SUTHERLIN, Ore. - Betty Klopp has been holding on to these strands of hair and bits of skin for nearly 45 years.
"Of course I've kept it," Klopp told KPIC News. "I wouldn't give it up for anything."
She believes the clumps came from a bigfoot.
No one has proven the existence of bigfoot - or sasquatch or yeti or skunk ape, as some call the creature.
Klopp is convinced the forest dweller is really out there.
"Oh definitely," she said. "I don't think people should go around shooting him if they find him."
Her sasquatch keepsake comes from her parents. Klopp said her parents  were driving along in the 1960s, towing a small trailer, when they  swerved off the road to avoid hitting what they believed was a man. 
Klopp said her parents stopped at the Porter Creek Store to assess what  had happened. They got out of the car and searched the area, but they  found nothing.
The next day, her parents discovered pieces of skin and hair snagged on the trailer.
"This is something you don't run into every day, quite literally," Klopp said.
She said the material was sent to the University of Montana for testing  about 3 years ago. The results showed the DNA was too deteriorated and  the hair too degraded to make any identification.
Klopp still believes. She decided to share her story after hearing reports that someone in Texas had killed a bigfoot. 
"There are reports that someone has one and has shot it and is storing  it in his freezer," Klopp said. "I would like to know for sure."
 
Source: KVAL
 
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