国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

chupacabra monster Minnesota Katie heaney Madelyne Tolentino coyote mange animal
Is this a chupacabra? Probably not, but it's dead, so how could we ever know for sure? (Photo: Pablo Spekuljak/Flickr)

Monster Hunt: The Chupacabra

Katie Heaney tries to figure out the difference between "shriveled dead thing" and chupacabra

Published: 
chupacabra monster Minnesota Katie heaney Madelyne Tolentino coyote mange animal
(Photo: Pablo Spekuljak/Flickr)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

The trouble with the chupacabra is that it looks an awful lot like a handful of other, regular animals. When someone thinks he鈥檚 found one in the United States, the creature usually looks like a coyote, or a fox, or a dog, or a wolf, or a small kangaroo鈥攋ust slightly off. But most things look a little off when they鈥檙e dead. And that鈥檚 what most so-called chupacabras have in common when they are found: being a shriveled dead thing.

But then there are those that describe the chupacabra more like a creeping lizard, a green-gray-black scaled monster, either with color-changing spikes or duller black (but still deadly, in the end) spines trailing down its back and tail, with a Hollywood bug-eyed alien face and claws on its fingers and toes. This is the fantastic version, and, it has to be said, the one without the carcasses to show for it. There are only drawings. Or, anyway, that鈥檚 what they want us to think.

The chupacabra鈥攖he name, Spanish for 鈥済oat sucker,鈥 for the animal鈥檚 reported eating habits, the vampiric puncture wounds found on the necks or chests of its prey鈥攊s a relatively new legend, which I think makes it just slightly more suspicious for reasons I can鈥檛 quite explain but which have something to do with having too much familiarity with the historical setting into which it was born. (It鈥檚 the same way with religions, for some people. If you had relatives whose names you know and who were around and living when it all got started, doesn鈥檛 it just seem less authentic somehow?) 1995? I remember 1995. It did not seem an especially mystical year, or anything like one that could give birth to a new strain of folklore that could last for decades or more. But then, maybe I was too busy with the fourth grade to notice.

It is to that year, though, that the first eyewitness account of a chupacabra dates back, . A few months earlier, eight sheep drained of blood, apparently through puncture marks in their chests, were found dead in a town nearby. The attacks intensified, and soon , where Tolentino lived. She was the first to report seeing the creature responsible.

In the months between the first set of attacks and Tolentino鈥檚 report, she went to see the science-fiction movie Species, about a sexy (but lethal) alien woman named Sil who is hell-bent on seducing a human man and who, in her true, spiny-backed form .

That鈥檚 how 鈥攁 paranormal enthusiast-but-skeptic whose written works (and podcast, MonsterTalk) exist to ruin the fun everyone else is having by applying scientific criticism to cryptozoologic and legendary phenomena鈥攃ame to decide the lizard-man variety of the chupacabra mystery was nothing but a cinematic fever dream. It鈥檚 fair enough, if you鈥檙e looking for 鈥渆xplanations,鈥 or whatever.

THE MORE MUNDANE VERSION鈥攖he dog that is just a little crazy鈥攑ersists in the continental United States, no matter how many times . The theory explains the look: the hairlessness, the leathery skin, the wiry dying bodies. The smell.

Mange, however, wouldn鈥檛 account for the goat-sucking-ness of the thing; the insatiable and frightening craving for blood that makes any of this a more compelling story than one that starts and ends with 鈥渁 few of my livestock have died.鈥 Scientists say (and not without reason, though I鈥檓 loath to admit such a thing) that part is just a myth, an idea run wild upon seeing puncture wounds in an animal鈥檚 neck鈥攕omething that is not, after all, so far outside the typical series of consequences when a carnivore kills something using its canine teeth. So there you go. It鈥檚 a young mystery all finished.

But it鈥檚 still the sort of thing that can pretty easily end up starring in , the reporter telling the viewer that this, like most chupacabras seen before it, is just a coyote with mange, probably. 鈥淐hupacabra鈥 is still what we want to call it when we want to tell someone about something dead and weird we saw on the street鈥攍ike .

Whatever the thing in that picture is, I think we can all agree that it鈥檚 a damn mess. Nothing that was once living is supposed to look like that. Its head is falling off, and it has an ugly, toupee-like clump of brown hair perched in the middle of its back. Its neck is much too big and its hind legs too small. I鈥檇 have said it could look like almost anything, but once I learned that the woman who found it, Lacey Ilse, said that the dead creature looked 鈥渉alf-human,鈥 I knew I didn鈥檛 mean it. I tried turning my computer screen around and squinting my eyes out of focus and everything. It is 10-percent-human at best.

But anyway, there it was, on the street and in the national news. And a number of people must have wondered what it was for long enough to make it there, but then , which is probably one of the more boring chupacabra lookalikes there ever was.

We went to Alexandria just in case.

BEFORE WE LEFT, I asked Rylee if there was anything we should bring to bait it.

鈥淲hat do they eat?鈥 she asked.

鈥淲ell … goat blood,鈥 I said. She took French in high school, not Spanish.

She paused. 鈥淒o we have any?鈥

Despite hiking up a steep trail meant for snowmobiles for two rather difficult hours, we did not see a chupacabra in (or around) Alexandria. If they are real, for as much as I鈥檇 like to claim them as a part of the local wildlife, they just don鈥檛 seem all that natural a fit in Minnesota. But then if it were white, like the predecessor seen by Lacey Ilse, it would have blended right in with the fresh foot of snow on the ground. It covered up everything; we didn鈥檛 see any badgers (dead or alive) either. The only other living things we saw, in fact, were the local snowmobilers, and, well, there are some questions even I am too embarrassed to ask a stranger.

聽is a writer based in Minneapolis. She has a memoir coming out in early 2014.

Lead Photo: Pablo Spekuljak/Flickr

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online