After the firing I heard something that sounded like a semi tearing through the woods headed deep into the Cumberland Mountain range in the middle of summer, not smart for snake and other critters about.

I have put up trail cams and security camera’s and have picked up nothing thus far. I just don’t know what it is.


17 posted on 01/25/2022 10:54:10 AM PST by sarge83
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To: sarge83
I have put up trail cams and security camera’s and have picked up nothing thus far.

Even deer and coyotes can see infrared beams - whatever is disturbing your property no doubt can see and avoid them, also. Putting up many cheap trail cams is good way to reduce activity around your house.

18 posted on 01/25/2022 11:01:03 AM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: Hot Tabasco

Set up 5 trail cameras because I discovered they were Blacktail deer on my property. They’re not supposed to be there, about 60 miles away from their normal range. Anyway, all of the cameras were ripped off the trees, cases broken, straps broken when they were taken down and one of the cameras was never found again. Bears will chew on cameras if they find them, no chew marks just strange…


19 posted on 01/25/2022 11:53:58 AM PST by Bigbrown
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To: Hot Tabasco

Also, it does leave tracks. One set of tracks actually has dermal ridges. Fingerprints! There’s do not have fingerprints, they have a soft pad just like a dog.


20 posted on 01/25/2022 11:58:25 AM PST by Bigbrown
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