Friday, 22 January 2010

A chupacabra sighting? Mysterious, hairless creature found on golf course

by Jim Douglas / WFAA.com
Posted on January 18, 2010

WISE COUNTY, Texas -- Animal experts are baffled by a small, hairless creature found dead on the golf course at Runaway Bay in Wise County.

Maintenance worker Tony Potter picked it up Wednesday morning. To him it looked a little like a raccoon with no hair.

"Definitely not a dog," he said.

Potter showed the remains to several people and then took it to a veterinarian's office in Bridgeport. He said no one there could identify it, either.

"My wife wouldn't let me keep it in the freezer," he said, so Potter gave it to the Center for Animal Research and Education, a big cat sanctuary in Bridgeport.

The creature is dark brown, about 18 inches long, with a black nose and a face resembling a rodent -- but with long canine teeth jutting from the upper and lower jaws.

The front claws have narrow digits about a half-inch long, with long, narrow nails.

Whatever this is has powerful rear legs "almost like a kangaroo," according to CARE research assistant Sherre Sacher. She said the front claws look like they're made for digging.

The tail is like that of an opossum, but not quite as long.

"It's really exciting," Sacher said. "I can't wait to find out what it is."

The center hopes to hear from experts who would like to examine the animal. Some who have seen it wonder if it's the legendary chupacabra, an animal that supposedly sucks the blood of goats.

If nothing else, one thing appears certain: This is the ugliest bogey ever seen on the Runaway Bay golf course.

You can contact the Center for Animal Research and Education at heidi@bigcatcare.org

http://www.kens5.com/news/Chupacabra-like-82001007.html
(Submitted by Lindsay Selby)

See also: http://cryptozoologynews.blogspot.com/2010/01/chupacabra-debunked-its-hairless.html and http://cryptozoologynews.blogspot.com/2010/01/wise-country-chupacabra-actually-young.html

2 comments:

  1. Hey there.
    I just finished watching a segment on Nat Geo about Chupa Cabras - the first thing that came to my mind is porphyria. If it can happen in humans, why not in other animals? And with a wealth of animals in the form of livestock/pets, this mutation would have a far better chance at survival to procreate, making more.
    This wikipedia link is to the most common form, but there are others.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porphyria_cutanea_tarda
    I hope this helps the investigations.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It looks like a badger, but with no hair. There's a recessive gene that causes hairlessness in dogs, cats, rats, and mice, so it's unsurprising that it would occur in badgers as well.

    ReplyDelete

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