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Archive 143 Bigfoot

Feb 14, 202522 min
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Archive 143 Bigfoot

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Transcript

Speaker 1

When I was seventeen, I came home from school one day to find my mother anxiously waiting for me. I've always been a laid back guy, so when she told me that she and my dad had decided to take a break for a while, I took it pretty well. In fact, it was me who ended up comforting her for the next couple of days. It seemed a bit weird. My dad wasn't around much even when we were together.

He was an interstate truck driver. We were lucky if we saw him for a couple of hours one or two nights a week before he was off again, so his absence wasn't really unusual. That's why seeing his truck on a Monday when he was never home with such a surprise. I walked out the front as he was swinging the door open, and out jumped a huge black puppy. It was a massive Dane cross that I named Thor. My dad knew i'd wanted a dog for ages. I'd been shooting since I could hold a gun, but I

never hunted with dogs. With Thor, I was going to get my chance to contribute to the pig chasing stories at school. Over the next four years, Thor grew to be very protective of me. At a wapping one hundred and ninety six pounds, that was a lot of protection. He did have a few anger issues. No one could pet him, and he wouldn't eat unless I gave him the food. He scared my mother a lot too. She'd always say, we need to get rid of that dog. He's going to bite someone. I always shrugged it off.

One weekend, a mate I went to school with rang me and said that we were going pigging. He said to get my stuff together and he'd be at my place in an hour. I went and got Thor's pigging collar, a drink bottle, and my long range rifle. About nine am, my mate turned up in his white dual cave ute. His dog was already in the back and thora was nearly snapping the chain I had him on to get to the ute. He knew what we were doing and

he was getting excited. After I loaded my stuff and we got on our way, I asked my mate where we were going the Poliga. He said, Now, for anyone who doesn't know or has not heard of the Paligue of forests, it's just outside of Narrowbrie, New South Wales. There have been so many Bigfoot stories about that place, even a movie made about it. There's a highway that runs through the middle of it. Big semi trailer trucks can blow tires and the drivers won't even pull up

to fix them. Everybody knows about the stories and the sightings down there. I didn't know it, but we were about to add to the tally. It was about a two hour drive from my home down to the Palagua Forest. You can tell when the forest starts because the red soil on the side of the road turns to an almost sand or fine gravel. We continued until we saw an opening in a rarely used car track, and we turned in there and continued on for about fifteen minutes.

My mate slowly pulled the ute up to a five wire fence at a tee intersection and said, this is it. Let's go. I asked him who owned the property. He just shrugged and giggled as he unchained his dog. He reached over to unchained Thor, but Thor's lips came up and his teeth came out. Go on, he's only playing, I said, Stop being a flossy and unclip it. I laughed, but he uttered an expletive and walked away. Defeated. I unclipped Thor's chain, slung my rifle over my shoulder, and

off we went through the fence. We found a goat track and followed it for about ten minutes. It was pretty easy to walk through. The dogs were leading the way with their noses in the air, trying to scent some pigs. My mate's dog had a better nose than Thor's. It spun to the left, sniffed a few times, and then took off. My mate and I were doing our

best to follow. Thor hadn't picked up any sent yet, so he stayed by my side, watching the other dog and waiting for the barking and pig squealing to begin. I crouched down next to him and put my arm around him, giving him encouragement. Where's the pigs? Boy? You listening? Where are they? He was getting psyched up. Both of his ears were standing straight up, and he was ready to go. My mate and his dog were gone for

about two or three minutes. At this point, I couldn't see or hear either of them, just the grasshoppers and a few birds chirping. I was still crouched down next to my dog and watching in the direction my mate and his dog went. When I got an overwhelming feeling that we were being watched. I looked up and down the track, but a I didn't see anything. I spun on the balls of my feet to look behind me

into the scrub, but I didn't see anything there. The bush was so thick to see more than thirty meters anyway. I spun Thor around to look in that direction. He was hesitant, still trying to watch the way my mate and his dog went, and I said, what's up here?

Speaker 2

What is it?

Speaker 1

Something finally got his attention. He stared out into the scrub as the hairs on his back stood up and he started to growl jackpot. I thought, we're on again. I stood up and pushed Thor in that direction. Get him, boy, I shouted, as he put his ears back, head down and took off into the scrub. A million miles an hour in five seconds, I couldn't see him. I was chasing after him as fast as I could, listening for a pig to squeal. I could still hear him barking,

but it was getting farther and farther away. He was fifty meters ahead of me. I'd say, I was thinking, God, I hope they aren't much further. I hate running. Thor's barking stopped, and I stopped. I was waiting for a noise to tell me which way to run through the bush to get him. I waited, and I waited. Usually this happens pretty quick, and I kept waiting, and then I heard yelping. I had never in my life heard

Thor yelp, not even when he was a puppy. He was yelping with every breath, and I could hear the yelps getting closer. Whatever was making him yelp, he was having no part of it and was heading back to me. I could see him coming through the bush faster than he went in, and he was still yelping. His tail was between his legs and cowering. He got back to my feet and pissed himself in fear. He was trying to hide behind me, looking back in the direction he'd

just gone. This scared the absolute life out of me. I pulled my rifle off my and pressed it into my shoulder and waited for whatever was chasing my dog to show itself. I couldn't hear a thing except for Thor's whimpering. As I stood there staring into the scrub, a smell hit me. I thought Thor had lost control of his bowels and then rolled and burnt hair. I could hear my mate's dog barking behind us as they

returned to the road that I was standing on. I could hear them a fair bit behind us, but I wasn't game to take my eyes off the scrub in front of me. His dog picked up our scent and they found us. My mate called out, did you get one or what? I shushed him. Something ain't right, I said. He didn't even acknowledge what I said, and started walking back to the road. I yelled out, I'm going back to the ute and I'm leaving. He yelled over to me and said for me to stop being a baby. No, mate,

something's wrong. I'm leaving. I told him he knew I wasn't joking, and he agreed. I walked backwards the entire trip back to the ute. My mate climbed through the fence and I passed him my gun so I could climb through. I insisted on driving. I just wanted to get out of there. We got packed up and started down the trail that he'd driven us in on. After about two minutes of driving in silence, both dogs on the back started barking and looking out the left side

of the ute into the scrub. My mate said, hey, pull up, we'll let the dogs off. I quickly turned down his request, and he said pull over. Then he pulled the handbrake, stalling the ute. He pulled his gun up to his shoulder and looked through the scope into the scrub. The dogs were going ballistic. Now. I looked over and saw something about forty meters out. My mate was trying to find this thing in his scope, waving

it back and forth. He pushed the bolt forward down and he chambered a bullet, still looking for whatever it was, and the scope he must have had the magnification turned up a fair bit because he was struggling to find it, and then he gasped. I stared at him for a minute, waiting for an answer, before nearly yelling what is it. He uncocked the gun and it said, mate, I think it's a bloke. He took his eye away from the scope and looked over the gun back to the scope.

And back over the gun. He cocked it again, aimed down below the tree, and then boom. The warning shot rang out as this thing spun around and ran off on two legs, just like you or I. The sound of this thing's feet hitting the ground and breaking off the branches as it ran still scares me. My mate turned to me and he said, yeah, fair call, let's go. I have never been back to this place. I never planned to go back by any means. Thanks for reading my story. Sorry for the spelling mistakes. I know I

sound dyslexic. Brother, you aren't near as dyslexic as I am. But this was a great story because he's got this dog, this two hundred pound dog or ninety six kilogram dog that is just fearless, and it's a vicious dog. And this dog is scared to death of whatever that was. I'm almost sure that that thing got after his dog. I don't know. I could elaborate on this story forever, but it's real exciting. It's another story from Australia, from our good friends in Australia. I've read a little bit

about the Peliga Forest. I understand they've got some issues with fracking and gas extraction in that area. It's a beautiful, pristine wilderness and I think the I think industry is coming in and really giving the farmer's trouble. And so anyway, if you're interested in that, look up the Poliga Forest in Australia and learn about it. It's an interesting story about that. Okay, I'll quit Ramblin. Appreciate the email, buddy, thank you.

Speaker 2

I'm a reserve police officer and a private security officer who contracts for state and the federal government, so I'd like to keep my name and exactly where I'm from is quiet as not. Everyone in my line of work is so open minded. The thing about northern Illinois that not a lot of people think about is there's a lot of bigfoot activity. I never really believed it, as I'm an avid hunter and outdoorsman who spent more of

my childhood outside rather than inside. Part of my security job includes doing patient transports between various hospitals and mental health facilities in the Midwest, and on one of these I saw something that made me a believer in all the stories I heard as a kid. We were on the road for a few hours. When we finally got to the Illinois Missouri border the Mississippi. That river marked that we were close to the town we were going to, about one hundred or so miles south of the Iowa border.

We dropped off the patient without an issue, and I was glad as the amount of nicotine and caffeine in my system wasn't quite enough to fuel me through a physical confrontation. We stopped by a local diner and headed out on our way. When we got back to the bridge heading back into Illinois, I saw what I initially took as a farmer out in his field, which I thought was strange as it was one am, but I shrugged it off as a sick animal. Then he went into a pen and threw what looked like a sheep

over his shoulder. We kept driving and I noticed out of the corner of my eye the same figure running towards the river, which I thought was strange and made me focus more on him. It was then that I realized that this was too tall to be a man, because the corn wasn't even up to his chest and the sheep was absolutely puny over his shoulder. I initially thought that it was a lamb, but now it became clear it was a full grown adult that had to

be at least two hundred pounds, if not more. When it got to the river, it walked in and started swimming, going straight across the current, not even seeming to touch it. Despite having one arm handicap by its cargo. He got onto the Illinois side and crawled onto the bank with ease despite what might have been a six foot incline, and disappeared into the treeline. The surprise of seeing him scale that incline made me swallow some of the dip I had in my lip, and I was coughing when

my partner woke up and asked what happened. I explained the situation to him, and he said I need to cut down on the overtime and that the lack of sleep was getting to my head. When we got back to the office, I talked to my sergeant, who has twenty years law enforcement experience on top of four years active duty in the Marine Corps. He put a hand on my shoulder and he said that there are things out there that shouldn't be talked about and left it

at that. The whole experience has left me looking over my shoulder every time I'm out hunting and has given me a newfound respect for the woods. Many years ago, I was invited to go hunting in southeast Oklahoma. I worked with a guy that invited me, but did not really know the others. The coworker remains my best friend to this day. We all met at the same spot for about three seasons. Then for different reasons, it was just me. I didn't mind. I loved it, and it

was a good spot. This place is for public hunting in the Watchataw Mountains. It's also famous for bigfoot sightings. For all my years in the woods, I've gained a lot of skills in experience. I was sure that if anyone could find bigfoot, it would be me. Up until this point, I never had any definite proof. I have, however, seen and heard things that I could not explain, so I keep an open mind. The first couple of solo

trips were uneventful. I never worried about anything. I was always armed with a pistol, a rifle, and a shotgun. The rifle was with me in the woods, the shotgun rested on a chair while in camp, and the pistol never left my side. My trips were well planned, so I always had more than enough provisions to last the whole time. Sometimes I'd stay as long as a month. That's how much I loved it, now that I think about it. Weird things started happening. The first time one

went alone. A chair or a tool or other small things would be in a different spot when I returned to camp, nothing missing. It was just move I just put it down as absent mindedness on my part. And then one day it started. First it was a small rock that landed about ten feet away. I was sitting in a chair, sharpening my knife and sipping on a beer. I looked in the direction from which it came, and I saw nothing. I didn't hear anything either, I mean nothing,

no birds or anything. It was unnerving, to say the least. After a few minutes, I picked up the same rock and I threw it back where it came from. It took several minutes, but to my surprise, the same exact rock came back almost in the same spot that it landed the first time. I didn't sleep that night, but I was on high alert. The next morning, I was cold and went to the wood pop so I could stoke the fire and get a pot of coffee going, I grabbed a log, but on the chopping block I

saw it. It was a small figure, crudely fashioned out of pine needles. I picked it up and studied it. Two arms, two legs, and a head. That's when all of my anxiety faded away. I held it up and looking around, I said thank you. I was sure that whatever had left it meant me no harm. Things like this happened for the next three or four years. We even started exchanging gifts. It left an arrowhead one time, another time just a shiny rock from the river, which

was about a mile away. In exchange, I would leave an apple or some cookies. The small rock throwing also continued, like a game that we both enjoyed. I never saw it, but I could since when it was there. We had become friends. Always camped in the same spot, and this year was the same. I was always pumped for deer season, especially to visit my friend again. It always waited until I was finished setting up camp and could sit down for a little rest, then the rock tossing game would

start again. It had become our thing. About a half hour before dark, we both heard it. It was an old pickup with a bad exhaustedly screaming down the main gravel road. Not really unusual, everyone knew about the meth problems in that part of the state. What was unusual It came straight into my camp. It slid to a stop right in front of me. When the dust cleared, I could see them, four mails between about sixteen and forty, all sitting in an eighty model's Chevy single cab pickup truck.

I wasn't too worried. The shotgun was close by. When they all got out at the same time, I knew it was tweaker, and man were they on it. They all acted like they had spiders on their clothes in their hair. The driver I thought his eyeballs were going to explode. And their agitated state and almost incoherent speech, they said I was on their private property. I knew they saw the shotgun that was within my reachs So without getting up or raising my voice, I said, no,

this is public land. I've been hunting here for years. That's when they got really wound up. They all started yelling at the same time and started in my direction. But before I got my hand on the shotgun, I saw something big fly through the air from my right. It was a basketball sized boulder. It crashed into the driver's side bed of the truck. It was loud, and it scared them more than me, only because I saw it coming. One of them fell on the ground in

a stupor. The other three turned to look at the giant dent in the side of the truck. That gave me a couple of extra seconds to grab the shotgun and stand up. When they turned back towards me, they were looking at the business end of a Remington eight seventy. We all stood staring each other for what seemed like an hour, It was in fact only a second or two. Then came the loudest, scariest noise I had ever heard in my life, kind of a roar plus a scream,

and it hurt my ears. As they were staring at me, I calmly said, you boys, get on. They picked the one up from the ground, scrambled back in the pickup, and slung rocks getting out of there. When we couldn't hear the truck anymore, I sat back down in my chair and had a shot of whiskey. By this time it was dark. I sat there in the dark, trying to figure out what I was going to do next. Should I stay or should I go? That's when I heard a familiar sound. My friend tossed a small rock

that landed near my feet. I laughed out loud and threw the same rock back. I slept off and on that night, with mister Remington in my lap, but unafraid. The next morning, I had decided to go ahead and leave. It wasn't safe for my friend and I, so I got up. I made coffee and breakfast, and had one last game of rock toss. I was packed up and ready to leave about ten am. I knew he was still there, although I never saw him. But right before I left, I took everything I planned as gifts for

him and left it on the chopping block. In return, I found the rock that we played our game with. I said goodbye in a soft voice, and I left. That was about fifteen years ago. I never went back to that spot. Since then, I've camped and hunted in a lot of different places, from Oklahoma to North Carolina. Whenever I'm sure i'm alone, I'll pick up a small rock and throw it towards the thick part of the woods, but it never comes back. This is a true story, believe it, or leave it alone.

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