(see : http://cryptozoo-oscity.blogspot.com/2009/05/alaskan-lake-monster.html)
Sightings of this Alaskan bigfoot have gone on for some years. In 1956, a fisherman said he saw the Urayuli as he was anchoring his fishing boat on the beach at night. A biologist from Ketchikan apparently found and took a photograph of some large footprints on the same beach. (Not being able to trace the photo btw. Has anyone else seen it?)
In 1982, in Dillingham, a hunting guide was said to be showing around a photograph that he had taken of the Urayuli standing on a mountain ridge. ( again not been able to trace this)
In 1999, a gang of walkers took a photo of a pair of large wedge-shaped footprints in the mud along the banks of the Kiseralik River. The footprints were measured at 12 inches (30 cms) to 14 inches long( 35 cms) and 3 ( 7.5 cms)inches deep. Also in 1999 a large black-haired huge creature was reported as being seen in the Cold Bay of Belkofski. Described as 14 feet( 4.5 metres) tall and with the stance and demeanour of a large Ape.
A Federal Aviation Administration worker Jim Coffee said an eight-foot humanoid almost ran him off the road in Newhalen, near Lake Iliamna.
The same night, a woman living nearby reported that a Bigfoot left
watermelon-sized footprints in her yard and tore down her laundry. Large
footprints were found along the side of the road said to be 24 inches ( 60 cms) long.
In 2011 YouTube user putua76 posted a shaky video that purports to capture the unconfirmed creature on tape near Ketchikan, Alaska.
Read rest see video here : http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/our-alaska-bigfoot-sighting-ketchikan
See this site for more: http://www.bigfootencounters.com/articles/alaska2.htm
There appear to be no stories of attacks on Humans by the Urayuli but they are said to steal fish.
The Kushtaka of South Eastern Alaska, has
a more aggressive reputation then the seemingly harmless and non
aggressive Urayuli. The indigenous people avoided the places they
thought it frequented. Harry D. Colp wrote about an encounter with the
Kushtaka, published as "The Strangest Story Ever Told."
Colp and three other prospectors met up in 1900 at Wrangell. They sent Charlie, one of the four, to Thomas Bay
to look over a gold prospect, while the others sought grubstakes to pay
their expenses. Charlie went about 50 miles up the coast to this
location. There the rains kept him confined to his tent for several
days. He then went out, trying to locate the landmarks given to him by a
native. By chance, he found a gold-flecked quartz ledge and loosened a
piece with his gun, breaking his gunstock in the process. As he was
taking his bearings, he said, a troupe of creatures he called "devils,"
that looked like both men and monkeys, swarmed after him. These shaggy
beasts, with long, coarse hair, stinking and covered with sores, pursued
him back to his canoe. During the chase, they screamed and scraped his
back with "long claw like fingers." Charlie said he came to in his
canoe, which was drifting at sea. He was cold, hungry and thirsty. He
returned to his comrades with nothing but the clothes on his back, his
canoe and oars, and the chunk of gold quartz. He declared he had enough
of Alaska. In exchange for his passage back to Seattle,
he told his tale to the other three. Two more of Colp's partners
returned to the site of the gold-speckled quartz ledge. Once again, they
returned with strange tales of "devils." One of the partners was said
to have gone mad. Other prospectors who scouted the same area were
reported by Colp to have suffered frightening experiences and to have
behaved in a strange manner afterwards. Mysterious happenings occurred
as late as 1925, when a farmer reported losing a dog in the hills there,
but finding strange tracks, with the hind feet resembling a cross
between a bear's and a human's footprints. A trapper in the area
disappeared. Searchers found his outfit and tracks, but no trace of the
man.
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