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A few years before the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington, I worked on a nearby timber- cruising crew. We stayed in a barn-like lodge and ate at a nearby diner.

During breakfast one morning, Harry R. Truman, who owned Harmony Falls Lodge on Spirit Lake, came in. He was wearing an ancient raincoat and the same wrinkled cap he wore years later when he told a cameraman, a helicopter pilot and the world that he’d never leave his mountain. Days later, it blew.

Nodding to the diner’s proprietor, he poured himself some coffee and came to our booth. “You fellas must be the timber cruisers,” he said. He’d obviously had his morning whiskey. “There’s something you boys should know. A Big Hairy Guy hangs out in these woods. Someday you’ll be taping a tree, and a shadow’ll fall on you. He’ll know you’re fixin’ to log his forest, and he’ll be mad.”

He sipped his coffee. “I can show you scratch marks 10 feet high where he tried to get in my barn. I know when he’s around by the smell. Whew! But my cats warn me before he gets that close. They go crazy! Edna, my wife, won’t go out at night at all. The Big Hairy Guy’s passed up many chances to get me, ’cause he knows I’m on his side. You boys, though . . . .” He shook his head.

We figured that Truman was saying he didn’t like our being there (I couldn’t blame him), while ostensibly warning us about Sasquatch, as some Native Americans call the legendary creature. We considered ourselves duly advised on both counts. But in weeks of beating the brush, we saw no sign of the Big Hairy Guy, though in that mysterious forest of shadowy glens and hulking, mossy trees, believing in such a creature wouldn’t have been much of a stretch.

It could be the way we timber beasts were living: Our so-called ski-lodge was nothing but a cavernous wooden frame building with cots lined up, army-barracks style. To heat water for a shower, we had to build a roaring fire in a woodstove and wait. The weather was cool and rainy the entire time, and after the first day we decided a shower was optional. Maybe that’s why we never encountered Bigfoot.

For more than a century, Bigfoot sightings have been reported all over the Northwest. In 1890, railroad workers in British Columbia supposedly captured a rock-throwing, apelike creature they called Jacko. It escaped before anyone photographed him.

Several sightings have been hoaxes, such as those engineered by Ray L. Wallace, who ‘fessed up before he died three years ago. Though his faked footprints and films were amateurish, many believed they were authentic representations of something furry and big. While Wallace’s motive in fooling people was unclear, several bio-hoaxes have been perpetrated for political reasons. A bio-hoax by environmentalists involved planting endangered plants in a forest scheduled for logging.

One rumor had it that a Bigfoot was shot and secretly buried so “enviros” wouldn’t find out and demand Bigfoot refuges. It’s interesting to speculate on what might happen after a confirmed Bigfoot discovery. Personally, I’d like to celebrate by taking the discoverer to breakfast at the diner where I met Harry R. Truman. But, of course, the eatery is buried under millions of tons of volcanic debris. As is, apparently, Harry, and perhaps — who knows? — his Big Hairy Guy.

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