Story at :http://parabook.
Wednesday, 30 September 2009
MORE LINKS TO THE SUMATRA STORY
Story at :http://parabook.
PICTURES FROM AN EXPEDITION: The Lake of Seven Peaks
The jungles are cool and damp, much like the one inhabited by mountain gorillas in Africa. Adam found fresh tiger tracks in the jungle and thought the beast was only a few hundred yards away from our camp.
Twice, whilst crossing to the far side of the lake, the antiquated fisherman's canoes sprung leaks and were almost swamped when the lake's waters became choppy. The holes had to be plugged with black paper bags and we had to bail out the water.
Tuesday, 29 September 2009
PICTURES FROM AN EXPEDITION
Richard with a kubu hunter who had witnessed OP about
three years previously. He motioned that it had been about four feet tall,
black and walked upright like a man. Its face was like that
of a macacque. He was adamant that it was not a monkey, a gibbon, or a sun bear.
The Sumatran rainforest - home of the orang-pendek
A half eaten coconut that the expedition found by the side
of the trail in Gunung Tuju. Teeth marks are clearly visible.
Could it have been nibbled upon by orang-pendek?
More tomorrow....
EXPEDITION PRESS RELEASE
EXPEDITION SPOTS MYSTERY APE IN
The Centre for Fortean Zoology (CFZ) is the world’s largest mystery animal research group. Only a week after releasing footage of what appears to be anomalous animals in an Irish lake, a group of four British explorers and scientists from the CFZ have just returned from the jungles of
CFZ member Dave Archer and local guide Sahar saw the creature at a distance of around 100 feet as it squatted in a tree. Dave describes it as broad shouldered, with a large head, black skin and dark brown hair. A line of darker fur was visible on the spine. He likened the coat of the creature to that of a mountain gorilla. Sahar saw the creature jump down from the tree and walk away on its hind legs. It was the size of an adult male chimpanzee.
Next to the tree was some rattan vine that the animal was apparently chewing. Expedition leader Adam Davis has preserved part of the plant in ethanol in the hope that it contains cells from the animal’s mouth.
The team also found and photographed several sets of tracks made by creatures. Expedition zoologist Richard Freeman confirmed that they matched no known creature in the area. The prints were six to seven inches long with a narrow heel and wider front. The big toe is well separated.
Hair samples were taken from a tree close to the tracks. A number of the hairs contain medullas that the team hopes will contain orang-pendek DNA. The samples will shortly be sent off to experts around the world for analysis.
If the samples turn out to be from a new species Freeman suggests the scientific name of Pongo martyri in honour of the English researcher Debbie Martyr who has done more than anyone else to look into this zoological mystery.
Footage from the expedition and from the Irish lakes are being submitted for inclusion in a major BBC documentary about the CFZ, which is being made by Minnow Films, an award winning British film production company, over the next eight months.
Pictures are available from the expedition, and more information will be released over the next few days. For pictures from
NOTES TO EDITORS
* The Centre for Fortean Zoology [CFZ] is the world’s largest mystery animal research organisation. It was founded in 1992 by British author Jonathan Downes (and is a non-profit making (not for profit) organisation registered with H.M. Stamp Office.
* Life-president of the CFZ is Colonel John Blashford-Snell OBE, best known for his groundbreaking youth work organising the ‘Operation Drake’ and ‘Operation Raleigh’ expeditions in the 1970s and 1980s.
* CFZ Director Jonathan Downes is the author and/or editor of over 20 books. Island of Paradise, his first hand account of two expeditions to the
* The CFZ have carried out expeditions across the world including
* CFZ Press is the world’s largest publisher of books on mystery animals. They also publish Animals & Men, the world’s only cryptozoology magazine, and The Amateur Naturalist,
* The CFZ produce their own full length documentaries through their media division called CFZtv (www.cfztv.org). One of their films, Lair of the Red Worm, which was released in early 2007 and documents their 2005
* The CFZ is based in Jon Downes’s old family home in rural north
* Jonathan Downes presents a monthly web TV show called On the Track (http://cfzmonthly.blogspot.com/), which covers cryptozoology and work of the CFZ.
* The CFZ are opening a Visitor Centre and Museum in Woolsery,
* Following their successful partnership with Capcom (www.capcom.com) on the 2007
Monday, 28 September 2009
THEY ARE BACK
This, I hope, also answers the many online detractors who have sneered at the fact that no pictures were released with the sketchy story. That is because the story was never meant for publication, and the expedition were not even back in the country at the time. I hope that we shall be able to release pictures later today.
It is at times like this that I despair for the future of the cryptozoological community....
Saturday, 26 September 2009
EXPEDITION SUCCESS
Hi Jon,
We are just back from the jungle and have amazing news but don't release it till tomorrow when we will be out of Indonesia.
Dave Archer and Sahar the guide saw orang-pendek!
It was squatting in a tree around 100 feet from them. It was the size of an adult chimp and dark brown in colour. They could not see the face, hands or feet. Its head was shaped more like a gorilla's than a chimp's and it lacked the long mane of hair some witnesses describe. A darker strip was visible on the back. It had broad shoulders and the upper half of the body, including the head, was 40 inches (we measured afterwards). The coat was thick like a mountain gorilla's. We have hair samples and rattan that the orang-pendek was chewing on. Sahar saw it jump down and walk away on two legs. Dave missed a photo opportunity when he tried to get a better vantage point.
We found and photographed very clear footprints in a different area but could not cast them as we couldn't get hold of any plaster of Paris. We collected many hairs from this area.
Dampness screwed the moving camera's battery. It was virtually dead within 48 hours of us reaching Gunung Tuju. We took lots of photos. Dave's moving camera was drained by humidity too. We have some film but not a vast amount. We filmed a big cat sequence.
Loads of adventures happened including almost sinking in flooded canoes, thinking we had OP cornered up a tree and clothes being soaked in raw sewage!
The rattan will probably have OP DNA on it like a mouth swab. These are the best results from any expedition ever.
Cheers,
Rich
I followed Richard's instructions to the letter and didn't release it until today now the team are - hopefully - out of Indonesia. There could be a number of reasons for Richard's request, not the least being due to the instability of the region the possibility of the four brave CFZ boys finding themselves getting into trouble as a result of the news having been leaked. So we stayed schtum.
However, the news was leaked out last night. I don't know who did it or why, and I don't particularly care: this is about the advancement of science, not scoring cheap points over other people by getting the news out first. A considerable number of our readers and members emailed, telephoned and IM'd me last night to tell me that the news had been proliferated across the Internet, and to ask why there was no mention of the CFZ in any of the reports. Are there some people, they asked, who prefer not to give the CFZ any publicity at all if they can possibly help it? And would these people be happier if we just gave up and went away?
All I can say, my dears, is that you might well think that, but I could not possibly comment
Slainte
Friday, 25 September 2009
NEWS UPDATE
It is one of the most frustrating things about my job that when an expedition is in the field I often have little or no communication with them, and it is horribly frustrating not to know what is going on. It is even more frustrating to know what has happened but be unable to tell you. What with this and the embargo on the Irish lake monster video until after I have tried to flog it, I hope that you guys aren't too cross with me....
Sunday, 20 September 2009
RICHARD WRITES
This arrived several days ago (while I was in Ireland) and turned up in my spam filter. Hi Jon et al, I'm in an internet cafe en route to Banko. We have been on the road for 8 hours and have another 2 to go. Should arrive in Banko at 2 am. Will be meeting with the Kubu tribe tomorrow. Apparently there have been a lot of orang-pendek sightings in this area recently. We will be putting up baited camera traps. All the best, Rich |
Monday, 14 September 2009
LATEST PRESS RELEASE
BIPEDAL APE COULD GIVE CLUES TO HOW MANKIND EVOLVED
An unknown species of Indonesian ape could shed light on how our own human ancestors began to walk erect. The orang-pendek of Sumatra is said to be a powerfully-built ape that walks on two legs like a man. Both native people and western explorers, including two noted scientists, have reported the creature from the deep jungle.
This week four English scientists and explorers will brave the rainforest in search of the orang-pendek. The team from the Centre for Fortean Zoology will spend two weeks in Sumatra working with the Kubu people, the island’s original inhabitants, who will help them track the mysterious ape.
The expedition comes shortly after the announcement of the discovery of a fossil hominid in Georgia. The Dmansis hominids lived 1.8 million years ago and had legs like modern humans, but primitive arms. Their early occurrence has made scientists rethink how hominids moved out of Africa to colonise the rest of the world.
Richard Freeman, the team’s zoologist, says…
“It was once thought that our ancestors became bipedal when they descended from the trees and moved onto the grasslands of East Africa in order to exploit new food sources. However, now it seems that many apes and hominids were moving ‘bipedally’ whilst they were still rainforest dwellers.
As well as being a major zoological discovery, the orang-pendek could give us some clues on how bipedalism developed.”
The group’s trip will be recorded on the Centre for Fortean Zoology’s website at
NOTES TO EDITORS
* The Centre for Fortean Zoology [CFZ] is the world’s largest mystery animal research organisation. It was founded in 1992 by British author Jonathan Downes and is a non-profit making (not for profit) organisation registered with H.M. Stamp Office.
* Life-president of the CFZ is Colonel John Blashford-Snell OBE, best known for his groundbreaking youth work organising the ‘Operation Drake’ and ‘Operation Raleigh’ expeditions in the 1970s and 1980s.
* CFZ Director Jonathan Downes is the author and/or editor of over 20 books.
* The CFZ have carried out expeditions across the world including
* CFZ Press are the world’s largest publishers of books on mystery animals. They also publish Animals & Men, the world’s only cryptozoology magazine, and The Amateur Naturalist, Britain’s only dedicated magazine on the subject.
* The CFZ produce their own full-length documentaries through their media division called CFZtv at www.cfztv.org. One of their films, Lair of the Red Worm, which was released in early 2007 and documents their 2005 Mongolia expedition, has now been seen by nearly 50,000 people.
* The CFZ is based in Jon Downes’s old family home in rural
* Jonathan Downes presents a monthly web TV show called On the Track (http://cfzmonthly.blogspot.com/), which covers cryptozoology and the work of the CFZ.
* The CFZ are opening a Visitor Centre and Museum in Woolsery,
* Following their successful partnership with Capcom www.capcom.com on the 2007
A FEATHER IN OUR CAP
Dr.Darren Naish will also be working with Adam and the team on a more comprehensive scientific analysis upon their return.
NO NEWS IS....
So as I always do under these circumstances, I quote a few lines from Patriot (a single) by Scott Walker from his glorious 1995 album Tilt, which I would love to say is a CFZ favourite, but in fact everyone hates it except for me and Max:
The good news you cannot refuse/The bad news is there is no news
Don't know what I am talking about? Watch this:
Sunday, 13 September 2009
SO, THE GAME IS AFOOT
Saturday, 12 September 2009
SOSTRATUS ON SUMATRA
Hello there,
I’m sorry I’ve not been in touch for some time. Our household is ridiculous at the moment. The youngest member is very sick, the pets are behaving oddly and generally speaking it’s all over the place.
I wanted to say congratulations on the
Oh, and by the way, I am still working on my friend about the Bigfoot cast. I have not forgotten; nor did I make the suggestion idly, without intention of following through. He does owe me a favour but is reluctant to see it as yet!
Kindest regards,
Sostratus Winston
Friday, 11 September 2009
MORE PRESS COVERAGE
This is North Devon - Barnstaple,England,UK
Four explorers from the Centre for Fortean Zoology, the world's largest mystery animal research organisation based in Woolsery, will be searching through the jungles of Sumatra on the hunt for the orang-pendek.
The yeti-like creature is described as a powerfully built and upright-walking beast, which the CFZ believe may be related to the orangutan and the yeti of mainland Asia....
Wednesday, 9 September 2009
KITHRA WRITES
http://kithraskrystalkave.blogspot.com/2009/09/2009-cfz-expedition-to-search-for-orang.html
ADAM DAVIES: His hopes for the expedition
I want to see it. I want to see it so badly, I dream about it.
I will now have been to Indonesia five times looking for evidence of the Orang–Pendek, the Sumatran Yeti. Importantly, I have found real scientific evidence of its existence. For example, the hair I found in 2001 was identified as being from an unknown primate by the gentleman who analysed the hair in the famous Dingo baby case; while a primatologist at Cambridge reached the same conclusion over the prints. (See my book Extreme expeditions: Travel Adventures Stalking The World’s Mystery Animals for more details). Any evidence I do/will find will always be open to independent scientific scrutiny. Otherwise it counts for nothing.
I have spent thousands of pounds of my own money looking for the Orang-Pendek . I have interviewed reams of witnesses, and travelled hundreds of miles through jungle. I have been sucked by too many leeches to count and on one memorable occasion realised I had bacillary dysentery, whilst I was on top of a mountain….
Why?
Lake Tuju, where we are going on the second part of the expedition, is an exceptionally beautiful place. It is a volcano crater shrouded by primal jungle. As you approach the camp by canoe, gibbons warn others of your approach. Beyond that; bears, golden cats, and tigers really do roam only a few yards into that forest. In the diversity of its life, there is nowhere like it on earth.
I know the Orang-Pendek exists. I have travelled with several others in search of it, and I can say that the team we have - Dally and Sahar (Indonesia) and myself Chris Richard and Dave - are a strong, dedicated team. For the first half of the expedition, we will be staying with the Kubu, and I hope to learn about their oral traditions and legends, as well as utilising their services in the quest.
The Palm Oil plantations are upon us. The work we are doing is for good, so wish us luck!
Let me see it….
Tuesday, 8 September 2009
MEET THE TEAM
We thought that it was about time that we had a quick look at the four members of the Sumatra 2009 team. The pictures, by the way, are from last year's expedition to Russia.
Richard is a full-time cryptozoologist and the Zoological Director of the Centre for Fortean Zoology. He has taken expeditions all across the globe in search of monsters and mysterious beasts. He has hunted giant snakes in Indo-China and South America, relic hominids in Russia, mystery apes in Indonesia, dragons in West Africa, giant eels in Scotland and death worms in the Gobi Desert.
Dr Chris Clark
Chris has taken part in and partially funded many of the CFZ’s expeditions. An avid explorer, he has also travelled widely in some of the most inhospitable places on earth such as Afghanistan. He is a trained astrophysicist and currently works as an engineer for Halliburton. He is fascinated with Islamic architecture.
Adam works as an interviewer for the Home Office. He has explored the planet on the track of unknown animals for a number of years. His adventures have included ape-men in Mongolia, lake monsters in Scandinavia, possible living dinosaurs in the Congo and wildmen in China. He has appeared on the History Channel in the U.S.
Dave Archer
Dave keeps exotic pets in a number that could constitute a small zoo. He is a member of the CFZ and took part in his first cryptozoological expedition last year when he hunted the almasty, a relic hominid in Russia. He has taken his own expeditions to Turkey to study the native reptiles.
Monday, 7 September 2009
EXPEDITION PRESS RELEASE
BRITISH SCIENTISTS IN SEARCH FOR THE INDONESIAN ‘YETI’
A group of British explorers and scientists from the Devon-based Centre for Fortean Zoology (CFZ), the world’s largest mystery animal research organisation, are about to embark on an expedition in search of a yeti-like creature in Indonesia. The four-man team will search the jungles of Sumatra for what locals call the ‘orang-pendek’. The powerfully built, upright-walking beast may be related to both the orang-utan and the much larger yeti of mainland Asia. In the same island chain remains of the tiny hominid known as Homo floresiensis were unearthed in 2003.
The Kubu people - an ancient race who were the first inhabitants of Sumatra - will aid the team. The tribe and their chief have seen the creature in their poorly explored jungle homelands.
Westerners have sighted the orang-pendek too, including Englishwoman Debbie Martyr, now head of the Indonesian tiger conservation group, and wildlife photographer Jeremy Holden.
Also reported in the same jungles are huge horned snakes said to be ten metres long, and a savage, golden cat with a stubby tail and large canine fangs.
The expedition’s zoologist, Richard Freeman, Zoological Director of the CFZ, says…
“The orang-pendek is especially interesting as it is an ape that walks upright rather than on all fours. It may show us how our own ancestors first began bipedal locomotion.
The cigau may be a surviving form of Homotherium or scimitar cat, which is a beast related to the better known sabre-toothed cats. Fossils of this animal have been found in Indonesia that are only 10,000 years old. In evolutionary or geological terms that is yesterday.
The giant snakes, known as ‘nagas’ by the Kubu, may be a new species. There are horned snakes such as the rhinoceros viper and the horned viper, but these are small. The nagas of the Kubu are said to be ten metres long! The ‘horns’ are probably modified scales.
New species are turning up in Indonesia all the time; it is the real life lost world.”
Team leader Adam Davies, together with Dr Chris Clark and Dave Archer, will join Mr Freeman. You can follow the group’s adventures online at the CFZ website on http://www.cfz.org.uk/
NOTES TO EDITORS
* The Centre for Fortean Zoology [CFZ] is the world’s largest mystery animal research organisation. It was founded in 1992 by British author Jonathan Downes and is a non-profit making (not for profit) organisation registered with H.M. Stamp Office.
RICHARD FREEMAN: Notes from the front
A couple of weeks ago I had a dream of seeing a pair of orang-pendek on the outskirts of a village. Adam Davies has had a recurring dream of seeing an orang-pendek, also on the outskirts of a village. My girlfriend Lisa, however, has had a reccuring dream of me being constricted by a huge snake near some water. Make of that what you will! No Comment. Ed.
I'm looking forward to finding out more about the giant horned snakes that are said to live in the jungle, and the cigau - the savage big cat whose description sounds very like a scimitar cat.
I'm also wondering how much deforestation has occured in the five years since I was last there.
RICHARD FREEMAN: Three's the Charm
Adam Davies, Dr Chris Clark, Dave Archer and myself will be spending two weeks in the jungle in search of the orang-pendek. Past expeditions have concentrated on Gunung Tuju (the lake of seven peaks) in Kerinchi National Park. This time the better part of the expedition will be spent with the Kubu people in the lowland jungles. Back in 2004 Chris and I spent a day with these people and Nylam, their chief.
The Kubu are the original inhabitants of Sumatra. The modern Indonesians arrived relatively recently from Malaya. The Kubu are far taller and more slender than the average Sumatran. They have oriental features but the men have curly hair almost like Africans. Until recently the Kubu lived totally wild in the jungle. Now they have houses but still spend months on end in the deep rainforest. Nylam told us of his own encounter with an orang-pendek a few years back. He and his warriors had also seen ten-metre-long serpents that they described as having horns like an ox!
We will be working with the Kubu to search for orang-pendek and the horned serpents (the Kubu call them 'Nagas'). Apparently there have been a number of sightings of the short man in the area recently. We intend to make our HQ in the ‘garden’; a semi-cultivated area that abuts the true jungle. We hope to record some of their culture and folklore as next to nothing has been written on Kubu beliefs.
Towards the end of the trip we will return to Gunung Tuju where the creature has also been seen recently.
They say three's the charm and third time lucky so keep your fingers crossed!