Chupacabra caught in South Texas?

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      From KENS – TV
      02:17 PM CDT on Tuesday, July 31, 2007

      View video at: Is it a chupacabra or a grey fox?

      A rancher from the South Texas town of Cuero is telling a chupacabra tale and she say she has the evidence in her freezer.
      Is it a chupacabra or a grey fox?

      Phylis Canion says the animal had been lurking around her ranch for years.

      She said it first snatched cats, then chickens right through a wire cage. “(It) opened it reached in pulled the chicken head out, sucked all the blood out, left the chicken in the cage.”

      Canion says two dozen chickens were sucked dry.

      The meat, she says, was left on the bone.

      Neighbors speculate the blue-colored animal that was doing all that damage was a chupacabra.

      The name is translated from Spanish and means goat-sucker because the creature sucks the blood of livestock.

      Canion says not one, but three chupacabras were spotted outside the town in recent days.

      All of them, she says, were blue-skinned, had no hair and had strange teeth.

      Although Canion and her neighbors feel she captured a chupacabra, others like State Mammalogist John Young says she captured a grey fox. “When mange goes untreated it causes this type of reaction. they start to itch, lose all their hair, blue grey coloration. and the animal usually dies from it.”

      But it wasn’t mange, but a car that killed the creature that Canion captured. “There have been so many stories for so long. The chupacabra is a mythical thing and maybe it is, but this is something…a cross between something. What? I don’t know, I’d love to find out.”

      So, KENS-TV took samples of the creature and sent it off for DNA testing.

      Those results are due.

      Meanwhile, the creature’s head, which is in Canion’s freezer, will go on her home’s wall. “This one hands down will draw the most attention. Because they’re gonna say you got zebras, you got this, you got that, what is this thing here? That’s what we call the South Texas taz devil

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    • #2127

      Anonymous
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        From KENS – TV
        02:17 PM CDT on Tuesday, July 31, 2007

        View video at: Is it a chupacabra or a grey fox?

        A rancher from the South Texas town of Cuero is telling a chupacabra tale and she say she has the evidence in her freezer.
        Is it a chupacabra or a grey fox?

        Phylis Canion says the animal had been lurking around her ranch for years.

        She said it first snatched cats, then chickens right through a wire cage. “(It) opened it reached in pulled the chicken head out, sucked all the blood out, left the chicken in the cage.”

        Canion says two dozen chickens were sucked dry.

        The meat, she says, was left on the bone.

        Neighbors speculate the blue-colored animal that was doing all that damage was a chupacabra.

        The name is translated from Spanish and means goat-sucker because the creature sucks the blood of livestock.

        Canion says not one, but three chupacabras were spotted outside the town in recent days.

        All of them, she says, were blue-skinned, had no hair and had strange teeth.

        Although Canion and her neighbors feel she captured a chupacabra, others like State Mammalogist John Young says she captured a grey fox. “When mange goes untreated it causes this type of reaction. they start to itch, lose all their hair, blue grey coloration. and the animal usually dies from it.”

        But it wasn’t mange, but a car that killed the creature that Canion captured. “There have been so many stories for so long. The chupacabra is a mythical thing and maybe it is, but this is something…a cross between something. What? I don’t know, I’d love to find out.”

        So, KENS-TV took samples of the creature and sent it off for DNA testing.

        Those results are due.

        Meanwhile, the creature’s head, which is in Canion’s freezer, will go on her home’s wall. “This one hands down will draw the most attention. Because they’re gonna say you got zebras, you got this, you got that, what is this thing here? That’s what we call the South Texas taz devil

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