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Harry
09-01-2007, 08:23 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20539085/

:dog:

CUERO, Texas - Phylis Canion lived in Africa for four years. She’s been a hunter all her life and has the mounted heads of a zebra and other exotic animals in her house to prove it.

But the roadkill she found last month outside her ranch was a new one even for her, worth putting in a freezer hidden from curious onlookers: Canion believes she may have the head of the mythical, bloodsucking chupacabra.

“It is one ugly creature,” Canion said, holding the head of the mammal, which has big ears, large fanged teeth and grayish-blue, mostly hairless skin.

Canion and some of her neighbors discovered the 40-pound (18-kilogram) bodies of three of the animals over four days in July outside her ranch in Cuero, 80 miles (128 kilometers) southeast of San Antonio. Canion said she saved the head of the one she found so she can get to get to the bottom of its ancestry through DNA testing and then mount it for posterity.

She suspects, as have many rural denizens over the years, that a chupacabra may have killed as many as 26 of her chickens in the past couple of years.

“I’ve seen a lot of nasty stuff. I’ve never seen anything like this,” she said.

What tipped Canion to the possibility that this was no ugly coyote, but perhaps the vampirelike beast, is that the chickens weren’t eaten or carried off — all the blood was drained from them, she said.

Chupacabra means “goat sucker” in Spanish, and it is said to have originated in Latin America, specifically Puerto Rico and Mexico.

Canion thinks recent heavy rains ran them right out of their dens.

“I think it could have wolf in it,” Canion said. “It has to be a cross between two or three different things.”

She said the finding has captured the imagination of locals, just like purported sightings of Bigfoot or the Loch Ness Monster have elsewhere.

But what folks are calling a chupacabra is probably just a strange breed of dog, said veterinarian Travis Schaar of the Main Street Animal Hospital in nearby Victoria.

“I’m not going to tell you that’s not a chupacabra. I just think in my opinion a chupacabra is a dog,” said Schaar, who has seen Canion’s find.

The “chupacabras” could have all been part of a mutated litter of dogs, or they may be a new kind of mutt, he said.

As for the bloodsucking, Schaar said that this particular canine may simply have a preference for blood, letting its prey bleed out and licking it up.

Chupacabra or not, the discovery has spawned a local and international craze. Canion has started selling T-shirts that read: “2007, The Summer of the Chupacabra, Cuero, Texas,” accompanied by a caricature of the creature. The $5 shirts have gone all over the world, including Japan, Australia and Brunei. Schaar also said he has one.

Thoth-Amon
09-01-2007, 09:20 PM
Looks like a dog to me.

Blue Eyed Frau
09-01-2007, 09:56 PM
Also looks like a dog to me but Yikes it so sad to look at :eek:

Northcott
09-02-2007, 03:26 PM
It wouldn't shock me too much if the chupacabra turned out to simply be a very, very sneaky type of canine or other species. The authorities have claimed for nigh on a century that the cougar is extinct in Ontario, yet every couple of years someone spots pawprints, and a few hunters and/or woodsmen claimed to have seen them. Sneaky animals.

For years there was the thought that gorillas were some kind of freaky, quasi-supernatural beast, before the truth of them was discovered. Hell, we're still discovering the truth of them.

doc
09-04-2007, 04:44 PM
Fish and Game guy said it was a Fox with the mange

Varaj
09-04-2007, 05:21 PM
Fish and Game guy said it was a Fox with the mange


Quick google image search shows that to be a very likely answer.

Harry
03-20-2010, 08:53 PM
http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/us/2010/03/05/kotv.chupacabra.found.cnn.html

Ancalagon
03-21-2010, 09:22 PM
http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/us/2010/03/05/kotv.chupacabra.found.cnn.html

I only had partial sound, but that was kinda freaky to see what a raccoon looks like with no hair... poor critter!

Lady Fury
03-22-2010, 12:07 AM
I've seen something similar back when I use to work for the vet clinic. It's an awful site to see any animal with advance mange. With that said, I could definitely see how people could mistake animals with this condition as something else.

shiningbrow
03-22-2010, 09:57 AM
dog. yes. unless a dna test proves otherwise.

Name Lips
03-22-2010, 12:11 PM
I'm also betting dog.

But I have no problem with a "Chupacabra" being a perfectly good name for a rare and elusive breed of wild dog.

Pigs in Space
03-23-2010, 06:16 PM
I've seen something similar back when I use to work for the vet clinic. It's an awful site to see any animal with advance mange. With that said, I could definitely see how people could mistake animals with this condition as something else.

Can you fix them, or do you have to put them down?

Lady Fury
03-23-2010, 07:53 PM
Can you fix them, or do you have to put them down?

There are treatments and for some animals it is successful. It's usually not the mange that ends up killing them but the other infections that come along with it.