| Pollyanna,
the Yeti and the Media Circus
While trekking in Bhutan Pollyanna visited a very remote Buddhist
monastery, where she got in to conversation with the sole caretaker
monk, who took her into a part of the temple which was hardly
ever shown to either foreign or Bhutanese visitors.
There she was shown an object mounted on a pole, which through
her interpreter she was told was a yeti scalp which had been
in the temple for many generations, and was regarded as a holy
relic.
No photography is allowed in the interior of any Buddhist temple
in Bhutan, but Pollyanna was able to sketch an outline of the
scalp in her expedition journal.
Later she also completed a ‘photo fit’ sketch of
a yeti, working from descriptions given to her by the local
villagers, who regularly report sightings of and encounters
with yetis in the Himalayan mountains.

Above : Pollyanna with the 'photofit' Yeti sketch
Following a brief mention of the yeti sketch in an interview
with a local paper, Pollyanna suddenly found herself in the
centre of a media circus, with the story being featured in almost
every national paper from the Daily Telegraph
and the Express through to the Sun,
the Mirror, the Metro, and the Scotsman,
and on countless web sites. Many of these reports were highly
exaggerated, claiming she has found ‘flesh and bone’
of a yeti – but they went on to spark a round of radio
interviews, with Pollyanna speaking on BBC Radio Sheffield,
BBC Radio Derby, Peak FM, Ram FM, and National radio
Five Live over the course of three days.
The story was discussed on the Pick of the papers on Sarah
Kennedy’s morning show on BBC Radio Two, and
made the news reports on several other radio stations. Pollyanna
will be featured in the next issue of the Fortean Times
magazine, (which deals with the ‘unexplained’) –
and has even been invited to guest at the next National conference
organised by the Centre for Fortean Cryptozoology!
Meanwhile the story has since gone international, appearing
in among others the New Zealand Herald, the
Bahrain Tribune and the Washington
Post,as well as papers in Russia (where is was helpfully
illustrated with a photo of a yeti scalp ... not supplied by
Pollyanna!), Poland, Spain, France and Ireland, and being mentioned
on NBC news in America. Appropraiately enough
the story even found its way in t the Bhutan Times
and the Himalayan Post.
The original Yeti sketch was displayed to the public for the
first time at Pollyanna's gallery, for the duration of the Land
of the Thunder Dragon exhibition in June 2008.
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