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For
many disbelievers only a personal experience could ever convince them
of the Yowie's existence.
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To
read excerpts from
GIANTS FROM
THE DREAMTIME
The YOWIE in Myth and Reality
Click any Below Chapter (eg: Chapter
1 )
Contents / About the Author / Dedications / Acknowledgements / Forward / Introduction
Chapter 1 / Chapter 2 / Chapter 3 / Chapter 4 / Chapter 5 / Chapter 6 / Chapter 7 / Chapter 8 / Chapter 9 / Chapter 10 / Chapter 11 Chapter 12 / Chapter 13 / Chapter 14 / Chapter 15 / Chapter 16 / Chapter 17 / Chapter 18 / Chapter 19 / Chapter 20 / Chapter 21
Early Settlers Tales of Northern N.S.W.
We now turn to the rich
store of 'hairy man' folklore to be found throughout the length and breadth
of the Northern NSW mountain ranges, and as with the 'hairy man' traditions
of the Blue Mountains and southern NSW, these also date from the first years
of European settlement throughout the north of the state.
A station hand on Goonoo Goonoo Station near Tamworth, in the New England
district wrote of his encounter with a 'Yahoo' in 1844:
"I made a camp on the high bank of the creek, lit a fire and made myself
comfortable, my dog down at the fire alongside me. I sat smoking a pipe as
the moon rose." "About an hour later, when you could discern objects
200 yards [ie 200 m] away from the camp, I heard a curious noise coming up
the creek opposite. One hundred yards away I saw him. He seemed as a man,
only larger."
"He was something like an ape of a dark colour and making roaring noises.
He went away towards Top Bingara, the noise getting fainter." "I
started at daylight, getting to bells Mountain about 9 o'clock. Mr Bridger
lived there so I stopped and had breakfast. I was telling them about the night
before when they said several people had seen the hairy man about there."
"He was often seen in the mountains towards the Gwydir and about Mt Lindsay.
I thought, how easily this giant animal could elude pursuit, travelling by
night and camping in rocks or caves in the daytime."
"Some people think they are a myth, but this doesn't explain the many
sightings of them by people in the old days."
This author is indebted to researcher Mr E.L. Bates, for the great wealth
of material gathered by him, and which he so generously provided me with,
when I first began preparations for this book during the late 1970's. It is
this material which now makes up much of this chapter.
The region covered by his investigations has remained virtually unchanged
since pioneering days; rugged, forest-covered hills and mountains, rising
up out of the forests of the Hunter Valley and New England Ranges, making
up a vast expanse of often impenetrable wilderness.
Vast expanses into which few white men [if any] have ever penetrated. It is
from these wilderness regions that, today hairy manbeasts [and womanbeasts!]
are claimed to emerge, to wander onto the edge of lonely farms, leaving their
sometimes huge footprints in the mud of waterholes as 'calling cards', before
retreating back into their wilderness habitat, high amid those cloudline peaks.
Mr. Bates, first heard of the Yowies about 1905, while a child growing up
at Caroda, which lies between Narrabri and Bingara.
Yet as he grew older Mr Bates became sceptical of the 'hairy man' tales of
his childhood.
That was, until one evening in 1925, when he met a man at Glendon near Singleton.
After learning that Mr Bates was a member of an old Pioneer family in that
district, he asked him if he had ever heard of the 'Coories' [pronounced Coo-e-e-es]
that once lived out in the scrub behind Minimbah Station during the pioneer
days. The man stated that his family had not only heard about, but also seen
some of these strange creatures during the later part of the 19th century.
The Coories, he said, stood around 2.6 m tall, the males being very strong,
muscular brutes, with deeply set eyes, and curly body hair; that on their
heads being about 8 cm in length.
Then, during 1931 Mr Bates met an 81 year old man while at Brookfield near
Dungog, from whom he learnt that these Coories also roamed the Canobolas mountains
outside Orange, in the Central West. Although the old man had never seen one
himself, he related that his father and a number of other early settlers of
the Canobolas district had claimed to have seen them during the previous century.
These, and other similar traditions soon convinced Mr Bates that the accounts
of 'hairy man' encounters were more than mere bushman's tall tales.
He settled in the small sawmilling settlement of Upper Allyn Valley, which
lies on the southern side of the rugged forest covered Barrington Tops Ranges,
and 60km from Dungog. The Allyn Valley is an eerie, foreboding, densely timbered
region of towering, steep mountainsides and gorges hemmed in on three sides
by the Barrington Tops, some whose peaks rise well above 1,666 m above sea
level.
Some parts of the Allyn Valley are so impenetrable that they have not yet
been completely explored. It was from old people of this district that Mr
Bates obtained stories of encounters with 'Coories' reaching as far back as
1848.
Excerpts
from my 2001 Book "Giants From the Dreamtime-The Yowie in Myth and Reality.
Available Now. To Order Your Copy Details Are On The Main
Homepage.
To Continue Reading Click On Image
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Below For Chapter 4
Chapter
4
Dawn People of
the Dreamtime
Chapter 4
Click any Below Chapter (eg: Chapter 1 )
Contents / About the Author / Dedications / Acknowledgements / Forward / Introduction
Chapter 1 / Chapter 2 / Chapter 3 / Chapter 4 / Chapter 5 / Chapter 6 / Chapter 7 / Chapter 8 / Chapter 9 / Chapter 10 / Chapter 11 Chapter 12 / Chapter 13 / Chapter 14 / Chapter 15 / Chapter 16 / Chapter 17 / Chapter 18 / Chapter 19 / Chapter 20 / Chapter 21
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© Rex Gilroy 1959-2002 &
Beyond or Subsequent Photographers.
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