PHOTOGRAPH PAGE OF TENNESSEE
BIGFOOT HAIR SAMPLES
All information (reports, sketches,
and pictures) contained within are
and are the sole property of the Gulf
Coast Bigfoot Research Organization (G.C.B.R.O.)
and the submitting party.
No information may bereproduced,
in part or in whole, without the express written consent of the G.C.B.R.O.
or submitting party.
TENNESSEE BIGFOOT HAIR SAMPLE
REPORT
STORY BEHIND IT
At long last, after many months
of searching the area where the Tennessee
Bigfoot photograph was taken by
Mary Green and her son, John Green in
February of 1998, nearly a year
later, a hair sample was collected from a
barbed wire fence.
HERE'S MARY'S STORY ON HOW IT
WAS FOUND
I am very leery of any hair on
barbed wire fences. Yet, I am very familiar
with deer, bovine, swine, and horse
hair. So when I entered an area that I
had suspicioned as a “crossing
point” along a narrow, ill kept, black-top
highway, I was on the look out
for any sign of crossing by a Bigfoot. This
place was heavily wooded up a steep
mountain on my left facing east, and a
grown up field on my right where
cattle had once been several years back.
This field on my right was riddled
with very thick blackberry thickets forming
a massive blanket nearly impenetrable
during June and July when greened out.
I had reasoned that during the
season for the blackberries to be ripe, this
would most certainly be a way for
a Bigfoot to come down over the
mountain, with miles of mountain
range behind it, and make a dash across
the road. It would be a
short distance between an
open space and thick cover.
Since I already had a good sighting report of a
Bigfoot in blackberry thickets,
I figured it would be a likely place for a
Bigfoot crossing at any time of
the year.
In order to be quite truthful about
finding the hair that later, Henner
Fahrenbach analyzed and confirmed
it as from an unknown primate, I’d
have to say I was driving my car
when I spotted it. I know that is not going
to sit well with all the Bigfoot
researchers who have traveled into rough
territory for miles and miles in
search of Bigfoot, or at least a hair sample
from one of them, but this is just
how it happened. Consider, though, the
months and months I had trudged
deep into the woods investigating sighting
reports in search of the same myself.
It was sprinkling rain that day,
after a dry spell, the temperatures ranging in
the low 50’s during the day and
low 30’s during the night. I had investigated
this very same likely crossing
point, only 3 days before and had not noticed
hair of any kind on any of the
old barbed wire fences along this road. So
when I saw the hair on two barbs,
on the top fourth strand, I knew I
had to stop and check it out.
It was very black in color and my first thought
was that it could be from a stray
cow, but after carefully picking it off the
barbs, and there was quite a bit
of it, I thought then it might be human hair. It
was very fine hair indeed.
This top strand of barbed wire was nearly four feet
high off the ground, so I thought
someone might have walked up to the fence
and leaned over, somehow getting
their hair entangled in it.
I was not too excited over it when
I submitted it for analyses to Dr. Henner
Fahrenbach, so it was a terrific
surprise to find out that it was similar to other
samples of suspected Sasquatch
hair that Henner Fahrenbach had analyzed in
the past for other persons and
organizations. I want to thank him from the
bottom of my heart for taking time
out of his busy life and on his own time, for
personally conducting the professional
analyses on the Tennessee hair
sample. Dr. Fahrenbach has
contributed greatly to the Bigfoot Research
Field, and our gratitude and thanks
go out to Dr. HennerFahrenbach from the
G.C.B.R.O.
for his time and donated professional skills.
SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE HAIR SAMPLE