View Full Version : The Chupacabra Thread
Doctorthingit
08-04-2005, 08:03 PM
I don't know what it is, but I've heard of it. What the heck is it?
Zombie-F
08-04-2005, 08:17 PM
I'll let raxl answer. He loves that little goat-sucker.
There was an X-Files episode on it a while back, but it is a real mexican legend.
Sinister
08-04-2005, 08:17 PM
The Chupacabra is a creature who's name literally means "goat sucker." It's reign of terror began somewhere in Mexico, Peurto Rico and Central America around the mid-90's and is described as being a cross between a kangaroo and a bat. It's primary victims have mostly been livestock and domesticated animals like dogs and cats. It has many chracteristics as a Vampire by hunting at night, draining blood from its victims through puncture wounds inthe neck and can be warded off with a crucifix.
It is mostly a creature associated with tabloid nonsense along with the Bat-Boy, The Devil's Face seen in cloud formations, and other freaks of nature. It is a creature that Raxl fears mightily! :D
Some numbers of weird animal deaths in South America: :xbones:
Argentina
500 cases in 2002
1,082 cases in 2003
493 cases in 2004
75 cases so far this year
That's 2,150 animal mutilations, largely focused in the province of La Pampa, Argentina.
Chile
Paralleling Argentina along the Andes mountains is Chile. 1,294 animal mutilations since 2002. If you combine Argentina's and Chile's reported animal mutilations, the number is 3,244 in the past three and a half years.
Other
That's not counting the 1,461 poultry deaths in Chile caused by Something that punctures the birds with bloodless holes. Bloodless punctures were the calling card of the infamous chupacabras creatures that attacked in Puerto Rico, Mexico and the southern U. S. from 1995 to 1996. In addition, there were 837 mutilated and punctured animals on Brazil farms in 1997.
Along with the thousands of unusual animal deaths, Chile and Argentina eyewitnesses have also seen unidentified aerial objects and beams of light - despite the Argentina government's official explanation for all the animal deaths: a red-snouted mouse.
Chupacabra sightings date back to the mid 70's, actually. In Puerto Rico.
Something killed a bunch of livestock, sucking out all the blood, and several vital organs, through two small holes in the neck.
Eyewitnesses claim seeing a 3 or 4 foot tall creature, grey, or dark green, with a giant head, big red eyes and wings.
It is similar to creatures like the Jersey Devil and Spring Heeled Jack.
Except the Chupa kills more small animals. :p
Chupacabra has was reported in Florida as far back as 1996, and is reported in California and Texas as well.
Many theories regarding the creation of the chupa exist. Lots of people believe the Chupa was created by the US government genetic labs, as it's earliest sightings were in areas near US bases. The theory goes that the US considered Puerto Rico to be a great big self contained testing lab. Except Chupas got away from the base, and eventually got off the island.
Other ideas run from aliens from ufo's (unexplained lights are often seen during Chupa reports) to undiscovered natural life form.
feldjager
09-01-2005, 05:32 AM
http://www.earthfiles.com/news/news.cfm?ID=970&category=Environment
SuFiKitten77
09-01-2005, 11:33 AM
The very last picture of the "creature" looks to me like a shaved kangaroo .. hehe. The Chupacabra has been depected much uglier ;)
Sinister
09-01-2005, 11:44 AM
The very last picture of the "creature" looks to me like a shaved kangaroo
That is in all liklihood what it is. The Chupacabra doesn't exist. If they were trying to convince us that they did, I would think they would get a little more creative than that.
SuFiKitten77
09-01-2005, 11:46 AM
I would sure the hell hope so .. lol .. that was lame :p
feldjager
09-02-2005, 05:16 AM
The Chupacabra doesn't exist! what,that the samething the say about my penis, bu ti know its there also!
Papa Bones
09-02-2005, 03:12 PM
The very last picture of the "creature" looks to me like a shaved kangaroo .. hehe. The Chupacabra has been depected much uglier ;)
I was thinking a skinned coyote or some kind of dog myself. But now that ya mention it, it does look kind of kangaroo like
SuFiKitten77
09-02-2005, 03:37 PM
Hehe .. maybe it's a "Kangaote" ? Never know now a days ;)
Haasmama
09-02-2005, 06:29 PM
I always thought Texans were better educated. Has anyone seen the photos that Graphic Designers have done to put a tigers face on a butterfly's wings or put a world map on a jersey cow? They are floating around on the internet somewhere. IMO, these are just a poor attempt at doing the same thing. These pictures are fakes not worthy of any attention. They lack all "believable" detail. It's another hoax like big foot was. Didn't Big Foot turn out to be a 90 year old man with fake feet strapped onto his shoes?
Neither the reporter or the people they were talking too were asking or giving any detailed information. IF it were me, I would have taken it somewhere for someone to study. As long as they put my name on it somehow, they can call it what they want
I have to give them credit for trying though. Aren't we all trying to recreate what our imaginations show us?
Another strange dog-like creature has been found in the East Texas woods. The animal bares a striking resemblance to so-called Elmendorf Beast (aka Chupacabra).
Over the weekend, two brothers out hunting shot it and killed a mysterious animal with leathery skin, long teeth, and hind legs longer than its front legs.
Kolby Russell told KLTV in Tyler-Longview that this wasn’t his first run in with the creature. "I had chased it a couple times earlier, about a month ago, and my friends didn't believe me, I finally showed them and they did."
"I've seen mange before, and he has a body kind of built like a coyote -- but he's real skinny," says Kolby’s brother Coty told KLTV.
The Russell family sent photos to the county animal control department to see if they want to examine it.
CharlieM
01-20-2006, 02:59 AM
Man, I love the Chupacabra. But of the various versions of it I've seen, I prefer the one that doesn't look like it would rip my asshole out my cock in six seconds, before devouring my balls in three.
Sinister
01-21-2006, 11:40 PM
:rolleyes: Raxl and his fucking Chupacabra's. His and claymud's obsession with Spring-Heel Jack have provided me with many hours of amusement on this particular board. :D
claymud
01-22-2006, 09:18 AM
:rolleyes: Raxl and his fucking Chupacabra's. His and claymud's obsession with Spring-Heel Jack have provided me with many hours of amusement on this particular board. :D
We aim to please
Feb. 28, 2006 — In south Texas, its frightening name resurfaces in the news every few months — especially after another neighborhood pet or farm animal mysteriously dies.
"El Chupacabra," they say, "is back."
Parents are cautious, warning their children to stay inside at night or risk a face-to-fang encounter with the chupacabra — a red-eyed, spiky-haired, blood-sucking creature with a green-blue tint to its hide.
The chupacabra haunts the minds of the residents in La Frontera, the U.S.-Mexico borderlands. Here, an amalgamation of cultures blend, represented by Gulf shrimp tacos, polka-inspired Tejano music, and young, white girls who also hold quinceneras, the Mexican teen rite-of-passage celebration.
Amid this mostly peaceful cultural mishmash, the chupacabra — translates to goat-sucker — replaces the boogeyman. Rumored to be originally of Puerto Rican folklore, the chupacabra and its reign spread to Central America in the '80s and '90s, and has moved northward through Mexico and Texas, where it has quickly been embraced and has lately been portrayed in artwork and film.
Is It Real?
Like other mythic monsters, the chupacabra has its believers — just ask www.elchupacabra.com Webmaster and science-fiction buff Dave Pettis.
"I just believe there can be something out there like that," said Pettis, who lives in Northern California. "I don't think every animal in the world has been classified."
Pettis said he gets lots of e-mails from people. Some are curious about the creature, while others want to submit their own sightings.
"Some people think it's some [lab] experiment that escaped, but other people think it's some animal that's been around for a long time, like in South America. The clearing of the rain forests has made it come out," he said.
The Mexican Boogeyman
It's these sorts of theories that make anthropologist Tony Zavaleta chuckle.
He loves the chupacabra myth, but it's for different reasons. It's simply a great part of Mexican-American folklore, he said.
While the chupacabra is by far the most popular myth, it is just one of several indigenous monsterlike creatures. There's also El Cucuy, or a small humanlike demon that also goes after kids at night.
"It's so universal. … Every group of people, regardless of where they are, they have what I define or describe as the boogeyman — the story you use to keep children in line and inside at night," said Zavaleta, a professor and vice president for external affairs at the University of Texas at Brownsville.
Zavaleta's favorite encounter with the chupacabra came while walking through Mexico City a few years ago. He spotted a mask for sale — one that looked partly like a chupacabra and partly like the Mexico president at that time. He had to laugh.
"It's the metaphor for the evil president: the blood sucker," he said.
The Whimsical Monster
High in the mountains of northern Mexico, not far from the Texas border, many of the farmers do not laugh about the chupacabra, said artist and fellow Texas professor Carlos Gomez. There, the chupacabra is blamed for killing cattle and other livestock.
While traveling around the El Cielo cloud forest a few years ago, he tried to joke with the locals about the blood-sucking monster.
He received a cool response.
"There had been some sightings. People were panicking," he said. "Their livestock is their livelihood. They really depend on that."
His trip inspired him to create a recent set of paintings about the chupacabra. Instead of portraying it as a monster, he took a whimsical approach, defying local perceptions.
"Some are old. Some are young and showboating," he said. "Some are blue with red moles, or red with freckles."
A Cult Favorite
Henry Serrato, who works for a south Texas television station and is an amateur filmmaker, also took a whimsical approach with his mockumentary or documentary spoof titled "The Search for the Chupacabra."
Blending real in-person interviews with fictionalized accounts, his film highlights some of the absurdities of the science-fiction fan world — such as the time a real film crew showed up in south Texas ready to film scenes about sightings of a giant Pterodactyl-like bird last spotted there in the '70s.
"The crew shows up in 1996 — 20 years too late. Here was a crew going around interviewing about the big bird, and everyone wants to talk about the chupacabra," he said.
"It's reached cult status," he said of the chupacabra.
Just a Coyote?
Lately, there have been signs that the chupacabra myth may die out before reaching worldwide fame.
Several carcasses of supposed chupacabras have been brought to the attention of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.
And its official determination?
The animals were nothing but coyotes with severe cases of sarcoptic mange, a nasty skin disease that leaves the animals emaciated and partially hairless with bluish skin.
It's a plausible explanation for why people may let their imaginations wander, said Danny Pence, a professor of parasitology at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in Lubbock. He was talking to the San-Antonio Express-News.
"If you never worked with them or seen them, they do look strange," he told the newspaper.
But Pettis, the chupacabra Webmaster, isn't convinced. He has seen several pictures of the carcasses.
"It didn't look like a coyote. Its back legs were too long," he said.
Chupa tv special tonight, on the National Geographic Chan. at 8:oo.:ninja:
feldjager
03-07-2006, 07:36 PM
man they show that one every 2 weeks!
:D Chupacabra to Congress: Without Us, Who Will Drink the Blood of Your Goats?
By Chad Fifer, Mar 29, 2006
As the Senate begins to overhaul the particularly harsh immigration policy passed by the House, thousands of pro-immigrant protestors have taken to the streets to voice their opinion -- among them, the elusive Chupacabra!
From: Anónimo
To: The United States Senate
Re: U.S. Immigration Policy
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Senate,
Hola.
I am writing to you from a small cave somewhere in the American Southwest, my humble home since 1996. I live a quiet life here, and rarely involve myself in politics of any kind. There is a reason for this, which I am sure many of you may have already guessed. You see, I am an illegal immigrant in this country, and live in constant fear of deportation at the hands of your INS agents. In addition, I am El Chupacabra, famed goat-sucker of Latin legend.
As I said, I normally keep my political opinions (as well as my scaly, greenish-gray body) hidden from others, but was so moved by the thousands of students who left school this week to march in support of immigrant rights that I felt compelled to step up and lend my voice to the cause. My horrible, braying, unnatural voice.
Allow me to tell you my story. I was born in Iztapalapa, one of the poorest areas of Mexico City, in a small shack made of cinder blocks. My mother was a beautiful young seamstress who had been kicked out of the house when her family discovered she was pregnant without a husband. My father was a Chupacabra who inseminated her while she slept before boarding an orb of light and fleeing to the farthest regions of the galaxy.
It was difficult growing up without a father to teach me how to play baseball or ride a bike, and my human mother only shrieked and stabbed at me when I approached our filthy dwelling. Clean water was scarce, as were the delicious goats that filled my dreams. The only thing that kept me warm at night as I drifted off to sleep in the local dump, clutching the carcass of a rat or mangy squirrel, was the dream of a better world where the livestock were plenty. A better world. America.
I first attempted to make my way across the border at 16 by pulling the stuffing from an enormous Tweety Bird doll and sewing myself inside. As any cryptozoologist can tell you, the mature Chupacabra is typically between three and four feet tall, but since I was still young, it seemed an easy fit. Once concealed, I attempted to get myself sold on the Tijuana border as a cheap souvenir for American tourists. Unfortunately, I had not thought to ask for the assistance of a roadside seller, and all of the drivers squealed away in horror at the sight of a dirty Tweety Bird hopping toward them in the rearview mirror, the sharp quills of my back protruding through the doll’s furry yellow hide.
Although daunted by this first experience, I eventually did make it across the border by hiding inside of a small shipping container in the back of a truck, nearly dying of dehydration in the process. Were there an easier way for me to come to America legally (and also if I weren’t a horrific creature of urban legend that would doubtless be quarantined by the military, tested and destroyed), of course I would have done it. But so desperately did I crave escape from the misery of my own land that the risk of death was not too great. I would have done anything to get here. And my story is not rare.
I understand that after the terrorist attacks on this country, Americans are nervous about protecting their borders, but we must remember that this is a country built by immigrants! You may deride the Mexicans and los Chubacabras now, but remember how the Italians were treated when they came here. Or the Irish. Or the Chinese. They were all considered swarthy, shifty, un-American immigrants at one time. Now, these groups make up the backbone of society and own many, many goats that I will suck on.
I am so tired of hearing American citizens talk about how the illegal immigrants are coming in and taking their jobs from them. Come on! If we weren’t illegal, you wouldn’t be able to get away with paying us next to nothing. And do you really want to have those jobs? Do you really want to clean toilets, or wash dishes, or maul livestock all night long? I mean, can you imagine your typical New York stockbroker having to sneak onto a farmer’s property in the middle of the night and quietly drink the blood of five goats? Forget about it! First of all, he wouldn’t possess the dread gaze of the Chupacabra, a gaze which makes all animals freeze and succumb to my vampiric embrace. Secondly, he wouldn’t want to get his fancy suit all dirty.
I am glad that Congress is finally making some attempts to deal with the 11 million unauthorized migrants and 15 elusive Chupacabras now in the United States, but the bill passed by the House to make all of us felons is ridiculous. And the perception that we are coming into this country in order to take advantage of America’s benefits while we lie around doing nothing is just plain stupid. We work hard for next to nothing, always afraid of being deported back to the squalor from which we came. We are an engine for this country, and we want to be accepted by this country. Yes, we have broken laws to get here, but many of us needed a solution right away, and the slow motion of the bureaucracies just would not do. Also, the number of goat attacks on children has dropped to an all-time low since we got here. It’s true. Seriously.
The Senate Judiciary Committee’s recommendation to allow illegal immigrants to stay after paying a fine, learning English and getting a background check is preferable to what the House wants, although the fines are a bit steep – $1,000 now, $1,000 later, plus any back taxes we might owe. Chupa ain’t got that kind of scratch – I don’t know where you’re getting your figures. Maybe you let people work it off over time – something reasonable like that. Chupa don’t have all the answers, neither. But as you continue to work toward a solution, you should remember that even though many of us don’t know English, we do know “give me your hungry, your tired, your poor.” We are poor, we are tired, and we are hungry for the blood of your small and defenseless livestock (or domestic pets if we happen to be located in an urban center).
We are the American dream.
The Weekly Memo is a biweekly behind-the-scenes look at the revealing correspondence of our most fascinating thinkers, leaders, celebrities, and weirdoes.
I swear, you can find ANYTHING on the 'net!:D :cool:
Johnny Thunder
10-28-2006, 11:25 AM
Chupacabra sighting at Discovery Science Center
To lure kids into learning about real animals, the museum features a mythical one.
By ERIN UY
The Orange County Register
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
SANTA ANA - Word traveled fast in Salvatierra, Art Guevara's hometown in Mexico. A chupacabra, a bloodsucking monster, slaughtered a neighbor's farm animals. Children who played on the farms and in the fields at night would be next, parents warned. But Guevara, then about 7 years old, and his friends planned to catch the menacing chupacabra with a net.
"It was scary. We stayed out the whole night and when we caught it, we called everyone to see the chupacabra," said Guevara, 56. "And then we realized it actually was a coyote."
The half-man, half-beast monster has never been photographed, but the Discovery Science Center is offering insight into the mythical creature through an exhibit that runs until Nov. 5. The display is part of Discovery's Spooky Science program, which uses monsters to explore aspects of science. To understand the chupacabra, children can learn about real creatures that share its traits. The exhibit features leeches and mosquitoes, other bloodsucking organisms. And it looks at specimens such as fleas, which share the hind-leg features that the chupacabra purportedly uses to pounce on its prey.
"What we like to do at the Discovery Science Center is offer something to spark a kid's interest and then show them the science behind it," said spokeswoman Julie Smith. But Discovery leaves the mystery of the chupacabra to its guests. There are no images or figures of the creature, which is said to have razor-sharp fangs, scaly skin and haunting red eyes.
Some Orange County residents thought they spotted a chupacabra in Santa Ana in 1996, according to news reports. A construction worker who fell asleep near his apartment window said he woke up to see a large, shadowy figure of the legendary beast. Guevara said the stories may have been a parental tactic to keep mischievous children like him home at night. But, despite his chupacabra hunts, he has never stopped believing the urban legend. "They would prefer little kids over grown-ups and animals, they would tell us," he said. "We couldn't help but be scared."
THE CHUPACABRA LEGEND
The first chupacabra “sighting” was in Puerto Rico in 1975. Goats had been killed and their blood drained. Chupacabra, a Spanish word, translates as “goat sucker.” Sightings span from South America to Michigan.
The chupacabra's origin is disputed. Some say they are pets left behind by aliens, animals from another dimension or creatures that have gone unnoticed since the time of the dinosaurs.
The creature has never been photographed, but people describe it as such:
• Half man, half beast
• 4 to 5 feet tall
• Leaps up to 20 feet with its powerful hind legs.
• Spikes stretch from the head to bottom of its back.
• Reptilian skin changes colors.
• Red eyes
• Long fangs
Source: The Discovery Science Center
http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n295/johnnythunder_1971/chupa4.jpg
Ah, we can never have enough chupa stories!:p
Johnny Thunder
11-22-2006, 12:49 PM
Animal baffles Johnson County residents
Nov 13, 2006 08:08 PM EST
JOHNSON COUNTY--A strange animal in one Arkansas county has residents looking for answers as to what it is. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission say it's a dog, but some residents disagree.
Some people say it's a cross between a wild dog and coyote, but others say there's an air of mystery surrounding the animal. Some even think it has characteristics of a Chupacabra, an animal from a Hispanic legend.
Deer hunters have more than one animal to talk about when they check their hunt in at McCormick's One Stop.
"Everyone that comes in has their own opinion," Matt McCormick said.
Ideas circulate among the customers about this animal, one Johnson County residents' can't agree on what to call it. McCormick's has pictures on the counter if you want to get a good look at it.
They're "just kind of curious as to what it is. It's got everybody's interest perked up," McCormick said.
These pictures were taken October fourth, one day after the animal was shot. The photographer sent them to the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission for an answer, and they got one. But many residents say they're not convinced it's a dog with a severe case of mange.
Some people have been digging for another explanation, and they think they found it in the urban legend of Chupacabra. According to the Hispanic legend, Chupacabra can come in three forms one of which is a strange breed of wild dog, mostly hairless with pronounced eye sockets, teeth and claws.
But some people say that idea is far fetched.
"It's a funny colored dog so got to calling it a dog from hell. It's just a regular dog," Johnson County resident Gerry McCartney said.
McCartney says the idea that's it's anything other than a dog is off the wall, because she's had a run-in with the animal in her yard.
"I came out one night and shot up in air to get it gone off my dogs," she said.
People in the county continue to talk of this animal although its dead, they're confident others are alive.
http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n295/johnnythunder_1971/147488_G.jpg
Hauntiholik
11-22-2006, 01:22 PM
"What the heck is it, Edgar?"
That is not a dog.
Spookkid
11-22-2006, 02:24 PM
It looks like a deranged prairy dog.
Some sort of demented meerkat,perhaps.:p
It's ugly, whatever it is.:eek:
Johnny Thunder
11-22-2006, 08:36 PM
Agreed - it looks like a sick prairie dog kinda thing.
Spookkid
11-23-2006, 03:25 PM
http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/3/33/200px-Prairie.dog.600pix.jpg
-prairydog
http://www.meerkats.com/images/5422.jpg-meerkat
You decide.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,295481,00.html
No pictures though.
Otaku
09-01-2007, 09:16 PM
Comcast had a blurb on the Chupacabra with a small pic:
http://www.comcast.net/news/strange/
TearyThunder
11-05-2007, 10:56 PM
Creature ID'd as Coyote, Not Chupacabra
http://www.woai.com/mostpopular/story.aspx?content_id=d4a65dc5-2ce4-427e-b141-93910790d802
Johnny Thunder
01-15-2010, 09:35 AM
This story involves some dead chickens and concern there's - yup, you guessed it - a chupacabra on the loose.
http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_14172713
Johnny Thunder
01-24-2010, 12:17 PM
Chupacabra Found? - CBS News Video
RoxyBlue
01-24-2010, 09:50 PM
How is it all these poor dead hairless animals automatically get consigned to the "chupacabra" bin? It makes me wonder - if aliens came to this planet, would they think bald men were some strange species also?:D:googly:
Johnny Thunder
04-06-2010, 02:23 PM
"Chinese chupacabra" found.....
http://life.globaltimes.cn/odd/2010-03/517141.html
Johnny Thunder
04-23-2010, 07:52 AM
"Chupacabra" corpse stolen! Well, to be fair, who could resist? :)
http://www.kens5.com/news/local/Fiesta-Mystery-Chupacabra-carcass-missing-91757639.html
Sickie Ickie
04-23-2010, 12:40 PM
Looks like a publicity stunt. Pull your gaff, call the media, return gaff again .
debbie5
04-23-2010, 05:00 PM
Why do all carny guys look alike?? Carny as in -val, not-niverous....
Dark Angel 27
07-14-2010, 09:14 PM
this is one ugly animal!
http://buzz.yahoo.com/buzzlog/93844?fp=1
Rahnefan
07-14-2010, 09:38 PM
I drunkenly posit that if someone could offer irrefutable evidence of Nessie, then not long thereafter, interest and funding would lead to the proof (or disproof) of chupacabra and a lot of other cryptids. And at first, that would so, SO rule. It'd be the event of our lives. Can you imagine much anything that'd be bigger? But after that...when there are no more mysteries...y'know, it would kinda suck. Yeah. It'd really suck.
Viva chupacabra, hombres.
RoxyBlue
08-04-2010, 11:49 AM
Chupacabra - the pet for people who don't want to be annoyed:
http://i907.photobucket.com/albums/ac276/bontom/HauntForum/chupacabra.jpg
(I know - I put this in Random Shots as well, but it's just so damn funny it deserves to be seen twice:D)
PirateLady
08-04-2010, 11:58 AM
Love that picture....
Johnny Thunder
09-03-2010, 10:14 AM
300 goats beheaded – Chupacabras to blame?
http://www.aolnews.com/weird-news/article/chupacabras-suspected-in-300-goat-beheadings/19616888
Johnny Thunder
01-02-2011, 02:58 PM
Gross.
http://www.wave3.com/story/13731615/mysterious-creature-found-in-nelson-county
RoxyBlue
01-02-2011, 03:32 PM
Another poor maligned bald creature makes the news:googly:
We were going to go with 'possum, but there appear to be teats showing in one photo, so we're revising our guess to raccoon.
debbie5
01-02-2011, 05:59 PM
#1: This is NEWS? #2: Is this 1820? #3: It's a raccoon.
GothicCandle
01-03-2011, 08:47 AM
Cothren described the creature as having large ears, whiskers, a long tail, and about the size of a house cat.
my guess is a...house cat!!!
http://www.demopolislive.com/gallery/images/1/1_sphinx_cat_02.jpg
Lunatic
01-05-2011, 08:41 PM
Oh yeah, definitely a Chupacabra. I'd recognize one of those anywhere.
Spooky1
01-06-2011, 12:25 AM
There was a video on CNN, that has wildlife officials identifying the critter as a raccoon. So the real Chupacabra is still out there on the loose. :)
debbie5
01-06-2011, 02:37 AM
My dog is a chupacabra...only he wears a Tony Curtis wig so he blends in....
Johnny Thunder
01-07-2011, 11:01 AM
Sadly, just another bald racoon.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40948849/ns/local_news-louisville_ky/
Johnny Thunder
07-29-2011, 12:06 PM
Possible chupa on the loose in Siberia
http://themoscownews.com/russia/20110726/188875163.html
RoxyBlue
07-29-2011, 12:33 PM
Those creatures sure do get around.
Spooky1
08-04-2011, 02:43 PM
They even show up in our backyard. :) :googly:
http://i460.photobucket.com/albums/qq325/SpookyTJ/Crypt%20Crawler%202011/DSC03806.jpg
Lunatic
08-04-2011, 03:43 PM
I think a chupacabra is nothing more than a mangy skunk-ape.
Johnny Thunder
08-17-2011, 11:41 AM
No that chick’s not annoying at all.
New chupa vid?
http://tv.yahoo.com/daytime/video/chupacabra-captured/26090386/
RoxyBlue
08-17-2011, 11:50 AM
Looks a bit like a hairless wallaby to me. Or a hairless possum.
And yes, she was VERY annoying:D
scareme
08-17-2011, 01:36 PM
I love her! I watch her all the time. She's bubbly. The real question here is what were they smoking?
Spooky1
08-17-2011, 02:44 PM
Here's one from our neck of the woods.
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/44159491/ns/today-today_pets_and_animals/t/new-chupacabra-mystery-animal-confounds/
debbie5
08-18-2011, 02:23 AM
Mangy fox.
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