Biology:Moehau

From HandWiki

The moehau (also called the maeroero) is reputed to be a large, hairy hominid cryptid in the Coromandel-Moehau ranges of New Zealand's North Island. It may be synonymous with the maero, another New Zealand cryptid, because both have been reported to have long, sharp fingers in some sources.[1] Some Māori people suggest that the creature is a descendant of the maero, but another explanation for the moehau is that it was an exaggerated report of an escaped gorilla.[2]

However, in 1970, County Councillor J. Reddy told Robyn Gosset that the Hairy Moehau was an exaggeration started from a joke.[3] Also in 1970, Bob Grey told researcher Robyn Gosset that the term Moehau Monster came from a name given to a Yankee steam hauler that was utilized for logging.[3] In New Zealand Mysteries by Nicola McCloy, the author discredits both theories by citing several Moehau sightings during the early 19th century, although most New Zealanders are unaware of its existence.

In popular culture

The Moehau is a large part of the inspiration behind the titular character, Moe, of The Moe Show, a New Zealand children's show featuring puppets interacting with people and places in the world outside of the treehouse where Moe lives.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. Maberry, J., Kramer, D., The Cryptopedia: A Dictionary of the Weird, Strange & Downright Bizarre. 2007.
  2. Turner, P. National Geographic Traveler: New Zealand. p. 116
  3. 3.0 3.1 Gosset, Robyn, New Zealand Mysteries 2nd Edition, The Bush Press of New Zealand, Auckland, 1996

Further reading

  • Alpers, Antony, Maori Myths and Tribal Legends, John Murray, London, 1964
  • Beattie, Herries, Maori Lore of Lake, Alp and Fiord, Otago Daily Times and Witness Newspapers Co. Ltd., Dunedin, 1945
  • Gosset, Robyn, New Zealand Mysteries 2nd Edition, The Bush Press of New Zealand, Auckland, 1996
  • In Search of the Hairy Hill Horror, New Truth, February 15, 1991