Bigfoot Encounters Riverside Man on the trail of Bigfoot by Gregor McGavin |
![]() Daniel Perez lives in a tidy, two-story home on a quiet Riverside side street, far from the deep, dark backwoods where his real interest walks.
Or doesn't, depending on what you believe.
By day, Perez toils as a licensed union electrician. But
his life's work is as a dogged researcher and investigator, hot on the hard-to-follow trail of Bigfoot. "It's an ongoing investigation," says Perez, 44, who has spent more than 20 years in his pursuit of the legendary creature. Perez is editor and publisher of the monthly print and online newsletter Bigfoot Times and co-founder of the Center for Bigfoot Studies, both of which he operates from an upstairs study at his home that is packed with files and artifacts.
He is quoted widely in articles and books on Sasquatch, as the hirsute biped is more commonly known in Canada. He even coined some of the phrases that became part of the Bigfoot lexicon, including the term "Bigfooter" to describe devotees.
![]() The roughly minute-long 16-millimeter film was shot at Bluff Creek in Northern California in 1967. The film -- in which a large, hairy creature turns to face the camera before striding off into the woods -- is the most well-known footage and is upheld by many as proof of Bigfoot's existence.
Perez's booklet on the film, "Bigfoot at Bluff Creek," is often cited as the "bible" on the subject.
On Oct. 20, he served as keynote speaker at a conference in Willow Creek, celebrating the 40th anniversary of the filming by Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin.
"Daniel is a very dogged investigative researcher," said Jeffrey Meldrum, an associate professor of anatomy and anthropology at Idaho State University. Meldrum has written extensively on the evolution of primates and authored a recent book on Sasquatch.
"His forte is a penchant for detail. In his investigations he leaves very few loose ends."
So how does a well-respected Bigfoot expert come to live in the Inland area, not exactly a hotbed of Sasquatch sightings?
It started with a movie, Perez says. He was 10 when he first watched "The Legend of Boggy Creek," a documentary-style movie about a Bigfoot-like creature.
'Just Became Hooked'
"I just became hooked," says Perez, a wiry fellow with long, black hair under a Bigfoot Times baseball cap. "I never grew out of it."
Perez, who dropped out after a few months at Humboldt State University, is a self-taught researcher.
He has spent more than two decades researching the creature and investigating purported sightings.
He has journeyed to sites of Bigfoot spottings throughout the Pacific Northwest, in Georgia and Ohio and as far afield as Australia.
Perez has debunked false claims and defended what he believes to be solid evidence.
But he has never seen Bigfoot himself.
The closest Perez has come to a sighting are two tracks he found -- the first in Hemet in 1980 and the second near Mt. Whitney a few years later.
Perez came across the Hemet tracks after he responded to reports of Bigfoot sightings in the area. In the woods near a creek, he found a 17-inch footprint.
"That was the first track I saw, and I was like, 'It's real!' " he said.
Since then, Perez has corresponded regularly with other researchers and with Bigfoot buffs.
Bigfoot Expertise
In his study, two metal filing cabinets are filled with newspaper clippings, photographs and artifacts. Three bookshelves brim with texts on Bigfoot, cryptozoology and other topics. Plaster casts of Sasquatch and its footprints abound, and photos of Perez with notable researchers are alongside family pictures.
Perez acknowledges that little is known about Bigfoot, despite decades of reported sightings and research.
He says he believes the creatures may have come to North America via a prehistoric ice bridge. They might be descendants of a giant ape that once roamed throughout Asia.
Perez believes Bigfoot is a nocturnal creature that shuns contact with humans.
He believes there may be more than 100,000 of the creatures in North America today but concedes that any such figure is a "guesstimate" at best.
Perez takes heart, however, in the fact that skeptics have been unable, despite several attempts, to successfully duplicate the footage from the Patterson-Gimlin film using a man in a monkey suit as the subject.
He says he will continue on the trail of Bigfoot, investigating incidents such as the photographs shot in September by a hunter in the woods of Pennsylvania that some Bigfooters say could depict a young Sasquatch.
And Perez holds out hope that one day, he will have his own sighting.
"I think about it all the time," he said.
- --- Press Enterprise - --- Daniel Perez can be heard with Don Keating talking about the Patterson film on Blogtalkrado http://www.blogtalkradio.com/search.aspx?query=sasquatch%20triangle - --- Back to Stories? Back to Bigfoot Encounters Main page Back to Newspaper & Magazine Articles Back to Bigfoot Encounters "What's New" page Portions of this website are reprinted and sometimes edited to fit the standards of this website |