Tuesday, February 10, 2015

The Chuchunaa Of Eastern Siberia

    The Chuchunaa of Eastern Siberia. Greatly endangered because of his thievery from humans, probably extinct. Only Wildman known to wear clothing. From the book Still Living? Yeti, Sasquatch And Neanderthal Man published in 1983 by British university anthropologist Myra Shackley.
    This is a report by a reindeer herder, about the only people who share their frigid, bleak enviroment, of a typical Chuchunaa sighting. In the 1920s, after the Russian Revolution when communism began its stranglehold, the inhabitants of a village ran into a Chuchunaa while both parties were picking berries. The Bigfoot was seen pulling berries with both hands and stuffing them into his mouth. When he saw the villagers, he stood up straight and looked at them extremely briefly. He was lean and tall, standing over two meters. He was wearing a deer skin and was barefoot. The median January temperature in this region is -59 degrees Farenheit. He had very long arms and unkempt hair on his head. He had a big face like a human's, but it was dark. His forehead was small but hanged over his eyes like a peaked hat. His chin was broad and much bigger than a man's. Overall, he looked much like a man but of greater bulk. After a second, he ran off at a very high speed, and with every third step, he made a leap.
    Nick's Analysis: It is so cold in eastern Siberia that the Chuchunaa could not survive without the additional warmth of reindeer skins. As you can imagine, the living there is so difficult that he cannot seem to stay away from the barns and other outbuildings of the villagers in the middle of the frigid nights where he steals whatever he can eat. For this reason, he has been hunted down by the villagers. A Russian professor appealed to Stalin that the Chuchunaa were people and should be protected. But Stalin was busy exterminating 6o million humans so what should he care about questionable humans? After Stalin, there was official protection of the Chuchunaa, but since the villagers weren't compensated by the State for their losses to the Chuchunaa, the hunting, albeit illegal,continued. It is very doubtful that the Chuchunaa still exists.
    www.blackfloridapanther welcomes you and generally has a Wildman story and analysis every weekday. If you would like to discuss your Bigfoot sighting, please contact me. Peter Nickerson, peternickerson12@yahoo.com or 352-359-0850.

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