Hey, everybody, This is Left Strive. Yes, yes, I know aka Survivor Man, and you're listening to Brian on Sasquatchis. Hey there, welcome back to Sasquatchis. Thank you so much for clicking play. It is Wednesday. I hope you're having a great week. We have an amazing show light though for you. But before we get there, I want to start by inviting you. If you've had an encounter and you'd like to be on the show, shoot me an email you and get me at Brian Apparentomoworld Productions
dot com. Can head over to the website, check it out, become a member there and help support the show. This is round two of our roundtable that we did on Calling All Beings with Doug Hicheck, Amy Boo, Scott Tompkins, Sabilla Irwin and me and we get into whether Bigfoot use caves, whether they live on the edges of society. We finished out this pretty strong, in my opinion, with some really great conversation and some really cool
theories on what these things may and may not do. I've had several people reach out to me over the last week and emails and leaving me some voicemails and saying I should do more shameless book plugging on the show to get the book out there. So I'm going to take a few seconds to do that. Here. My brand new book titled Sasquatch Unleashed The Truth Behind the Legend is on sale right now for pre sale. Those are scheduled to start shipping out here in the next week and a half or so, So get in
line now get your book. They're on sale for seventeen ninety nine. They will go up to about twenty four bucks after this pre sale is over, so get yours now and make sure you get one of the first shipments when these things go to print. The link is right there in the show notes. All you have to do is click it, go over to Hanger one Publishing and get yours right now. That I know you guys are ready to get into it. It's all you have to do is sit back, relax
and enjoy the show. This is a question from Pam Sper, my friend from Central Florida, and she would like to know Nathan, would you read that one, sir? Absolutely all right, so Pam says, DJ, I would like to know from some of the panel, what do you think about skunk Florida, Louisiana, Texas. Do you believe them to be some fort of monkey instead of a bigfoot. I would like to tackle that one just really quickly. I'll say I believe that skunk cape is some sort of
a bigfoot. That's just always been my take on it. And again, I've had some very aggressive encounters come out of Louisiana where dogs have been killed and thrown forty eat over people's Hey, it's I don't think it's a smaller version of some sort of a monkey or something. In my opinion doing that, I think it's some sort of a bigfoot. Bergman's law, you know, in full effect. Yeah, and there later, they're often described with reddish hair. It would tend to heat up less than black hair or gray
hair. So yeah, I think they're just a form of a bigfoot too. That's definitely on the far end of Bergman's law. They're smaller with a smaller body mass. Scott, Yeah, I agree with Brian and Doug. I'll chime in with I don't know if everyone knows this, but there's actually a population of monkeys that live in Ocala State Park. There. There's a small population of monkeys that live in the swamps there, so you may be seeing monkeys actually, but I do believe the skunk ape that populates the Gulf
coast is a bigfoot. And Alex Pettikov, who is a wonderful researcher, and I have done a lot of research and talks about that hot spot that's in central Florida there near Ocala. He and I did an expedition into the Achafalaya last year. We paddled in and camped all the way in what we determined was a good spot looking for big foot. Nothing eventful, but it was quite an experience to learn what it's like to quote unquote live in that swamp, the biggest swamp in the US. Long winded answer. I think
it's a big foot more than a monkey. Yeah, it seems to me. They would all be from the same family to a degree. Let's see what else we got here. Actually we have to let's go and let's finish our roundtable and then we can get to some of the questions in the chat with the time we got left. So is that you yeah, mister sharp, Oh, it's my turn to ask a question, Yes, sir,
okay, I have it written to shameless book plug number two. In chapter eleven of Sasquatch Unleashed The Truth behind the Legion, I talk about this human population growth and land loss, how it potentially affects Bigfoot their movements, and more importantly, I guess for me, just as a side subject, how does it affect how many the sidings we have of these things when we're encroaching
into their area. So I'd like to hear from the panel what they're feeling on our human population growth and land loss, how it affects the population of Sasquatch that are out there. Let's just take the continental United States. I just want to say, Brian, you and I should talk about your branding because I'm having a hard time figuring out the name of your podcast what you're hosting, So let's we got to work on that anyway, Scott, go ahead, sir. Yeah, I've been taking notes here. I'm going to
make a banner for the next time. Doug made this banner for me, so maybe you can venmo him some money and people like yeah, will, There's a few things I'm going to odug for I think after this call and you but bigfoots all over the map, dude, A consulting fee for sure, But to jump on your question, and this is actually one of my favorite things to look at because it's very easily viewed through a map when you have the good data set to put behind all the points in the map,
all the reports that have come in. I'll refer to the data set first. It's the Green Infrastructure data set put out by EZRI. And what it is. It's a bunch of corridors, right that connect wildlife hubs. So like a wildlife hub would be a state forest, a national forest, state park, a big green area with high conservation value so it can support a lot of wildlife. Right. And then between these areas you start to get the most traveled corridors, which have the least cost pathways. So what's the
path of least resistance between each each hub? Right? You can start to see what human progress, I guess i'll call it and development is doing to these corridors. It's starting to squeeze them so they become more and more defined
funnels. So if you look at land use or land cuver over time and go back as far as you can, you'll see that there's just vast areas it's hard to whittle down really identifiable corridors, or there might be a lot of corridors in a specific area, but when you start to pave over things, build highways, you start to separate environments things like that that you can
really start to see defined corridors. And I think that may increase the amount of sightings because now you need people to have sightings, but now there's so much more surrounding these corridors and they're few and far between in highly developed areas that the wildlife, not just bigfoot in these areas have no choice but to go through the same funnel over and over again between these big areas, so
that's when they're exposed. That's when they're at risk of being seen from the side of a highway perhaps, or people hiking things like that, because now there's a lot more outdoor activity, especially in the Pacific Northwest, for example, there's so many hikers. That's such a big part of the culture,
and that's why you see such a big hotspot there right now. In the southeast, maybe you don't see that as many sightings in the summer because as Sibylla pointed out, it's a million degrees here and nobody wants to be out in the swamp with the mosquitos the size of your fist. You might not see those sightings, but there are people driving the highways down in the southeast, for example, and in Florida and hotter areas that are heavily developed where
you might see wildlife from the road. So I think, again, I'm
pretty long winded. It must be the caffeine tonight. But to answer your question, I think that sightings are increasing, that sharp increase from like the sixties forward because of human development, just displacing these creatures from their environment, habitat destruction, things like that, and then what's really left behind for them to travel is sparse, right, so they only have the choice of using these corridors that are left over, or that weave between suburbs or things like
that, drainages, rivers, creeks, et cetera. I was going to say, this is not long winded. I heard a podcast the other night, Scott the Post went an hour and forty minutes and never got to ask a question. It wasn't one that I did, wasn't now I'm not going to tell anybody who it was on here, but the ange sometimes an hour and forty minutes that the host never got to ask his first question. Anyway, let's go to Amy Fu on that. I hope that I'm going to
answer the question. Okay, I started getting going off of tangents in my own mind, But as far as where they can survive privately, as far as that land disappearing, I think it's scary for all kinds of animals. The first thing I thought about when you asked that question was I remember reading
an article last year. Hopefully I don't get details wrong, so I'm not going to say that many details, but there were in Africa there were a bunch of elephants that were dying and they couldn't figure out why they were dying, like hundreds of elephants. From what I remember, it was because just exactly that their habitat was shrinking, so their population was denser, and then there was some type of bacteria that was attacking them and and they died from
it. So I think it's a concern for all animals if that is to happen, And I don't know what to do about it, but I agree with you Scott that the likelihood of seeing one is probably greater as they're crowding
in. But I know you don't think so either. If it's not a good thing, but it's something to be concerned about, Yep, maybe sightings will pick up, mister Hotchik. I listened to what Scott said, but one thing that's never talked about is that, yeah, these corridors and there's a lot of development, are getting narrower, but that's where the animals are focused. That's where all the wild turkeys exist, that's where all the deer
exists. They're focused. If any of you ever gone into the true wilderness, I'll bet you good money you won't even see a bird. You won't see deer, you won't see moves, you won't see anything. Most of the animals stay towards the edges. If man has made a road, that's your best spot a spotting something. Because they were using those areas. If there's farm fields, edges, barbedoyer, it's actually helped wildlife. And I
think Bigfoot punches into those suburban areas. The urban sprawl to go after the wildlife so bad. Here in my own neighborhood, the wildlife it's hard to even go biking because there's so many deer hurts so many turkey flocks and they're blocking the trails. It's insane off to wait in an hour, sometimes even get by because there's so much wildlife and I don't want to plow through herd a deer. But this is where we're seeing the fox, the coyotes,
the grouse, the pheasants, just everything. And then of course you've got eagles and hawks overhead. So yeah, there's a price to pay for urban sprawl, but there's also some benefits. It does seem to balance out because they're finding out right now that wolves are actually thriving because of the man made edges, because of the roads, because of the trails, gives them very easy trail of corridors. So that's the other side of the coin. And
I'm not saying I'm for urban sprawl. I'm not. I think it's gotten way out of hand, but I do know that the wildlife seems to adapt to it and flocks to it because we have a bigger variety of plants on those edges. We have agriculture on those edges, which many animals take advantage of, and so it may not beat the predator that takes advantage of the agriculture. It may be the prey animal that does, and so it attracts the predator. So it's far more complicated than one might think. I also
wanted to respond to one of the comments. I think somebody misunderstood me when I was saying bigfoots operate on fear. I think she thought or he thought I was saying bigfoots cause fear and people. No, I was saying, one of animal operates on here. It's afraid of humans. It stays away from humans. It does what it can to avoid humans. That's what I meant, and I just wanted to clarify that too. Sibylla. Let's say you're headed down to your local dairy queen in southwest Texas to get a blizzard.
I'm sure you get an oreo blizzard every now and again. Do you expect to see big foot? I believe these beings are so highly intelligent and so highly adaptive. I really think that if they're living in close proximity of people, that they learn. And the reason why I say this is because
I felt this when I moved into that house in Crienttinton, Kentucky. I really felt like I was watched and studied Okay, so here, let's see what kind of a threat this person is, and that I was watched and studied, and then you know, human beings lives are so incredibly patterned that it wouldn't take very long to know what time these people are getting up, what time they're leaving for work, what time they're coming home, what time they go to bed, so that if you were going to wanted to raid
their chickens, you'd know exactly what time when the lights went out to go get their chickens or something. So I really think that these creatures are so adaptable. It's just my experience that they're so highly adaptable to their situations and to what's going on in their situations that I think these things can be living
right around people. And after living on this place for five years, I absolutely understand why there's farmers all around there that had no idea that the Sasquatch are living among them, because what they do on a daily basis is so subtle that if you're not paying attention, you're not going to see the things they leave behind unless they're slamming your house, which they did that they're with throw things. But I think the average person is just going to write stuff
off to something else. I think that they're highly adaptive and they can live around humans, and if the neighborhood keeps expanding, they'll just keep adapting. I think the only reason they slapped the house they've thought like, oh, Sibylla's made fries. She's not using lard, she's using canola oil. That probably made them a little angry. That was everybody. So we got some questions from the chat here. This is from our friend Mick from the UK
Debs. Would you read this one man question? Has Doug and anyone on the panel managed to capture any really good video footage of sasquatch? No video footage, but I'll put an astrosk up. I haven't got to ask my question of all you guys yet. Oh, I'm sorry, Scott goes next. We'll go ahead and answer the question. But I haven't leaded any video footage. I wish. Yeah, therein lies the problem, Mick. We've alluded to the intelligence throughout the show. Here, Doug has a couple of
tricks up his sleeve. Some he tried last year, more he'll try this year. So the issue is not closed. But they're incredibly intelligent about avoiding cameras. I think that's the bottom line. And couple that with the fear that they can instill in people when they do have the chance to take a photo and near front and center. But you're just so freaked out that you're not thinking about, let me get my camera out now. You're probably like
thinking, can I survive this encounter? And please and everybody that wants to take a shot at that, And then Scott Wolfskill, can I say something about it, please, ma'am? Not the video. That's probably one of the biggest questions I get. I go to a lot of places, outdoor shows, different places talk about sasquatch. What I always like to point people to is the Cross River gorilla, which I brought up earlier. They are in Africa, on the border of Cameroon, in Nigeria, and it was
just this century that they were really no longer cryptids to most scientists. They weren't got to exist. They were thought to be mythological of the people there. The natives were just using these stories about these hairy men in the woods,
except they're real. If you look them up, you can see the first video ever taken of them, where people were looking them for years and years, and one of the primate zoologists that I work with in Project Zoobook, the curator of a zoo that he used to work in, was one of the first Westerners that saw these gorillas in person, and he lived there for I believe eight years, had different guides taking him around trying to find
these gorillas, and finally saw them for a total of ten seconds. They would find some signs, nests, different things like that, but couldn't find the actual gorillas. But anyway, if you look up that first camera trap footage, there are several females that are coming out of the trees and one male, one silverback, comes into the frame and he bluff charges that camera and all of them are looking right at the camera. So I like to say that was a lot of luck that they got that footage to begin with,
and every single one of those gorillas was aware of that camera. It wasn't that they were just walking by and they sneakily got footage was in the right place at the right time, but they knew it was there, whether they could hear something or smell it, or it was just something odd where they normally go. I don't think bigfoot has to be much different than that. They're intelligent and they can avoid things, I think, so I'm not
sure where that question was coming from. I'm assuming. Maybe I shouldn't assume, but we get a lot of warning. They're more pictures where don't have more video, and I just point people to that because that was just the sense we finally got them on camera. The real reason there's no picture is because nobody's hiding cameras. A camera trap strapped to a tree is not hiding
a camera. I'm working on systems where the cameras are completely hiding. There's no way I could say it's right there on of that tree and you won't be able to find it. That's what it'll take, multi step planning because these creatures seem to be very savant, like where they know their environment and they spot them and they avoid them. But we did an experiment last year and we had them standing on our cameras because they were hit. Unfortunately,
there's no natural light because there was thick cloud cover. There was no moon under that cloud cover either, so I was just really black, no stars, nothing. But we're hoping we're going to do the same exact thing in the same area this year. But we've got good moon coming. So we've looked at the conular tables and we know that we're going to have good moon
and all we need is good weather. But if you can take a miniature camera and I will say, like a motorcycle dashcan camera system that's IR, turn the IR lights off because you don't want that garbage, and then hide the camera so it cannot be seen. I'm not talking about barely seen.
No, it cannot be seen at all. And when you can figure that out, now you've got something, you have to actually put it under something to where something walking cannot see it completely one hundred percent out of you and there's bill light, IR or any other type coming out of the camera, I think then the game will change. Don't bet against Doug Hicheck, is
what I have to say. We have about seven minutes left, so I want to get Scott's question in here, but we need to tighten it up a little bit because then we want to go through all of everybody's projects before we close the show. So please go ahead, Scott. Seven minutes.
That's a challenge, Okay. I'd like actually to get Brian, being former law enforcement I think you may have good insight into One of my biggest frustrations with the Bigfoot mapping project is I try to find data that is corroborating or supporting data like forest type or agricultural data, USDA data, USGS data.
And one of the biggest challenglenges I have is finding cave locations. And in my research, I've found that in let's see, let me I'm going to I have it up on my screen here in US Code Chapter sixty three, from Title sixteen, Section forty three oh four. If I were to find those cave locations and publish them on a map, I'm actually violating federal law. That's why I cannot find cave locations. And I'm going to get a
little conspiratorial here. And my justification is, for example, they justify it under safety, right, they don't want people going splunking and dying in a cave. But if that were the case, you know, why don't they keep people from climbing cliff faces, a half dome in any national park or up a mountain side. If it was truly for safety, why aren't they doing things like hiding, obscuring waterfall locations or other dangerous locations. Why is
it just caves? And why I get frustrated is because so many people will reach out to me on my channel asking can you show me cave locations in comparison to like the Bigfoot sighting is how close are they? There's theories that they retreat to caves, live in caves, and all I'm able to find is cave concentration. Like in Kentucky, I have great cave density data, great great data available there, but nationally, I'm unable to find a really
good data set. So I was curious if anybody had an opinion or insight into maybe a little conspiratorial opinion or something beyond just blanket safety, why that data set is so protected. I can certainly try to use a couple of sources I have and see if they know anything about it. I've had difficulty getting anybody getting lou Elizondo to talk about Bigfoot other than one episode or any of the big players, one of my other guys that's inside. I just
looking for that one person. I think, once we get one person like Tim Burchett from Tennessee, or Tim Burchett if you want to how he says it, somebody like that who I also, I've heard that he has had a big foot experience, as as Mitch McConnell. Just I guess it's the political expediency for them to talk about it. But we can get one person. I think we'll get some movement, So go ahead, and that'll be a me first. I don't know about any conspiracy or anything like that.
I do know maybe I shouldn't say this, but I do know that one of the reasons I went back to school to become an Ohio Certified Volunteer naturalist is because we get access to different things that I don't as a private citizen. So what are the things I was most interested in? Or the cave maps that I was able to see, That's something I'm really interested in, especially somewhere like Ohio, or you don't have as much covering like as you
do in the Pacific Northwest. Why they don't, I guess I always thought it was just the danger of it somebody getting hurt. Sometimes the government thinks to where a bunch of simpletons and can't follow safety procedures. But that is what reasons. Yeah, I guess I ask if I can add on to that. I asked because you don't typically hear the government doing something proactively.
They usually make a law in reaction to something and just blanket safety. It's not very specific why they just it's like a single line in the code. Oh, it's just for safety. So it just triggered my curiosity. Why is it such a serious law at the federal level regarding caves if it's just for safety when there's not many similar laws that I'm aware of for other natural features. And I'll just chime in here and tell you my personal experience from
being in law enforcement for sixteen years. There was probably if you trace this back and really dial in when the law was introduced and when it was passed, there may have been some family that died in the cave in some area. There was something very specific that that predicated this law being introduced into Congress and being ultimately adopted. There's weird laws on the books, dude. I remember being an Atlanta City cop. I think it's still on the law now
that a lady can't walk down Peachtree Street in Atlanta without wearing gloves. That's against the law. You can't spit on the sidewalk. There's just these weird laws. But most of them had something to do with a specific incident, So I bet if you really drilled down, I think it's probably less conspiratorial and more about some specific thing that happened and somebody in their district took it up as they're carrying the gauntlet for these people, and they ended up getting
this law passed and it just affects everything. My opinion, it's probably a little less conspiratorial, and it's probably something very simple that happened. It might have happened one hundred and fifty years ago, but the law is still on the books. But I think it's something that we could definitely start to band together and look into as a community as a whole and start calling out your local representation, whatever state you're in, and talk about this law that's on
the books, that's how change happened. Somebody could take this up and actually maybe get it overturned or abridged to a point where that may be more public information. I don't know, just my two cents. Stay tuned for more sasquatch out to see will be right back after these messages. Getting hands on that data set would be really amazing. Somebody in the chat said about not disturbing in dangered bats. It's a really good point. It could be ecological.
There is one rich man from Nebraska who started the low bat food craze, and the reason why McDonald's no longer uses beef talub in their French fry concoction is because of one guy. Malcolm Gladwell did an entire show on how one guy started that. So, like what you said, Brian, is very possible. You get a group up there. Like you said, somebody was killed in a cave where they local law enforcement found a number of people that had died exploring caves, got lost, became disoriented. You saw those
Tai kids that were in that cave. Were it not for those even with my friends from Air Force Rescue and the Navy Seals and the Thai Navy Seals that were in attendance, had you not had those two British sar guys, those guys who were expert at deep cave diving, everybody would have died in there. It was only because those guys were able to locate them and not become disoriented and find their way out and all these things. So anyway, great question, who's going to go next? Doug gonna let's say we got
amy. So yeah, Doug, Please, first, before I even want to think about caves, I've gonna ask myself, is there any connection between bigfoots using caves? Yeah? I hear that all the time, Yet I've never really seen any evidence of them using caves as travel routes or shelter. That doesn't mean that they don't. I'm just saying I don't see a lot of evidence to it, but I would think that with a little searching, and I'm going to work on this, Scott. There's gotta be a group
of national splunkers that have mapped out all these cavelow there are. There's a lot of speleological societies I've found, and they're very, very protective of their That is interesting. Do you feel that biquots are utilizing cavescut? I don't know. I would like to get the data sets so I can make an opinion on that without having anything to analyze. I really I would like to
explore it further. And that's one of the data sets that causes me the most frustration, because I got a lot of questions about that, and I really have no way to answer them other than speculation. Is there a map that would show limestone concentrations cars, jeffs, are there maps that show where the cars is concentrated around the country, Because anywhere you have cars, you're gonna have caves. Period. Dog is going to take this for action. We will. I'm in our next we Will presents. I love it.
Man, it's a badass. Who else? Sibilla? I fall on the side with Brian. I think that it's probably because it was necessary if people have This happened locally not too long ago. There was a huge cave found in South Texas and I think they let it out of the bag is where it was, and people started flooding the area, you know, so they had the higher security to keep people from going there. Because people are just not smart and they don't respect other people's property, it seems like so it
can be very dangerous from what it sounds like those caves. I've never beilunked or anything, but it sounds like it could get You could really easily get turned around. I've heard about people diving. I once heard one of the UFC fighters about cave diving, and he said, man, it's just like you were this close to getting lost in there and if your buddy gets lost, you know, you got to leave him in there because panic sets in.
You use up all your hair and all these things. All right, if there's any final comments, and then we'll do our Cabby goodbyes where we'll thank you, and we also want to hear everybody talk about all the projects that they're doing. Any final comments between you amazing panelists. Okay, I'll take that as a note, Nathan. All right, it's been an incredible conversation though, just certain captivating. So thank you all for joining us.
Do you want to go alphabetically through so people can talk about it? Yeah? Please? Yeah? Maybe what do you want to know? No, we just want to we really just what we do is we say thank you for joining us, just like giving of your time. Man, you're so nice to chat with. I hope that we can have you on again so that you can give us more of this knowledge that you've gained because you are like all in on this. Thank you for having me. Thank you,
it's great to have you and Amy. For those of our listeners who may not be familiar with your work, where can they find you? Where's the best paid place to find your work? Now I'm on Facebook, which is where normally I'm thankfully we are getting toward the finish line with Project Zoo book or having a new website, which we've been wanting to do for a long time. There's a really rudimentary one out there where people can at least contact
us, but it's going to be interactive. Hopefully it will be up sooner rather than later. As far and the Live Project also has a website that people can get on too. As far as projects, I'm doing, this weekend starts my two month run of going to different outdoor shows all over Ohio and Pennsylvania where I talk to different hunters and fishermen and get bigfoot stories. One of my favorite things that I do. So let's starting this weekend.
And I'm also writing a book. I'm getting toward the end of it and excited about that. So doing a project with Native Americans and all kinds of different things. So I'm excited. You don't have enough things to do, You're really boring. It was great and I will see you at the Ohio Bigfoot Conference. Yeah, I will not be there, but I wish I could. I got an invitation from Tim who's the one who connected me with Doug, Tim Hollerin, and Dana. Okay, so let's go to our
next victim of person. Sorry mister hiding Devs Well, once again, thank you DJ for inviting me. Thanks everybody, some really brilliant people here. I'm just trying to work on legimate science too. Keep my podcast going, Untold Radio AM and the network Untold Radio Network going, and we're publishing books. Anybody's got a really cool book. Amy. If you want us to give you a give you some spiel, we'd be happy to do that. But generally you can get a hold of me on Facebook, and I just
loved talking about the topic. People have questions or just comments, please get a hold of me and Pine Island Research. Is that Jeff, that's Jeff. Yes, Hey, Jeff ye? All right, go ahead, Nathan Devs Yeah, Doug, it's been great to have you on the show. This has been an incredible conversation and I hope you get to do it again because I know there's bazillion things we could talk about, and I have questions that we didn't touch on some of the ones that we've talked about on prior
shows, but would be great to get some responses from these folks. Looking forward to have you guys back, love to come back. Thank you so much to everybody. Absolutely, I'm thrilled that y'all were able to come together. I love seeing round tables like this, and I have questions for all of you. It might be a year or two years down the road before
it's done. And also, if you want to debate somebody about Bigfoot and not obviously not like an argument type thing, but like a legitimate Lincoln Douglas debate, Dead will host you on Anomalist Debates. Next, we have to go to miss Irwin. Yes, thank you so much for inviting me. It's just been so great to get to see all of you and is it with you and get to know you. People can find me at Sabella Erwin dot com and if they want to see the witness sketches, they just go
to the gallery. There's a Witness gallery. I just added a whole bunch of pictures from Matt Amps and also from Mike Blueler just released his video last Friday and it's just live there. You've taken off. It's got forty three thousand views already just since Friday. It's just blown up. Yeah, I love Mike Lueller. So Sketching Encounters, if you'll just go and please subscribe, and it's new witnesses like just all the time to tomorrow I'm talking to
so I'm so excited. So and thank you again for having me here. Amazing And I love the sketches though they have on there because you get to see the diversity of what these beings look like. Money Nathan Debs. Yeah, Samilla, you've been on the show before and it's so great to have you back. It's just a real pleasure to speak with you. And I'm a huge admirer of your work and your passion for the subject. It just
comes through. So thank you so much for joining us, and we hope to have you back on the show too for to keep up with what you're up to. And as you said, you get lots of folks coming to talk to you all the time, so I know you're going to have new stories to share. Absolutely, Thank you guys, thank you for coming. I hope that one day we can just do like a gallery of all your artwork. That'll be really cool. I hope we can just do a show. Yeah, that'll be amazing. Yeah, Yeah, that'd be great.
Deb has so many good ideas. Oh my god, we're so lucky to have her. Brian King Sharp, I'm just podcasting, man. You guys can find Sasquatch Odyssey, that Bigfoot podcast. You can find Backwoods horror Stories, you can find Weird Encounters, you can find True Crime Odyssey anywhere you're listening to podcast on your audio podcasters. I do have a Sasquatch Odyssey and Backwards Horror Stories YouTube channel, so if you're on YouTube and you're into that
thing, you can find me there. The book is out for pre sale. I am stoked about the book. Doug and Alex and all the guys at Hanger one Publishing were amazing at helping me get the book together. It was a project that I have had in my brain for many years and we finally got it done and I am stoked about how the book turned out. I'm very excited about it. I think there's a little bit of something in there for everybody. Sasquatch Unleashed the Truth behind the Legend is out for pre
sale Hanger one Publishing dot com. You guys can check it out and just go and listen to the show man. The shows are all about this show, particularly Sasquatch Odyssey, is all about the encounters. I highlight encounters from everywhere. It's all about people who have had experiences with these things, because, unlike Scott and some of the other more scientific people, I feel like I'm a collector of data in my own right with the podcast, and we
put it out there in perpetuity for everybody to listen to. And you can gain a little bit from every single one of these encounters that you hear on the show, and I think they all have something to offer in the overall Bigfoot conversation. So I'd love for you guys to listen to the show and check out all the encounters. We're about four hundred and twenty some odd episodes into Sasquatch Odyssey at this point, so there's a little something out there for
everybody, and you can find me at Paranormal World Productions dot com. We have I think seven shows under the network at this point for I do myself and then other people the Basement hangout. Those guys are a phenomenal The Kentucky X Files guys, we have some really great shows, a little bit of something in the cryptive world for everybody. So we'd love to have you check it out for us. I just want to say congratulations on all your success,
Brian. You have really gotten after it and just done an amazing job that podcasters can look at it and go okay, if I can follow like what Brian did, I can be successful in this realm and do it as a career. So congratulations, brothers. It's good to be your friend money Nathan. Yeah, it's awesome to have you with us, Brian, And I know how hard it is to do podcasts. I do too, but to do more than two, which is clearly what you're doing. I don't
even know how you find the time. So absolutely incredible, and I just love your approach, your investigative and analytical approach to the topic. It's really refreshing and really just super happy you're able to join us tonight and look more and have you back. Yes, absolutely, thank you for joining us. I look forward to hearing more about your book in the future. I definitely will be checking out You're one of your podcasters so many I pully for sure
at least one, So thank you. People love Brian. Is that your co host Tiffany in the chat? Is that her? Yep? That's tea time with Tiffany. She helps a lot on Paranormal Odyssey with Wayne and she joins us for the live shows on that Bigfoot podcast. We love Tiffany. She has a couple of books out you guys, go over and hang her one Publishing. She's done a couple of books that she's got out over there as well. Check her stuff out. Hi, Tiffany, welcome. We'll
hope to see you again. Just real quick, thank you Doug for getting everybody's work out there. It's just another thing that you're doing in the community. I just want to say thank you for having me on such an esteemed panel. Everyone's input and feedback and ideas and opinions are going to be swirling around my head while I'm feeding my baby tonight. I don't really have time to sleep, so I have plenty of time to think, and I'm looking
forward to sharing these stories with him as he grows up. I'm really happy to be here. And if you'd like to follow the Bigfoot Mapping Project, it's bigfootmap dot com and on Instagram. It's at Bigfoot Mapping Project and you can always reach out to me there. But another great way to get a hold of me would be just Scott a bigfootmap dot Com is my email and you can email me with any questions, whether it be about Bigfoot, gis
maps, technical stuff, you name it. I'm always open for interesting questions and I'll do my best to get back to you. I really enjoy hearing from everyone and getting to talk to people a little bit behind the scenes. It's a lot of fun. This really made me feel like home, Scott, because you're a hometown brother. I told you I go back there all the time, and your accident reminds me of home. And I'm just so
proud to be from the Hudson Valley. And when Sunny Cortland knows is a If you go home all the time, you've got to go to Beacon and go on Main Street and go to Glazed Over Donuts. That's my mother and father's donut shop. So if you go in and say hi to them, they will load you up with a lifetime supply of donuts. It's yelp top one hundred donut shops in the country, so please go check it out. Yeah, shameless, plase, but I have nothing to do with their donuts.
I'm just proud of them. They do a good job. I will endeavor to do that. I'll be up there in August, like I told you, that's my plan, my next one and will be August and then I'll do it winter iteration. I'll be cool. We tell them high for me and I hope you stop in. Thank you, sir, all right the money Nathan in Debs. Yeah, Scott, it is awesome to have you with us. It's my first introduction to your work, and the Bigfoot
mapping project is super cool. I got a chance to look through that material, so congrats on getting that launched and the continuing developing that you're doing with that. It's much needed, obviously in the space to bring that kind of analytical collection approach to the topic. So thanks for what you're doing, and good luck as a new parent with the little one. I know that's not easy at the whole project of its own. Good good luck with all of
that, and hopefully get a chance to talk with you Againsent. Thank you so much, Scott, and congratulations again on the baby. And I think it's amazing what you're doing because data is amazing. Thank you very much for contributing that to the to this realm of anomalous beings and so forth, my pleasure. Debs, you're awesome man. All right, everybody, it's been great, and please, like I said, if you would email me anything that you would like in the show notes, because I just love filling up
the show notes with everybody's links and stuff. I hope to see all of you again, as a collective or individually back on calling all beings, give us a like and subscribe. Julie, thank you very much for being the amazing person that you are, and for Amy, for Doug or Sibyla, Brian and Scott, and of course Gabby's money, Nathan and Debs. This is DJ saying peace out, one love. We'll see you down the road.
And we're always wondering what's up around the bend. They say you don't got to go, but you can't stay said step steps steps chart this child, that child, everything come right back, right back joy from me. Enjoy staying right you come in right away still still stay ssssssta, don't don't talk about thesssstssssssssss
