On 5th March, Jonathan and Corinna Downes, the Director and Administrator of the Centre for Fortean Zoology [CFZ] the world's largest mystery animal research organisation, fly to Texas. Together with their friends and colleagues Richie and Naomi West who very generously financed the expedition, they will spend two weeks continuing the research into the Texas blue dogs, first carried out by Jonathan Downes in November 2004..

Thursday 18 March 2010

NAOMI WEST: Strange Days Indeed

In the past few days I have learned just how much of a hunting-happy place Texas really is. I have lived around hunters all my life but this week I got more of an “up close and personal” glimpse of the hunter mentality. It boils down to this: if it moves, shoot it. The strange thing is (strange to an animal-lover like myself) the hunters we have met this week have been very likeable people. They just have a mindset completely different from mine.

One young man proudly came onto the scene and told us how he had just shot a hog (which explained the gunfire Corinna and I had heard minutes before). I looked at him in momentary shock that he would burst in with this 'good' news. While I considered how to respond he broke into a proud and excited grin, clearly anticipating my delight at this kill, and immediately my judgment melted and I returned the smile. It hadn’t even dawned on him that I would do anything else. After I had recovered from that episode we had the privilege of following said young man to our next location. During the drive Corinna and I noticed that he suddenly began shifting wildly around in the car and then pushed his rifle through the open window. I sucked in my breath sharply. “Oh, Dear God, what’s he going to kill?” Corinna suspected he was still attempting to shoot a coyote he had been after. I waited in dread, praying while he shifted again and stuck the rifle out another window. In the end he shot nothing, to my relief.

Later a lady who had won us over in many ways took us to her very lavish hunting-lodge-style house. The décor turned out to be a dizzying collection of animal heads from around the world: there was a moose, a zebra, an antelope, many deer and probably other things I didn’t take the effort to notice. I almost expected General Zaroff - from Richard Connell’s The Most Dangerous Game - to appear in a fancy dressing gown and offer me some fine wine.

However, the animal heads lining her walls captured our attention only for a few seconds. For as we ventured into the living room, our eyes were drawn to the display ingeniously placed in front of her fireplace: the 'chupacabra'. This carcass was one we knew she had, as it had been featured on the National Geographic documentary with Ken Gerhard several weeks ago, but we had expected it to be frozen. Instead, it was magnificently mounted on a platform of sand, its head turned toward us with mouth open in frozen ferocity.

Despite the fact that I would much rather see this creature alive, the display allowed us to examine it in detail. The most noticeably striking features were its arched back and hairless skin. It truly was something different from the average canid. But there was something else: two pads on the buttocks, features that don’t exist on any known canid.

On the National Geographic documentary these pads were referred to as 'pouches,' a term that threw Jon off as they brought to mind a marsupial pouch designed for carrying young. But the pads on this creature were not designed to carry anything. My initial and amateur diagnosis was that they were tumours, as a hamster I had as a kid developed on her stomach two tumours that looked similar to these pads. Jon asked if they were possibly anal glands but the lady assured him that she had located and suppressed the anal glands. Furthermore, a biopsy revealed the pads were made of meat, a revelation that did nothing to solve the mystery other than to prove they were neither anal glands nor tumours.

I suspect one thing: these pads are possibly unique to the male species of the Texas Blue Dog. Both the Elmendorf Beast (Devin Mcanally’s creature) and the Blanco creature were female and did not have the pads.

As for the commonality of these pads among other Texas Blue Dogs, I did discover these same pads on the Pollock creature in a picture we happened upon while flipping through an album of newspaper clipping and photos. I believe these pads are among the best evidence that we have struck upon a canine species that is either new or as Jon speculates, a recurrence of an extinct species.

One thing is for certain: these aren’t mangy dogs….

7 comments:

  1. Those are anal glands.

    That's what happens when your dog gets impacted anal glands, and the vet doesn't take care of it!

    It looks like they were severely infected.

    I hate to sound skeptical, but I am.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am not a hunter, but killing a feral hog is in fact a good thing to do, where ever you might be. They aren't native and they're almost as destructive of habitat and native species as real estate developers are. They clearcut less, but they eat and trample more.

    If you live around hunters, you soon realize that there's not as much difference between them and birdwatchers as it at first appears. Both are looking for a socially-acceptable reason to get out into the country and just be for awhile. For many, it's also an excuse to hang out with your (mostly male) relatives. I've known more than one person for whom a family hunting party out at the deer lease on opening weekend is a tradition they wouldn't miss, even when it's so warm they admit they'd rather not take a deer.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I agree with you totally, Peni, and I have learned how dangerous these hogs are. But it was still humorously uncomfortable for me, especially in the car.
    These guys were among our favorite aquaintances and their love for the outdoors is very evident. They both offer a valuable pair of eyes in our investigation.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Retrieverman, the anal glands were located and suppressed. These pads were biopsied and found to be pure meat, not infection, and they have been seen in the other hairless canines in the area (at least the males). Very strange.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I wonder if these hogs are like the ones killed on pig sticking hunts in India. Ugly things with tusks?

    ReplyDelete
  6. I think I may have posted my comment three times before noticing the message, "your comment will be posted after approval." This is one time I hope two of them fail to meet approval. haha

    ReplyDelete
  7. By meat, do you mean muscle? Sorry, just wanted to clarify what type of tissue the biopsy revealed.

    ReplyDelete