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Supernatural - Local Mysteries & Myths - The Nodoroc & The Wog

10 Aug 2011

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The basic premise of the show Supernatural (Click for my new promo!) is two brothers driving through the back roads of the United States... Saving people, hunting things -- the family business. (I swear that phrase will be seared into my soul from every time they repeat it on the recaps!)

While the story has expanded into one of the more dynamically mythologically-heavy television series in the last 3 seasons that sets it far off in its own little corner of entertainment genres, the basis of the story is still in tact -- The writers use everything from ancient pagan gods to the localized legends of America. Lately, (as usual for the hellatus), I've been wondering what the heck is coming up for us in the next season. Of course Spoilertv has provided plenty of tidbits here and there for me to snack on until the main course on September 23rd, and one of these little bits of information is that season 7 will be the scariest season of Supernatural yet. Now, the monsters/demons/angels are all formidable and freaky, and interesting in their own right, but aside from certain monsters over the past few years, very few have been very scary. I think season 1 milked the scary angle the most until the plot for the YED picked up and they went in another direction. There's been great, great amounts of gore, and freaky stuff all along, but how often have they taken the time to make something different and ourageously scary? Now that it seems like that's the plan for season 7, and also that season 7 is primarily focused on the events of earth rather than Heaven, Hell, or purgatory...I would assume this means we will hopefully be getting some good American folklore every week. I honestly think the best standalones are the ones that have that extra twist of local lore rather than the broadly known monsters like werewolves and vampires...I want something like a rugaru, or a tulpa... The djinn have been great in their respective episodes, and the man-eating ghouls were a nice touch. However, there's still an untapped well of folklore out there waiting to be mined!

Digging into Georgia's Past

Just today, I was looking into folklore around where I live. There's all kinds of stories about Mahayley Lancaster, (the witch of Roosterville, GA that helped the police locate a body in the 1940s) and her gravesite. There's stories of elusive black panthers just outside the view of most people, living in the deep woods of Georgia. There's the strange stonehenge-like monument that was left on top of Stone Mountain. The hauntings of Blood Mountain are apparently horrific, and the case Bleeding house of Atlanta is still unsolved to this day. (Random widespread blotches of blood appeared all through the house, even behind and under furniture, out of reach...Scientists confirmed the blood but it was inconclusive as to how it got there...)

These stories are all generally good for entertaining some ghost stories, but there was one I found that was just an outstanding and wild story...

The Nodoroc

Winder, Georgia: A small town that is not really notable for any reason. Except it's the site of the Georgia Volcano. Wait...there's no volcanoes in Georgia you say -- and you'd be right. No one has ever been able to tell what exactly the GA volcano is, but it is established that it is a small area of thick bluish mud, in the middle of nowhere, where the forest doesn't grow very well. There's a constant sluggish smoke that comes from the mud, and towards the center of the lake of mud, it appears to bubble and boil.

This is something you can go visit. Of course, it has diminished greatly in size over the past 200 years, and is very small compared to before. In the time of the Native Americans, this area was 4 acres wide, and known as the Nodoroc. It was said that this was an eternal place of torment that people were sentenced to be abandoned for the worst of crimes. It is said that a woman once murdered and devoured her own child, and she was thrown to the Nodoroc for her crime.
It is said that throughout the area people can hear her cries of terror, followed by the sound of cheering children. Not exactly a comfortable bedtime story. But I've not even gotten to the good part yet.

The Wog
They don't throw you to the Nodoroc because they expect the weird blue swamp-like pseudo-volcano to kill you. No, that's what the Wog was for. The Wog is a mysterious creature that roamed the Nodoroc and the adjacent areas. It is described as a large, jet-black wolf-like creature with a long forked tongue and overwhelming huge red eyes. It is the size of a horse, a head reminiscent of a bear, with huge commanding front legs, and an undersized back with small legs. It is said that just seeing this thing emerge from the shadows had scared natives to death. It had a huge bushy black tail, with tufts of white fur at the end. The tail was described as something in constant motion. It never stopped waving around or twitching. The Nodoroc sometimes burned hotter and more noticeable and this frightened the locals into thinking that the Wog was angry. For fear of the wog appearing in the town, they ritually sent prisoners and criminals to the Nodoroc for sacrifice.

The preferred meal of the Wog was said to be dead things. Apparently it was commonplace to come across a dug-up grave and have the body be missing. It is said that the earliest native stories of the wog told of an extremely frightening aberration that systematically fed on people and livestock in the area, however over time it seems as though the wog had settled down and instead of actively seeking humans, it would find a grave or the corpse of an animal and consume that instead.

Here's an excerpt from the Nodoroc.com's description of the wog:

His tail was very large, all the way of the same size, and at the end of if there was a bunch of entirely white hair at least eight inches long and larger in diameter than the tail itself. Whether sitting, standing, or walking this curious appendage was in constant motion from side to side, not as a dog wags his tail, but with a quick upward curve which brought it down with a whizzing sound that could be distinctly heard at least when twenty-five or thirty steps distant. But the most distinguishing feature of this horrid tail was that it revealed the presence of the monster in the dark – the only time he ventured to go abroad. His great red eyes were very repulsive, but not so much so as his forked tongue, the prongs of which were thought to be eight inches long and sometimes played in and out of his mouth like those of a mad snake. Really the meanest feature about the beast as that his bear-like head contained a set of great white teeth over which his ugly lips never closed.

The Indians told the first white emigrants that so long as the Wog was left undisturbed he would not molest any one – that he would sometimes visit their houses – go around them – if a light were inside, poke his tongue through any opening he could find between the logs, and then go away. Pioneers were not only quick to learn this lesson, but also carefully followed the instruction.


Other Things on The Nodoroc
I've read related stories of a Native "princess" who was on the run from someone who hid a "priceless" bracelet in the Nodoroc. I've also heard that a small town nearby the Nodoroc one day simply sank into the ground. All of these stories I find would be a great standalone episode for Supernatural. It got me thinking about local lore and what ammo we could possibly find that would be great for the brothers to hunt? I mean, c'mon...the wog seems like a scary enough monster don'tcha think? I'll bet there are other things that each of you know of (or could easily research) about your hometown/state that is mostly unknown to the world. Perhaps this could be a place that the writers of Supernatural come across in their own search for ideas of future episodes?

Your Turn
So what monster/haunting/myth/event has taken place in your own back yard that could serve as a really creepy episode of Supernatural?

Sources:

46 comments:

  1. Very interesting read!  I loved how scary/creepy some of the episodes from Season 1 were.  I would love to see some good & scary standalone episodes in Season 7. 

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  2. nice!! will have to post tx lore!!

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  3. great info I don't know of any strange creatures in my neck of the woods but I'll try & dig some up

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  4. I was thinking they'd work more from lovecraft stories, but this would be very cool. :D They already did a drowned boy-lake story in S1, but I live near Lake Ronkonkoma, which has a pretty notorious backstory involving an indian princess who drowns boys. Just reading about other myths associated with the lake now, but I've never heard of the myth claiming it is bottomless - which I find uber creepy! D= thank goodness it isn't, though it is ridiculously big & deep (I remember driving past it with my sister and going, "O___O WTH? what is that huge body of water??).
    I dunno about other stuff, but this has me interested in looking! ;D 

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  5. In Maori mythology there is a taniwha which can be either a monster or a guardian. They live in deep pools in rivers, dark caves, or in the sea. At sea, a taniwha often appears as a whale or as a large shark.  In inland waters, they can still be huge, but look more like a lizard, with a row of spines along the back. 
    They can be highly respected protective guardians of people and places, but when disrespected can become dangerous, predatory beings, killing and eating those who disrespect it. They sometimes kidnap women to have as wives. 
    I don't know a lot about them but they're scary!

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  6. We have a haunted toy store, the employees keep a "secret" journal of the activity (don't say I told you lol) http://gocalifornia.about.com/gi/o.htm?zi=1/XJ&zTi=1&sdn=gocalifornia&cdn=travel&tm=36&f=00&su=p974.8.121.ip_p284.12.336.ip_p531.51.336.ip_&tt=2&bt=0&bts=0&zu=http%3A//www.ghostresearch.org/ghostpics/toys_r_us.html

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  7. The LaLaurie house in New Orleans.  It's an actual haunting,  AND I lived not far from this place, SERIOUSLY bad vibes.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delphine_LaLaurie  

    Also, Bachelor's Grove in Midlothian IL It's an old abandon grave yard.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bachelor%27s_Grove_Cemetery

    Selysions Private School in Cedar Lake IN.  It was a boys school and apparently the Priest who was running it went insane and killed everyone in his charge. There is very little on the school anywhere.  I've looked.  In 2001 it was bought after several years abandoned and it was turned into a haunted house, then torn down in 2004.

    Just a couple weird ones.  

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  8. great legend, the wog sounds pretty scary
    if tseason 7 is gonna be the scariest ever than i am SO excited
    my fave parts about seasons 1 and 2 was the horror and all the different monsters and i've missed that over the last few seasons
    i thought thats what they were gonna do with season 6 but they didn't do a lot of it
    now i'm soooooo pumped!!!

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  9. these are fantastic legends :)

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  10. These were great.  I'll look and see what Texas Legends I can recall.  I knows there's the Chambers House in Anahuac where I lived for around twenty years.  It is down from the public library.  On Halloween people come for a tour and to hear about it.  I will find out more about it and other areas.  Texas has a lot of them.

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  11. I really hope they do go towards more monsters this season and they do hold up on the promise of really scary stuff happening. If they don't I'll be pretty let down. We need more monster-like monsters and less human-like monsters as well. I'm tired of humans with weird eyes...I want to see a damn monster already!

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  12. This was a fun read. Nice job!  I can't think of any stories to contribute right now, but I'll think more about it.

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  13. I didn't know anything about the nodoroc until I had an urge to look around in a local website on all things GA...and found all this great stuff, so poke around the internet for stuff nearby. :)

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  14. Oh yeah, don't you know it! ;D And don't forget the business about the amityville horror! 
    LOL, okay, just googled, and there are a buttload of places! No creatures though, mostly just murders of Indians/colonists resulting in supposed hauntings - but it's cool to see that people think Sagtikos and other old manors are haunted, I guess. It's too bad none of it sounds credible and that we don't have any creepy monsters. D; 

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  15. Holy cow, that sounds super creepy, esp the kidnapping bit and the rows of spines on the back. O.O

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  16. And if ever there was a story that made me think there *could* be a haunting, it would have to be the LaLaurie house - old Marie sounds like shades of Elizabeth Bathory there, it's downright awful! (on the upside, yes righteous mob of anger burning her house down!)
    That Selysions Private School story is making me think of Azazel at St Mary's! That is really disturbing... 

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  17. I've always wanted a more in-depth view of the Norse Mythology - I believe Bobby mentions Loki(& we also have Odin in ''Hammer of the Gods'') in ''Tall Tales'' - but, I'd like to see his children, like Fenrir & Jörmungandr'', on the show

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  18. First off, excellent job on the Supernatural trailer.  It's scary and intense and the music goes perfectly.  It definitely increases my excitement for season 7 to start.  Awesome!

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  19. Love this Wilson.  I agree that local folklore would be a great place for the Supernatural writers to turn.  If it is going to be scarier and more earth-bound (YEAH by the way for that), then there are thousands of stories that could inspire them..  In St. Louis, our local stories are mostly ghost tales.  After all one of the 10 most "haunted" places is the Lemp Mansion in St. Louis.  However, once you get a bit farther out there are all kinds Ozark creatures and backwoods stories.  I love the tale around you.  There is a lot you could do with the wog, the blue volcano, and even the ghosts of the victims.  Thanks for sharing this folklore with us.

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  20. I'd hate to have to be its "wife" lol
    Of course I'd just be eaten or something...apparently it's the women who have to worry about that.

    Moral of the story: 'spect yo elders.

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  21. :O
    Thanks Dahne. :)
    I got really excited about the scary part of what they said at comic-con and that inspired me! lol

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  22. Thankfully Winder, GA isn't that close to here. :P I might actually be really frightened of the wog...especially since it just sort've snoops around in the dark with its tail whipping frantically in the silent black night. That tongue poking into places...
    It would be great on SPN even if just a flash sight of it, or if it remained in the dark with its tongue out in the light and its eyes burning through your face with intensity. And then there's the whipping in the background...

    That could be great!
    we've got to get this article and all its comments to the writers somehow so they can have the benefit of our respective anecdotes! They can't know about all of the monster of America (and the worldly monsters) yet!

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  23. This is really intresting... sadly my state is much less exciting than yours. Not much in North Carolina Except a couple of ghost lights and Blackbeards ghost... not too exciting once you research him...

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  24. WHATTT??? That's just NOT true!
    The mystery of Roanoke Island is one of my favorite mysteries and one of the very first of America! The writers have actually even used the Roanoke Island mystery for a rather extensive part of the mythos of SPN: The Croatoan virus! 

    I vacation at Cape Hatteras every year and I'm always intrigued by the "Graveyard of the Atlantic"...And the swampy flat land that leads out to the coast, sprawling with bears and endless ramshackle shacks always freaks me out going through there!

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  25. I'm from NC as well and I really couldn't find anything worthwhile.  Or maybe I just suck at researching. 

    By the way, the boys need to travel to NC in the show.  I mean they've been to like every state except NC it seems.

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  26. Great story, Wilson. Iowa's best supernatural story (in my opinion) is the story of the Black Angel in Fairview Cemetery in Ft. Dodge. It was commissioned for the grave of Ruth Ann Dodge (whose husband was the Chief Engineer of the Transcontinental RR) in 1919. Before her death, she had three visions where she was visited by an angel and transported to a rocky seashore. There she saw a beautiful entity on a boat that offered her a drink from a golden urn. She declined the first two times, but accepted the third time. She died two days later. Her daughters commissioned the angel to resemble the angel in her dreams. It is a fountain and the legend is that the water from this fountain can transport you to the afterlife. It's kind of spooky.

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  27. That's an awesome legend Jilly.  I love hearing about other cultures' creatures and urban legends.

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  28. Agreed.  Even the invisible monsters are better than human-like monsters these days.  I realize they have a limited budget so if they could pull in cool-looking creature monsters in even a handful of episodes I will be happy.  Love your idea to just show part of the monster also.  That saves on the budget and leaves the rest of the horror to our imagination.  Far creepier that way.

     I also agree that they need to branch out to other cool monsters.  I love shapeshifters, don't get me wrong, but they are getting a bit stale.  The vampires and werewolves started stale.  I once went to the library to find alter-monsters for a fanfic I was writing and I had never heard of most of them in one book so there's plenty for them to choose from.

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  29. Unfortunately the writers can't even look at things like this for legal reasons.  They have to block people on Twitter and FaceBook who pitch story ideas.  It's a sad world when people have to worry about being sued just for listening/reading.

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  30. The most famous Ozark monster is the Howler or Black Howler.  It is a cat the size of a bear with shaggy coarse black hair, glowing eyes, and horns.  It emits a bloodcurdling scream that echoes through the mountains.  Legend has it that bad luck and death follows the cry.  Kind of like an animal version of the banshee.  The most interesting thing is that some cryptozoologists believe it might actually exist, maybe as a cat or maybe canine.  People have studied the Howler legend for years.  

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  31. that is so sad that everything has to go through legal channels and there is a need to block people's ideas on Twitter and FB :(

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  32. Thanks for the heads up Wilson. I live in Dacula GA which is only 5 minutes away from Winder GA so no more walks after dark for me!!

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  33. :(
    Meh I realize but spreading it in a general way is better than leaving it buried in the past has to be good for SOMETHING right? 

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  34. That is AWESOME.
    Like I said in the article, people think black panthers stalk around the woods of GA...(I actually have a friend who claims she's seen them before and it isn't a big deal o.o ) and supposedly their call is really creepy--This is even better :P
    The howler sounds like an incredible monster. 

    Have you ever been afraid of such a thing?

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  35. They seem to avoid the southeast in general... Half the show is in Illinois and Washington it seems.

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  36. Wow. A whole new meaning to "don't drink the water!"
    These stories are fantastic so far. :D

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  37. OH GOD...
    O.o
    I'm Carrollton so I've got a few hours between me and the Wog... you've never heard of it before? 

    Oh that freaks me out that you live so close.  You should take a field trip to see the little patch of boiling blue mud. :)

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  38. I think it's great just for MY own knowledge.  I've never heard of some of these so to get to experience what other regions and countries have as legends and myths is very insightful and quite frankly FUN.  I'm really glad you did this article and I hope you make it a regular feature at SPTV.  I can't wait until other people share their local lore too.

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  39. How cool is that.  They also have a similar creature in the mountains of the Southwest too I believe - Arizona or New Mexico maybe.  As for me, I'm more afraid of the bears and snakes that inhabit the Ozarks than the Howler.  However, I would rapidly change my mind if I ever saw one.

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  40. I'll certainly do my best. I've had a few ideas for articles for a little while, so if I get around to it, it could be a regular thing. :P

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  41. I think someone was talking on one of the forums I was reading something to the extent of  "we were all having a fun time in the pool, out late, and just hanging around. Then we heard it cry out from somewhere in the woods. Needless to say we got tired of the pool really quickly."

    lol

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  42. I had read something about the Wog before but I didn't realize that it was in my backyard. Now that I know about it I am absolutely going to plan a day trip and check it out. I will let you know if I have a Wog sighting LOL..... let's hope that if I do see one I can run faster than a Wog!

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  43. Supposedly he's not so bad as long as you don't poke at him or anything!
    Also, take pictures! :D
    I wanna know what the Nodoroc looks like! 

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  44. Selysions Private School is way messed up.  I'd been there before it was torn down, it felt wrong, like really really wrong.  Cold in places that it shouldn't have been cold. It's not something I've ever felt before.  Even the LaLaurie house doesn't feel that wrong.  The other weird thing about that place is that it looked as though it was being worked on at one point, but who ever was working just left.  Like LEFT left, there were tools that were rusted, concrete bags sitting open, but everything was dirty, like it had been there a while.  I am hoping that they don't build anything there.  

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