. . "Camacrusa"@en . "Despite its appearance, a camacrusa is very rapid in movement, capable of hiding behind haybales, jumping over ditches and hedges, and easily running down its prey \u2013 children who remain outside after dark. How it eats them is unspecified. Foix, V. (1904) Glossaire de la Sorcellerie Landaise. Revue de Gascogne, III, pp. 257-262. Heiniger, P. Les Formes du Noir. In Loddo, D. and Pelen, J. (eds.) (2001) \u00CAtres fantastiques des r\u00E9gions de France. L\u2019Harmattan, Paris. Nippgen, J. (1930) Les Traditions Populaires Landaises. Revue de Folklore Francais, IV, pp. 149-172."@en . "Despite its appearance, a camacrusa is very rapid in movement, capable of hiding behind haybales, jumping over ditches and hedges, and easily running down its prey \u2013 children who remain outside after dark. How it eats them is unspecified. Its role has largely been usurped by more traditional bogeys such as Ramponneau and the Sopatard (\u201CSups-late\u201D) or Sopa-tot-s\u00E8r (\u201CSups-every-evening\u201D). The latter in particular is closely associated with the camacrusa, for as the nursery rhyme goes: \u201CLa cama-cruda e lo sopa-tot-s\u00E8r, que h\u00E8n la nueit plenha de danger\u201D (\u201CThe raw-leg and the sups-every-evening, make the night full of danger\u201D). Foix, V. (1904) Glossaire de la Sorcellerie Landaise. Revue de Gascogne, III, pp. 257-262. Heiniger, P. Les Formes du Noir. In Loddo, D. and Pelen, J. (eds.) (2001) \u00CAtres fantastiques des r\u00E9gions de France. L\u2019Harmattan, Paris. Nippgen, J. (1930) Les Traditions Populaires Landaises. Revue de Folklore Francais, IV, pp. 149-172."@en . .