Trent Sasquatch Society delves into Bigfoot research

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,667
3,002
113
Trent Sasquatch Society delves into Bigfoot research
Author of the article:Liz Braun
Publishing date:Apr 24, 2022 • 12 hours ago • 2 minute read • Join the conversation
Sasquatch Society?

Sounds like a good name for a college beer-pong team.

The Trent University Sasquatch Society, however, is a scientific group that takes the search for Bigfoot very seriously.

“Are we just kids drinking in the woods? We get that a lot,” says Sasquatch Society founder and President, Ryan Willis.

“But we do a lot of research.”

Willis put the organization together when he was a first-year student. The Trent University Sasquatch Society became an official club at the school last fall, as Willis’ fourth year began.


It’s a hugely popular club with about 150 members.

“All our meetings are very serious,” Willis said in a recent interview.

“Our goals are to research and to look, but Peterborough’s not the best place to be looking. Our focus is to educate. We bring in experts each weekend.”

Those experts include advisors from TV’s Finding Bigfoot and academics such as famed Sasquatchologist Jeff Meldrum, a professor of anatomy and anthropology at Idaho State University.

Some experts have obscure theories about alien creatures, said Willis.

“But most talk about an ape-like animal. The evidence points to a very intelligent, ape-like animal that lives in remote regions.”

There are Sasquatch sightings all over North America, but far more in the west, and in particular, Washington State.


“Washington is densely forested, like B.C. That habitat supports grizzly bears.”

(Speaking of B.C. the tiny village of Klemtu, in the heart of the Great Bear Rainforest, is one of the great Sasquatch-sighting spots in the world.)

“I never have seen one, but I’ve always been very interested. We learn something new about this all the time,” said Willis.

“One interesting thing we found out: a lot of researchers compare Sasquatch habitat to bear habitat, and one expert said, ‘For every 200 black bears out there, there are probably two Sasquatch.'”

That makes Sasquatch rare as well as highly elusive — but never seeing one doesn’t mean they don’t exist.

“There are mountain lions all over Ontario, but people don’t ever see them,” said Willis.


“People say, ‘I didn’t know there were mountain lions here!’ but there are. Their bodies are rarely found. But they’ve been here a long time.”

Sasquatch evidence includes still photos, film footage, giant footprint castings, fur samples, and food-related evidence.

“Look at Gigantopithecus,” said Willis, referencing the massive, three-metre ape believed to have become extinct 100,000 years ago.

“Scientists have found their bodies. The animal lived in Asia. It was essentially a Sasquatch.”

Why so many are suddenly interested in Bigfoot remains a mystery. The animal — real or imagined — is enjoying renewed interest.

Turns out that famed footage shot in the 1960s by Roger Patterson and Robert Gimlin has never been completely debunked.

Interestingly, some of the work done by Sasquatch scientists has greatly contributed to the body of knowledge about other animals, particularly bears.

“I am proud of the club,” said Willis, who hopes the Trent University Sasquatch Society will inspire other universities to host similar clubs.

“There are a lot of academics in the Bigfoot community who keep their research hidden because there’s a stigma attached to it,” said Willis. “But there is compelling evidence out there.”
 
  • Haha
Reactions: taxslave