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Terror in the Deep Woods: The Ozark Howler

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Terror in the Deep Woods: The Ozark Howler

Home / The SFF Bestiary / Terror in the Deep Woods: The Ozark Howler
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Terror in the Deep Woods: The Ozark Howler

We continue our exploration of regional cryptids in North America...

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Published on August 12, 2024

Illustration by C.E. Swan (from The Wild Beasts of the World, 1909)

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Illustration of a mountain lion standing in the brush.

Illustration by C.E. Swan (from The Wild Beasts of the World, 1909)

We continue our exploration of regional cryptids in North America, mammalian and mammal-adjacent, with one that may be as old as the Jersey Devil. According to legend, famous frontiersman Daniel Boone encountered the beast in what is now Missouri and possibly even shot it.

That takes it back to the mid-eighteenth century, contemporary with the Jersey Devil but quite a bit farther west. There are a few similarities between the creatures (hairy, horned, and given to howling), though the Howler doesn’t seem to have been regarded as demonic. Whatever it is, it’s an earthly creature, if not quite like anything else in that part of the world.

I say “is” because Boone’s sighting is the first of many from colonial times onward, right up to this century. People have seen and heard it in Missouri, Arkansas, and even Oklahoma and Texas. In 2015 a man named John Meyers claimed to have taken photos of it, but those were debunked as a hoax.

The Howler in Meyers’ photos is a quadruped. It’s black with tan points, doglike in body shape, with a long, thin, catlike tail. The head looks like a dog’s, with a pointed muzzle and a set of deer-like antlers. It looks like a mashup of a chupacabra and a big cat, with jackalope horns. The newspaper article opines that it “looks less like a mutant horned black mountain lion and more like a German shepherd pup with a badly done Photoshop haircut.”

The original Howler is more like a giant mountain lion with horns and long, shaggy, bearlike fur. It’s big—about the size of a bear—and it has a terrifying cry, though reports vary as to what it sounds like. Blood-curdling scream, elklike bugle, wolf’s howl. It’s been called the Black Howler and the Devil Cat.

As to what it might be, other than a bear or a deer or elk moving quickly and confusingly through the woods, a likely candidate is a mountain lion. Supposedly there is no breeding population of these animals in the area, but big cats have big hunting ranges. My state of Arizona knows about that—there are jaguars in the mountains near the Mexican border, and all of the current individuals are males. The females so far have stayed in Mexico.

There’s another possibility, too, as noted in Unlock the Ozarks. Many of the people who colonized the Ozarks came originally from the British Isles, and brought with them their lore and legends. One such is what the site calls the Cù-Sìth, the Hound of Death. This creature is “the size of a young bull with the appearance of a wolf. Its fur is shaggy, and usually cited as being dark green though sometimes white. Its tail is described as being long and either coiled up or plaited (braided). Its paws are described as being the width of a man’s hand.” Its howl is a harbinger of death—in fact it’s associated with another mythical creature, the Banshee.

This legend may have combined with Native tales of sabertoothed cats that roamed those hills during the Ice Age. Native peoples arrived in North America well before these cats became extinct; it’s possible that humans caused that extinction, along with that of the native horse and the mammoth. Stories of the great cats may have survived long after the species had vanished. Then came the colonizers with their own tales, and encounters in the deep woods with animals half-seen and distantly heard.

Unlock the Ozarks provides recordings of calls that might be taken for that of the Howler. They include the red fox (the shriek of a vixen will freeze your blood), the fisher cat, and fighting raccoons. I’d add the scream of a mountain lion.

If you’re out in the woods at night, you’re most likely primed to be scared, and more so if you’ve been telling tales of a monster that hunts in the darkness. Catch a glimpse of a large animal, bear or elk or even a big cat, and your imagination may go into overdrive. A bear crowned with branches, a mountain lion looking for a mate—there’s your Howler.

Or, as we often say, maybe there really is something else out there. It’s not impossible. icon-paragraph-end

About the Author

Judith Tarr

Author

Judith Tarr has written over forty novels, many of which have been published as ebooks, as well as numerous shorter works of fiction and nonfiction, including a primer for writers who want to write about horses: Writing Horses: The Fine Art of Getting It Right. She has a Patreon, in which she shares nonfiction, fiction, and horse and cat stories. She lives near Tucson, Arizona, with a herd of Lipizzans, a clowder of cats, and a pair of Very Good Dogs.
Learn More About Judith
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