Friday, January 6, 2012

Chupacabra Sighting in Tucson and the Beauty of an Open Mind

Posted by Ryn Gargulinski on Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 9:00 AM

One rendition of a Chupacabra

Hide the children and secure the goats — a Chupacabra was spotted in Tucson. Although this creepy creature was originally born of Puerto Rican myth, it has since materialized and made its way across several continents.

The coyote-like critter has enjoyed sightings throughout the 1980s in South America, spent a bulk of the 1990s in Mexico and has been currently roaming through parts of the Southwestern United States.

Carcasses thought to be Chupacabras have actually been DNA tested after they were brought to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The results only proved the dead things were “some type of coyote,” although their snout and back legs exceeded the length of those found on a coyote. They also reportedly had large fangs jutting up from their bottom jaws.

The fangs surely helped give them their name, which translates from the Spanish as “goat sucker.” In addition to sucking goat blood, they are also known to attack small livestock like chicken and ducks and larger animals like cattle and horses but have never gone for a human.

KGUN9’s Chief Meterologist Erin Christiansen didn’t see fangs on the beast that was caught like, well, a chupacabra in the headlights in front of her car, but she did get a pretty good glimpse of the critter as it skittered across Speedway, west of Camino Seco, earlier this month.

“Seriously,” she wrote in an email, “I don’t know if what I saw was really a Chupacabra, but I can say that I’ve never seen anything like this animal before.

“What I saw was just a very strange looking animal. It was slightly larger than a coyote, no fur, leathery looking skin. It was mostly black with gray and brown splotches. It had a long rat-looking tail. Its face looked like a bat with disproportionately large ears, which also reminded me of a bat.”

Christiansen’s sighting is not the only time an inexplicable creature reared its creepy head in Old Pueblo. About 20 years back, my fiancé and a pal were sitting in their truck along South Houghton near an old corral.

“A thing came walking out of the desert,” he says. “It looked like a bear walking on two feet and had kind of like a cow’s head. We called him buffalo man. I don’t know what it was. I’ve never seen anything like that.”

While the buffalo man does not share some of the traits as the beast seen by Christiansen, variations on the Chupacabra do exist. It’s been described as having the body of a bat, the body of a kangaroo or sprouting thick wings.

Creepy? You bet.

Crazy? No way.

It takes a lot of guts to admit seeing a Chupacabra, or even a strange beast that may have been a Chupacabra. Kudos to Christiansen and Mr. fiancé for being so bold — and illustrating the beauty of an open mind.

When people close off their minds, horrible things can happen. They get stuck in a rut of the mundane, dismissing or attacking all that cannot be explained. They eradicate the mystery and fun from life and replace it with the banal — then wonder why they’re so cranky.

Lighten up, keep an open mind and enjoy life’s possibilities. And don’t forget to hide the children and secure the goats.

__
Ryn Gargulinski, aka Rynski, is a writer, artist, performer and poet. Her column runs in the “Tucson Weekly” print edition monthly and weekly on Friday on “The Range.” See more writing and art from RYNdustries at ryngargulinski.com and rynski.etsy.com.

logo.jpg

Tags: , , , , ,

Comments (6)

Showing 1-6 of 6

Add a comment

Weather forcaster? Bwahahahaha! Sounds like too much cactus juice!!!BWAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!

report 1 like, 4 dislikes   
Posted by Tena on 01/06/2012 at 11:45 AM

probably a deseased and deformed coyote with mange.

report 1 like, 2 dislikes   
Posted by patmanaz on 01/06/2012 at 1:33 PM

I think this is wonderful! Thank God for people who are special enough to keep their minds open to things like this, I agree that it is a beautiful thing. My 10 year old son has Asperger's and is obsessed with cracking the mystery that is the Chupacabra...before he goes to bed at night we read his research book on cryptozoology to learn as much as possible about this mysterious creature. Kudos to Erin for keeping hope alive for kids with beautiful minds!

report 5 likes, 0 dislikes   
Posted by BubsMom on 01/06/2012 at 3:16 PM

Hey BubsMom,
Bub is one lucky kid! thanks for your input!



report 3 likes, 0 dislikes   
Posted by Rynski on 01/06/2012 at 4:37 PM

Good story.

report 4 likes, 0 dislikes   
Posted by G. DiNardo on 01/07/2012 at 4:43 PM

thanks, G. DiNardo!

report 2 likes, 0 dislikes   
Posted by Rynski on 01/09/2012 at 8:06 AM
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-6 of 6

Add a comment

Previously in the Range

More by Author

Popular Content

  1. You Win, Jill T. Nagamine (The Range: The Tucson Weekly's Daily Dispatch)
  2. Buddha's Dog House Is Open (The Range: The Tucson Weekly's Daily Dispatch)
  3. Seeing Stars (Well, Eclipsed Sun) (The Range: The Tucson Weekly's Daily Dispatch)
  4. Here's What the Eclipse Looked Like, If That's Your Thing (The Range: The Tucson Weekly's Daily Dispatch)
  5. You Should Read the Mad Men Power Rankings (The Range: The Tucson Weekly's Daily Dispatch)

© 2012 Tucson Weekly | 3280 E. Hemisphere Loop, Suite 180, Tucson AZ 85706 | P.O. Box 27087, Tucson AZ 85726-7087 | (520) 294-1200 | Powered by Foundation