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Tuesday 1 December 2015

The tale of the mysterious Girt Dog of Ennerdale...Really?

I really almost had my head explode when I read this article.  Was it a late "April Fool"?  Just read this http://www.lancashirelife.co.uk/out-about/wildlife/the_tale_of_the_mysterious_girt_dog_of_ennerdale_1_4020788

The tale of the mysterious Girt Dog of Ennerdale

03 April 2015
A photographs of a captured thylacine from the 1930s
A photographs of a captured thylacine from the 1930s
Emily Rothery goes on the trail of a dog-like creature that brought terror to the Lakes

An artist s impression by Helen ThorburnAn artist s impression by 
 
 
Helen Thorburn
There are many dog-like creatures found in the folklores of northern Britain and they have some weird and wonderful names - Barquist, Gytrash, Padfoot, The Grim, Striker or Skriker.

They are names that once struck fear into the hearts of all who believed in their existence. The mythical black creature was considered to be an apparition that appeared at night and was said to portend death. It was reputed to be much larger than a normal dog with huge glowing eyes and was often associated with electrical storms and the devil.

They are said to be myths dating back to Celtic times but in the Lake District in the early 19th century a mysterious creature known as The Girt Dog of Ennerdale was eventually found to be an altogether different kind of hound.

In 1810 a savage predator began mercilessly killing sheep in the Cumberland valley of Ennerdale. The attacks went on for months with up to eight sheep a day being slaughtered. Alarm spread, children were kept inside for safety’s sake and a £10 reward was offered for its capture.
A thylacine bagged by an Australian hunter 
A thylacine bagged by an Australian hunter
 
 
Eventually it was spotted but it was not what the locals expected. It was described as having the qualities of both a large cat and a large dog, tawny in colour with dark stripes running down its back.
Local farmers and their neighbours abandoned normal duties to track down the blood-thirsty carnivore, which seemed to have an uncanny ability to evade capture. It ignored poisoned meat that was put down and led the hunters a merry dance as they followed it on forays into Wasdale and then south into Lancashire.

It was said that normally brave hunting dogs that had been set on its trail would cower and whimper when a scent was picked up. Thus a belief began to take hold that the creature was indeed supernatural.
One experienced hunter by the name of Will Rothery was one of the first to get a clear shot but was so alarmed as the beast approached that he dropped his musket, lost his reputation and made a run for it.
As news of the wily predator spread across the county the locals were joined by professional huntsmen but still the beast evaded capture until eventually, after a long chase, the Girt Dog was run to ground and mortally wounded by a man named John Steel. By this time it was said to have killed 300 sheep and terrified a whole community.

The Girt Dog’s bloody reign had come to an end and the carcass, which weighed 112lbs was paraded around the area before being stuffed and displayed in The Hutton Museum in nearby Keswick. Unfortunately, in the 1950s a curator decided it was becoming moth-eaten and threw it out.

It is now commonly believed that the Girt Dog of Ennerdale was, in fact, a thylacine, a wolf-like marsupial, also known as a Tasmanian tiger or Tasmanian wolf. The exotic predator had possibly escaped from a travelling menagerie or circus, but the true origins will never be known for certain.

Hounded out
The thylacine, commonly known as the Tassie tiger, has been considered extinct for nearly 80 years but recently a team of intrepid British naturalists believe that compelling evidence of its presence has been found in Tasmania’s north west.

It is thought this was a relatively shy, nocturnal creature with a stiff tail and abdominal pouch like a kangaroo.

Its reputation as a sheep thief led to a bounty being placed on its head and this resulted in its likely extinction.

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Okay, let us get this straight.  It is a popular misconception that in hunting the term "bag" or "bagged" means a shot fox or animal.  The term originated in fox hunting where captive foxes were released from sacks ("bags") for hunts.  If the houndsmen could get to the fox before the hounds then the fox was "bagged" for the next hunt.  This is all detailed in The Red Paper: Canids along with hunting books and literature and examples.  http://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper-scharf/the-red-paper-canids/paperback/product-22092321.html

I am also sick and tired that people cannot buy books or do any original research but cite absolute fantasy sources as references.

Was the Girt Dog of Ennerdale a Thylacine?  Was it an escaped Tiger?  Well, I covered the matter and even went direct to the reference sources always quoted but never, it seems, ever read by writers.  It's all in Canids as well as Some More Things Strange & Sinister http://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper-scharf/some-more-things-strange-sinister/paperback/product-18763730.html

No, not going to tell you.  Buy a book!

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