Finding Bigfoot - 2011 Australian Yowie was released on:
USA: 30 December 2012
The so called Australian Bigfoot is called a Yowie. Whether it is real or not no one really knows
No one except you calls bigfoot "yahoos". Yowie and Yahoos is an Australian term for bigfoot.
a sasquatch and bigfoot abominable snowman
There is no scientific evidence to support the existence of Yowies, which are mythical creatures from Australian Aboriginal folklore. They are often described as large, hairy hominids or ape-like beings, similar to Bigfoot or Sasquatch. However, reports of Yowie sightings remain unverified.
sasquatch(American) Yowie (Australian) thats all I know
Yes, there have been reported yowie sightings in and around Bonnyrigg, Australia. Yowies are mythical creatures similar to Bigfoot, and sightings often come from rural or bushland areas. While there are anecdotal accounts, there is no scientific evidence to confirm the existence of yowies, and such sightings are often met with skepticism. The interest in yowie lore continues to capture the imagination of locals and enthusiasts.
Some Australian legends and folk tales include the Dreamtime stories of creation by Aboriginal Australians, the legend of the Bunyip - a mythical creature said to lurk in waterholes, and the tale of the Yowie - a hairy, ape-like creature similar to Bigfoot that is said to inhabit the Australian wilderness.
Australia's most well-known mythical animals are:bunyipyowiedropbearA bunyip is an Australian Mythical animal that lives in outback 'billabongs' (small swamp-like ponds or lakes in the middle of the bush). They eat kangaroos or stray sheep (sometimes a woman or child if the chance is there). They were supposed to be larger than human, fat, hairy and very ugly with a loud booming call.The yowie is a mythical Australian creature, commonly frequenting bushland on the continent's eastern side, although the west is not without its sightings. One of the earliest sightings of the yowie is recorded in a letter from naturalist H J McCooey in "The Australian Town and Country Journal", dated 9 December 1882. McCooey claimed to have seen the yowie in 1880, in an area of bushland between Ulladulla and Bateman's Bay on the New South Wales southern coast. He described the yowie as being about 5 feet high, standing on its hind legs, with long black hair which was reddish about its throat.A dropbear is a more humorous version of an Australian mythical creature, and supposed to be a killer koala that leaps out of trees onto the heads of unsuspection campers and boy scouts.
There is no scientific proof of the yowie.
Yes it is to the people who believe in it. However, the name yowie may be a mispronunciation of yuurii. To some Aboriginal people in western New South Wales (Australia) the yuurii are little people, very muscular and hairy, who coexist with Aboriginal people though they are hidden to non-believers. They have their own social structure and retain a lot of the magic powers that ordinary people have forgotten, though clevermen, and -women, can consult them. They only interfere with normal human life if they think these people are acting inappropriately, though occasionally a mischievous individual may play tricks on humans. The word yowie is used by the indigenous people of the Sydney region to describe someone's death-spirit (ghost doesn't quite fit) and may have been taken to the interior by early European settlers who misunderstood its meaning and used it to describe a creature known to Aboriginals there (who would have spoken a different language/dialect). This happens a lot when cultures collide and so yowie is now an almost generic term. What is now called the yowie is a larger creature, but also hairy and strong, who disturbs people it doesn't like. Indigenous Australians have many terms for little people and bigger creatures, some harmful, others not.
The Yowie is reputed to live in Australia, specifically in the dense (and often mountainous or hilly) bushland of southern Queensland. Apparently they prefer dry bushland to rainforest.
yowie