Episode 087: Globsters

Published: Oct. 1, 2018, 7 a.m.

b"It's October! Let the spooky monster episodes begin! This week we're starting off with a bang--or maybe a squoosh--with an episode about globsters. What are they? Why do they look like that? Do they smell?\\n\\nYes, they smell. They smell so bad.\\n\\nTrunko, a globster found in South Africa:\\n\\n\\n\\nA whale shark:\\n\\n\\n\\nThe business end of a whale shark:\\n\\n\\n\\nA globster found in Chile:\\n\\n\\n\\nA globster found in North Carolina after a hurricane:\\n\\n\\n\\nA globster that still contains bones:\\n\\n\\n\\nNot precisely a globster but I was only a few weeks late in my 2012 visit to Folly Beach to see this thing:\\n\\n\\n\\nFurther reading:\\n\\nHunting Monsters by Darren Naish\\n\\nShow transcript:\\n\\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\\n\\nIt\\u2019s October, and you know what that means! Monsters! \\u2026and have I got a creepy monster for you this week. Grab your Halloween candy and a flashlight while I tell you about something called a globster.\\n\\nIf you live near the seashore, or really if you\\u2019ve spent any time at all on the beach, you\\u2019ll know that stuff washes ashore all the time. You know, normal stuff like jellyfish that can sting you even though they\\u2019re dead, pieces of debris that look an awful lot like they\\u2019re from shipwrecks, and the occasional solitary shoe with a skeleton foot inside. But sometimes things wash ashore that are definitely weird. Things like globsters.\\n\\nA globster is the term for a decayed animal carcass that can\\u2019t be identified without special study. Globsters often look like big hairy blobs, and are usually white or pale gray or pink in color. Some don\\u2019t have bones, but some do. Some still have flippers or other features, although they\\u2019re usually so decayed that it\\u2019s hard to tell what they really are. And they\\u2019re often really big.\\n\\nLet\\u2019s start with three accounts of some of the most famous globsters, and then we\\u2019ll discuss what globsters might be and why they look the way they do.\\n\\nThe St. Augustine monster was found by two boys bicycling on Anastasia Island off the coast of Florida in November 1896. It was partially buried in sand, but after the boys reported their finding, people who came to examine it eventually dug the sand away from the carcass. It was 21 feet long, or almost 6.5 meters, 7 feet wide, or just over 2 meters, and at its tallest point, was 6 feet tall, or 1.8 meters. Basically, though, it was just a huge pale pink lump with stumpy protrusions along the sides.\\n\\nA local doctor, DeWitt Webb, was one of the first people to examine the carcass. He thought it might be the rotten remains of a gigantic octopus and described the flesh as being rubbery and very difficult to cut. Another witness said that pieces of what he took to be parts of the tentacles were also strewn along the beach, separated from the carcass itself.\\n\\nDr. Webb sent photographs and notes to a cephalopod expert at Yale, Addison Verrill. He at first thought it might be a squid, but later changed his mind and decided it must be an octopus of enormous proportions\\u2014with arms up to 100 feet in length, or over 30 meters.\\n\\nIn January a storm washed the carcass out to sea, but the next tide pushed it back to shore two miles away. Webb sent samples to Verrill, who examined them and decided it was more likely the remains of a sperm whale than a cephalopod.\\n\\nIn 1924, off the coast of South Africa, witnesses saw a couple of orcas apparently fighting a huge white monster covered with long hair\\u2014far bigger than a polar bear. It had an appendage on the front that looked like a short elephant trunk. Witnesses said the animal slapped at the orcas with its tail and sometimes reared up out of the water. This went on for three hours.\\n\\nThe battle was evidently too much for the monster, and its corpse washed ashore the next day. It measured 47 feet long in all, or 14.3 meters, and the body was five feet high at its thickest, or 1.5 meters. Its tail was ten feet long, or over three meters,"