It was great to see Josh Gates join the Expedition X team (scientist Phil Torres and paranormal researcher Jessica Chobot) for an investigation of the American werewolf legend The Beast of Bray Road. Eyewitnesses in rural Wisconsin have been seeing what is described as a six to seven foot wolfman with glowing read eyes for decades. The team talks to some recent eyewitnesses, discover strange tracks in the woods, and Jessica has an encounter with monster herself.
More on The Beast of Bray Road:
A hairy humanoid with canine features, the Beast of Bray Road, has been sighted in Wisconsin dating back to 1936 on a rural road outside of Elkhorn, Wisconsin. More recent sightings in the 1980s and 1990s, place the creature in Racine, Walworth and Jefferson Counties. Those who have seen the beast describe him as eating or hunting/scavenging.
Also known as Manwolf, Bear-Wolf, and Indigenous Dogman it is said to be around six feet tall with gray and brown fur. Its face resembles that of a wolf, with shiny yellow eyes and pointed ears. Its body, though furry, looks like a muscular man. The creature is said to run and walk on all four of its legs or just its hind legs and has been spied sitting on its haunches and kneeling like a man.
Though it has never attacked anyone, some witnesses claim that it has acted aggressively, running at them and jumping on their vehicles.
Some researchers consider the Beast of Bray Road to be identical to a kind of Wisconsin Bigfoot that locals call the “Bluff Monster” or the “Eddy.” Others, including many Native Americans, believe it to be the “Wendigo,” which has often been spied in Minnesota. Others believe that it has simply been misidentified and is a wolf, a bear, or a large feral dog.
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