In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond
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In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond

In Search of the Sasquatch

John Zada

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eBook - ePub

In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond

In Search of the Sasquatch

John Zada

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About This Book

A journalist travels through British Columbia exploring of one of the world's most baffling mysteriesā€”the existence of the Sasquatch. On the central and north coast of British Columbia, the Great Bear Rainforest is the largest intact temperate rainforest in the world, containing more organic matter than any other terrestrial ecosystem on the planet. The area plays host to a wide range of species, from thousand-year-old western cedars to humpback whales to iconic white Spirit bears. According to local residents, another giant is said to live in these woods. For centuries people have reported encounters with the Sasquatchā€”a species of hairy bipedal man-apes said to inhabit the deepest recesses of this pristine wilderness. Driven by his own childhood obsession with the creatures, John Zada decides to seek out the diverse inhabitants of this rugged and far-flung coast, where nearly everyone has a story to tell, from a scientist who dedicated his life to researching the Sasquatch, to members of the area's First Nations, to a former grizzly bear hunter-turned-nature tour guide. With each tale, Zada discovers that his search for the Sasquatch is a quest for something infinitely more complex, cutting across questions of human perception, scientific inquiry, indigenous traditions, the environment, and the power and desire of the human imagination to believe inā€”or rejectā€”something largely unseen. Teeming with gorgeous nature writing and a driving narrative that takes us through the forests and into the valleys of a remote and seldom visited region, In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond sheds light on what our decades-long pursuit of the Sasquatch can tell us about ourselves and invites us to welcome wonder for the unknown back into our lives. Praise for In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond "Books on supernatural phenomena typically steer one of two courses: tabloid gullibility or mean-spirited debunkery. Zada deftly tightropes between the two.... In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond is not really about sasquatch. It is about how we see what we want to see and don't see what we're not prepared to see.... A quirky and oddly captivating tale." ā€”Eric Weiner, Washington Post "An adventure story in the tradition of Paul Theroux and, in parts, Jon Krakauer.... Zada is a latter-day Henry David Thoreau or John Muir.... Searching for an elusive ape, Zada has a knack for meeting unforgettable humans." ā€”Peter Kuitenbrouwer, Globe and Mail "If people can believe in God, why not Sasquatch? Zada takes us through the temperate rainforest of British Columbia looking for both the hairy bipedal and the mythology and landscape surrounding it. Terrific nature writing with a furry twist." ā€”Kerri Arsenault, Orion

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PART I

1

THE BECKONING

In any field, find the strangest thing and then explore it.
ā€”John Archibald Wheeler, physicist
A froth of dark, roiling clouds churns above the swaying canopy. The rain begins, but as a gentle caress.
I am trudging through ground moss and rotting blowdown to the symphonic pitter-patter of reconstituted sea. Shouldering a flimsy daypack and holding a single-barreled shotgun, Clark Hans, my hiking partner, leads me along a high, forested bluff overlooking an expansive valley. We reach a lookout on the edge of the bluff with a commanding view across the floodplain, where limestone mountains dressed in a patchwork of cedar, spruce, and hemlock vanish under strangleholds of mist. To our right, the river meets the ocean, a sullen, blotted-out void.
Clark stares into the distance.
ā€œHere is right where it stood,ā€ he says. ā€œWhere it looked down at me.ā€
I say nothing, bearing witness to a reverie I can barely understand.
A cool gust of wind washes over us. The rain increases.
ā€œLetā€™s go,ā€ Clark says, coming out of his trance. ā€œWeā€™ll follow the creek back.ā€
ā€œThe creek?ā€ I say. ā€œBut you said thereā€™s bears there. Why donā€™t we go back down the rock face?ā€
ā€œToo slippery now from the rain.ā€
Clark heads back into the forest and marches in the opposite direction from which we came. I follow behind him, barely able to keep up. We come to the edge of a steep ravine, the slopes of which are filled with colonies of devilā€™s club, a spiky shrub as tall as a man. We skirt around the sharp-spined, broad-leaved plant, grasping at smaller trees and shrubs to avoid slipping down the hill in the ever-intensifying downpour.
We reach the bottom of the ravine, a narrow gully between the moss-encrusted walls of two mountains. Weā€™re completely drenched. All around us, a nightmarish tangle of salal and salmonberry bushes rises above our heads, partly concealing enormous conifers reaching for the narrow opening of sky above the gorge. We can hear the nearby creek running, but it is nowhere to be seen.
Clark, exhaling plumes of foggy breath, scours the surroundings. Suddenly his eyes dart left. There is a rustling in the bushes up the gulch. Itā€™s followed by the sound of something heavy moving.
Da-thump. Da-thump. Da-thump.
Fear clenches my chest. Clark remains frozen, his head cocked in the direction of the sound.
Da-thump.
There is something near us, waiting, watching, listening. I pick up what I think is a gamy animal smell mingling with the aroma of drenched evergreen. Clark takes hold of his gun with both hands. In almost zero visibility, the weapon offers little, if any, protection. Clark turns to me with an expression of muted alarm, trying to gauge my reaction.
Then: Da-thump! Da-thump! Da-thump!
ā€œGo!ā€ Clark yells, dashing through the berry bushes to a faint game trail. As I run behind him into the thicket sharp branches tear at my face and rain gear. All I can see is Clarkā€™s backside a few feet in front of me.
A heaving, growling bark explodes around us.
WOOF-WOOF-WOOAHHF!
WOOF-WOOF-WOOAHHFFF!
I break into a sprint with my arms held up to my head to protect myself from whatever beast is nearly upon us. The barking resumesā€”louder nowā€”and the terror spikes. Then I realize itā€™s Clark making the noises. He stops and cups his hands to his mouth.
ā€œHey, bear! Hey, grizzly-grizzly-grizzly!ā€ he hollers at the top of his voice, a ploy to ward off any bears nearby.
Clark drops his arms and ducks into a waist-high tunnel-like trail in the brush. Weā€™re forced to crawl on our hands and knees, past sprawling blooms of wet, rotting skunk cabbage, making loud noises, and occasionally having to untangle ourselves from the branches that snag our packs. I realize that at any moment we might be ambushed and mauled by a startled grizzly. Iā€™m awash in regret for what feels like a foolish undertakingā€”revisiting the perch of a legendary creature that also happens to be in the heart of bear country.
We come into a relatively dry enclosure of gargantuan Sitka spruces. Beneath a few of the trees, the forest floor is packed down. Clark wanders over to one of the impressions and moves his open palm over it.
ā€œDay bed,ā€ he says. ā€œA mother and cub were just here.ā€
Clark gets up and heads into the younger brushy alder forest at the edge of the spruces, barking and yelping like a man possessed. I follow into yet another gauntlet of thorns. The novelty of exploring one of the last intact wilderness regions on the planet gives way to silent cursing.
And then reprieve. We emerge, bleary-eyed, from the darkness onto a bright, open estuary dotted with driftwood, mature berry bushes, and half-eaten salmon carcasses. Several bear trails interweave through the tall sedge grass. The invisible creek we were following appears, emptying into a wide, fast-moving river running gray with glacial silt into a fjord-like Pacific channel to our west. Clark stops, rests the butt of his gun on the ground, and turns to me with the smiling satisfaction of a man grateful to have come through.
ā€œNickle-Sqwanny,ā€ he says.
Before us is the confluence of the Necleetsconnay River and the Bella Coola River, which drains an epic, fifty-mile-long valley of the same name. We are in the Great Bear Rainforest, a wilderness region the size of Ireland located along Canadaā€™s rugged British Columbia coast. The partially protected area, touted as the largest expanse of unspoiled temperate rain forest left in the world, extends some 250 miles between Vancouver Island and the Alaska Panhandle.
Days earlier, I had arrived in the town of Bella Coolaā€”a Nuxalk Nation community situated just a short distance from where weā€™re standing. A series of serendipitous encounters led me to Clark, who, people told me, had once seen a Sasquatchā€”a member of the alleged race of half-man, half-ape giants believed by some to inhabit the wilds of North America. The reputed hair-covered bipeds, known more colloquially as Bigfoots, donā€™t officially exist. No physical specimen, living or dead, has ever been produced. Because of that, mainstream science scoffs at the idea of such creatures, which are also considered by most people to be no more real than fairies or gnomes.
But like other residents of the Great Bear Rainforest, Clark Hans, a soft-spoken, fifty-one-year-old father of four, and erstwhile hunting guide turned artist, is convinced that the animals existā€”and that he saw one. He agreed to take me to the location of his sighting; a spot he had been too afraid to revisit since the incident thirty years prior.
On that day in the spring of 1983, Clark had been on a duck-hunting trip in the Bella Coola estuary with two of his cousins. Upon arrival there, the group decided to split up. Clark would remain at the mouth of the Bella Coola River, and the others would head up the Necleetsconnay River. They agreed to meet later back at their boat.
Clark remembers that day as being eerily quiet. Nothing moved.
ā€œAll day I never seen a bird, I never seen a duck, I never heard nothing,ā€ he said, recounting the story before taking me up the bluff. ā€œIt was just silence all day. And I couldnā€™t make no sense of it.ā€
The experience was made stranger by a memory from the week before, when Clark had ventured up the creek alone to check his animal traps. While there he had felt an unusual presence. Someone, or something, he felt, was watching him. He then discovered a cluster of young alders whose tops had been snapped back at the nine-foot level. It was something heā€™d never seen before, nor could he explain it.
The day he was hunting with his cousins, Clark continued to scour the estuary but found no birds. As he decided what to do next, his eye caught a distant movement on a moss-covered bluff on the mountain facing him. He saw what looked like a person moving into and out of the trees. Clark thought it might be one of his cousins, but he couldnā€™t tell for sure. Whoever it was kept weaving amid the foliage. After disappearing again, this time for much longer, the figure reemerged along the bluff closer to Clark. He estimates it was no more than two hundred feet away when it stepped into the open.
But what he saw caused him to shake his head and blink in disbelief. Directly ahead was not a person but a large, muscular humanoid, covered in jet-black hair, with wide shoulders and long arms, standing on two legs. Though it looked human, it had a menacing, bestial appearance.
ā€œI never seen any person that big before in my life,ā€ Clark said. ā€œIt was massive. It just stopped on the mountain and stared at me. And I stood there frozen.ā€
Clark thinks the encounter lasted one whole minute. But at the time, he said, it felt infinitely longer. Though he couldnā€™t make out the eyes in the general blackness of its face, the creature seemed to impale him with its gaze. A deep chill ran through Clarkā€™s body. His legs became wobbly. And for a moment he felt as though he might pass out. Then the animal released Clark from its visual grip and casually shuffled off.
ā€œIt walked into the bush in just a few strides,ā€ he said. ā€œIt didnā€™t run. It just calmly walked away like it couldnā€™t care less. They tell you not to be scared, but I was afraid.ā€
Clark had known about these creatures his whole life. Nuxalk traditional tales, passed down through the generations, speak of a pair of supernatural beings known as Boqs and Sninik, humanoids that are analogous to Sasquatches. Some in the community considered the animals to be a bad omen. Others claimed the creatureā€™s very gaze could trigger a comaā€”or even death. As Clark stood stunned in the aftermath of his sighting, his mind flooded with scenario after terrifying scenario. Was the monster still watching him? Was it planning an ambush? Had it already cursed him? Heā€™d heard that some people who had looked into the creaturesā€™ eyes had gone mad. Maybe his spiraling fear was evidence that he too was now losing his mind.
The mortifying possibilities swirled into a vortex of dread. Clark had to flee. He tore off all his clothes and in an adrenaline-fueled feat of endurance crossed an ice-choked Bella Coola River delta, while holding his shotgun and clothes aloft to keep them dry.
Back in town, Clarkā€™s uncle and grandfather found him slumped at the doorway, frazzled, wide-eyed, and teetering on the brink of hypothermic collapse. When they asked Clark what had happened, he tried to relate his story. But his speech was garbled and nonsensical. What little they did understand of his chattering gibberish was enough to alert them to what had happened.
The men did all they could to warm Clark up and calm him down. Later they burned sage and sang traditional chants to purify him of any negative emanations absorbed from the creature.
ā€œI was naked during the ceremony,ā€ Clark said. ā€œThey took my clothes and smoked those tooā€”so the creature wouldnā€™t bother me. So it wouldnā€™t haunt me. But it still did.ā€
Clarkā€™s fear and anguish deepened, and he was hospitalized for anxiety. After being discharged, days later, he underwent a complete transformation. Clark quit both smoking and drinking. He started going to church, and he took up drawing and painting. For a year he refused to go anywhere near the forest. Until he led me on the hike that afternoon, Clark had not once returned to the spot where heā€™d seen the creature three decades earlier. Neither had he climbed the nearby bluff where the animal, looking down on him, had so deeply altered the course of his life.
ā€œIā€™d heard lots of Sasquatch stories before,ā€ Clark said. ā€œI used to tell people: ā€˜Iā€™ll believe it when I see it.ā€™ I never disbelieved it. I just said: ā€˜Iā€™ll believe it when I see it.ā€™ And when I did see it, I said: ā€˜Why me?ā€™ā€œ
Ten days before meeting Clark, I had traveled from Toronto to British Columbia to work on a magazine story about the Great Bear Rainforest. After gaining a small amount of environmental protection in 2006, this lofty stretch of rugged coastline (best known for the white Kermode bear, or ā€œspirit bearā€) had been insinuating itself into the mind of the outside world. I had come to write about the area as an up-and-coming travel destination for those interested in seeing grizzly bears, going on hikes in primeval forests, and learning about the first peoples, who have inhabited this coast for at least fourteen thousand years.
But as is often the case with plans, little went as intended.
In the town of Bella Bella, on Campbell Island, the seat of the Heiltsuk First Nation, I found myself more interested in the peopleā€”and local goings-onā€”than in taking part in any touristy adventures on offer at the nonindigenous-owned local fishing lodge. While engaging with residents, I heard about a frightening incident. Months earlier, a monstrous humanoid had been seen on the edge of the communityā€™s youth camp, located nearby at the mouth of the beautiful Koeye River on the mainland coast. It wasnā€™t the first such incident at the camp, I was told.
Deeply intrigued, I talked to two of the key eyewitnesses, a brother and sister in their teens, and implored them to tell me their stories. The mere mention of the incident caused them to stiffen and etched onto their faces something of the visceral fear they had experienced. They were hesitant to speak at first, but then they agreed. What stood before them that night, they insisted, was not a bear standing on its hind legs, as a few skeptics in the community had allegedā€”but a Sasquatch. The Koeye valley, they added, was one area Sasquatches inhabited.
At first I thought Iā€™d come across an isolated incidentā€”a spooky bump-in-the-night episode gone sideways. But from that moment forward, without my having made so much as a suggestion or query, Sasquatch stories jumped out at meā€”both in Bella Bella and in neighboring towns. My arrival on the coast, it seemed, was coinciding with a cyclical rash of creature sightings in every nearby community. And contrary to what I expected, people itched to talk about it.
In the Kitasoo/Xaiā€™xais First Nation community of Klemtu, thirty miles north of Bella Bella, residents claimed that someone, or something, was banging on and shaking their homes in the middle of the night. Bloodcurdling, high-pitched screams emanating from the forest above the town were reported on a weekly basis. Two construction workers from southern British Columbia, newly arrived and ignorant of the experiences of the local residents, told me that they often heard a hollering and stomping on the mountainside above their trailer. Both claimed to be lifelong woodsmen and said it sounded like no animal they knew.
Meanwhile, in the Bella Coola valley, people traveling along the two-lane highway reported large humanlike forms crossing the road in their headlights at night. The gargantuan, lumbering figures were said to be of such enormous stature that they stepped across the highway in just three strides before melting into the blackness. Large, humanlike tracks, some measuring up to eighteen inches in length and pressed deep into the earth, appeared along the bushy byways between unfenced homes in two indigenous neighborhoods. These were only a few of the stories.
By the time I met Clark, I was awash in these tales. I had done little of the outdoor adventuring planned for my travel story and was instead obsessively following a trail of yarns, strang...

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