Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Yowies bolted when they saw red: hunter MYSTERY MUGSHOT

- KIRSTIN PAYNE

THE devastatin­g bushfires not only claimed the lives of millions of birds and animals. They are the reason there has been a significan­t drop in the number of yowie sightings on the Gold Coast, says the region’s only cryptozool­ogist.

Dean Harrison, who has been working to prove the existence of the large, hairy Bigfoot-type creature for the three decades, said he believed the Gold Coast yowies had been driven deeper inland by the flames of Hinterland fires.

Mr Harrison, who runs Australian Yowie Research, said reports of sightings in areas of Mount Tamborine, Currumbin Valley, Murwillumb­ah, Canungra, Springbroo­k, Tallebudge­ra and Beechmont had dropped from about 10 a week to none.

“Generally, it does fluctuate,” he said. “We can have dry spells but that whole area has dropped to basically nothing. It has all gone much quieter than normal.

“The same goes for areas in southern NSW near the path of the fire. There are no reports down there.

“But it is still active around the Sunshine Coast.”

Mr Harrison claims he has previously survived two yowie attacks after close encounters with the creatures.

The most recent “encounter” included a recording made by two teens of mysterious moaning and growls in the Tallebudge­ra Valley last year.

A 53-year-old truck driver had also spoken to the Bulletin about his scare in late 2018, when the hood of his truck was hit by a “large hairy creature” near the Kokoda army barracks on Beechmont Road.

Mr Harrison says yowies have now moved further inland to escape the risk of bushfire and human activity.

“When we have these sort of events there is certainly a change in behaviour.

“We are mainly getting reports from other areas. It is hard to say why but I expect they (yowies) have moved out of their comfort zone, out of their natural area and are therefore keeping their heads down more.

“There is so much uncharted bushland out there, they have probably gone further away from the brink of society around Beechmont.”

Mr Harrison said he did not believe any of the animals would have been hurt in the flames.

“Yowies can traverse the most extreme terrain and can grapple straight up sheer rockfaces,’’ he said.

“They have been clocked on the road up to 70 kilometres an hour.

“Once they get the smell of smoke they know the best ways to go, there would have been a good head start.

“If they have been hurt I am quite sure they will take care of their dead, which is why we don’t find the bodies.

“When you see one yowie there isn’t one too far away.”

Mr Harrison speculated the sightings would return following the rains.

 ??  ?? A yowie sketch by artist Buck Buckingham based on witness descriptio­ns and (below) a driver’s drawing of the one he saw.
A yowie sketch by artist Buck Buckingham based on witness descriptio­ns and (below) a driver’s drawing of the one he saw.
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