I found the following article online. It is an excerpt from a book about ghosts:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/northeast/gu ... wolf.shtml
Welsh Werewolf Folklore
Welsh Werewolf Folklore
-Jamie Hall
Do you like monsters? See Monster Mania!
Do you like monsters? See Monster Mania!
The reason is because this is werewolf folklore, just distorted through time. People retell their old tales with a different spin. As Europeans began being ashamed of their werewolf folklore, they began reinterpreting old tales. "Werewolves" were said to be unusual-looking wolves with a taste for human flesh, instead of people who changed into wolves. There were also other explanations given. For example, I've come across quite a number of American werewolf legends where some cryptozoologist is hell-bent on interpreting it as a Bigfoot, even when the creature is clearly established in local folklore as a werewolf.Yeah i saw this too, why dont they just give this "unknown" wolf speices a diffrent name then were-wolf, so its not confused
You might compare it to certain fairy abduction legends that have shown up with practically no changes, but now being interpreted as aliens. I'm sorry, but if it looks like a little old man in green trousers, lives in a fairy hill, has magic powers that align perfectly with fairy lore, and doesn't have a spaceship, it is still a fairy!
-Jamie Hall
Do you like monsters? See Monster Mania!
Do you like monsters? See Monster Mania!
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Me too! I've heard of the Bray Road Beast and one in France, but never this Welsh one- I like it! I believe in the French one I heard about somwone actually shot it and had it stuffed and it was display for awhile until it disappeared. The building caught on fire or someone stole it something...I can't remember. Quite interesting reading the comments on that site though
<-- Don't Do Crack (character from South Park)