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Cryptid

Florida Skunk Ape

Florida has its own Bigfoot—and it stinks. The Skunk Ape haunts the Everglades, recognized by its unbearable odor before you ever see it. Photographs exist. Footprints have been cast. Hundreds of witnesses agree: something foul lurks in the swamp.

January 1, 1957
Everglades, Florida, USA
500+ witnesses

The Stinking Swamp Monster

Deep in the Florida Everglades lurks the Skunk Ape—a Bigfoot relative that announces itself with an odor witnesses describe as worse than death. Sightings span decades, with photos, footprints, and an unforgettable smell.

The Creature

Florida’s Bigfoot:

  • Everglades habitat
  • Terrible smell
  • Ape-like appearance
  • Regular sightings
  • Local legend

The Description

Witness accounts:

  • 6-7 feet tall
  • Orangutan-like
  • Dark fur
  • Walks upright
  • Powerful build

The Smell

Defining characteristic:

  • Overwhelming stench
  • Rotting odor
  • Methane-like
  • Skunk multiplied
  • Precedes sightings

The Habitat

Why the Everglades:

  • 1.5 million acres
  • Impenetrable swamps
  • Hidden areas
  • Abundant food
  • Perfect refuge

Historical Sightings

Timeline:

  • 1950s first reports
  • 1970s peak wave
  • Continues today
  • Consistent accounts
  • Regional phenomenon

The Myakka Photographs

2000 evidence:

  • Anonymous letter
  • Sent to sheriff
  • Two photographs
  • Orange ape face
  • Through palmettos

Photo Analysis

Examination:

  • Never debunked
  • Real animal shown
  • Unknown species
  • Orange coloring
  • Controversial still

Dave Shealy

The researcher:

  • Decades of hunting
  • Everglades City base
  • Research headquarters
  • Tours offered
  • Claims multiple sightings

His Evidence

What he’s gathered:

  • Video footage
  • Photographs
  • Track casts
  • Hair samples
  • Witness interviews

Footprint Evidence

Physical traces:

  • Large prints found
  • 17-18 inches
  • Five toes
  • Heavy creature
  • Multiple locations

The 1997 Bus Incident

Famous sighting:

  • Tour bus
  • Multiple witnesses
  • Creature crossed road
  • Daylight
  • Mass sighting

Scientific Interest

Expert attention:

  • Cryptozoologists studied
  • Could be unknown primate
  • Escaped ape population?
  • Mystery continues
  • Research ongoing

Connection to Bigfoot

Relationship:

  • Same species?
  • Regional adaptation
  • Swamp variant
  • Southern population
  • Debate continues

The Smell Theory

Why so foul:

  • Swamp gases
  • Diet of carrion
  • Defensive odor
  • Natural habitat result
  • Multiple explanations

Recent Activity

Current status:

  • Still reported
  • Trail cameras deployed
  • New photos surface
  • Active phenomenon
  • Ongoing interest

Significance

Decades of sightings with photographic evidence of an unknown primate in America’s most impenetrable wilderness.

Legacy

The Skunk Ape proves that Bigfoot may have adapted to different environments—and Florida’s version makes sure you smell it before you see it.