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Archaeologist Digs For Proof Of Sasquatch
She's A Bigfooter. A Student Of Sasquatch. A Yearner for Yeti.


Article taken from The Union Democrat, Senora, California
Friday, January 26, 2007 By Chris Bateman

BY DAY SHE’S the Stanislaus National Forest’s archaeologist.
With a master's degree in anthropoligy, she makes sure prehistoric
Native American sites in the woods are protected. She’s also the
forest’s liaison with the Me-Wuk tribe. But it’s what Kathy Strain
does in her spare time that separates her from Forest Services
colleagues. She’s a Bigfooter. A student of Sasquatch. A yearner
for Yeti. A true believer.

“A strong case can be made that Bigfoot exists,” said Strain, whose
Jamestown-area home includes a room full of books, videos, cast
footprints, notes and reports on the creature. “I’ve seen things I
have no other explanation for.”

Not only that, but she says Tuolumne County and the forest she works
on are among the huge creature’s favorite haunts. She has catalogued
scores of eyewitness accounts, has discovered a Sasquatch “nest” near
Twain Harte and swears she was once close enough to the creature that
dirt was still falling from the sides of deep, 14-inch footprints it
left behind.

AND GET THIS: Strain is not crazy. In fact, her scientific credentials
and employment by a hugh, dead-serious and not terribly imaginative
federal agency boost her stock as a guest speaker at Bigfoot conferences.

But when she walks into the forest’s Greenley Road headquarters, Strain
leaves Sasquatch at the door. She doesn’t demand that wide swaths of
timberland be set aside as Bigfoot habitat. Nor does she hector forest
wildlife biologists with evidence or accounts she has collected.

“Kathy has been an excellent archaeologist and employee,” confirmed
her boss, Forest supervisor Tom Quinn. “And, at least in my four and
a half years here. I have had no reports of Yeti conversations in the
workplace.”

For the record, Quinn added, the forest has “no position” on Bigfoot.
Which, less restrained Bigfooters might say, is like Australia having
no position on kangaroos.

NEXT TO THE deep woods near the Oregon border, Strain says, the
Stanislaus Forest area is the nation’s hottest Bigfoot spot. In the past
six years she has documented more that 200 sightings and witness accounts.

A few have come from co-workers looking to unburden themselves –
after quitting time, of course – of long-held Bigfoot tales. Take the
wildlife biologist who never forgot his 1993 trip to Bloomer Lake,
above Pinecrest.

“An animal-creature mythological being,” is how this field worker
described the gaping, hairy 6-foot creature be glimpsed. Even after
it had disappeared, leaving a dismembered deer behind, he felt “the
sixth sense of a presence” nearby.












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