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Archive 33 Bigfoot

Jun 24, 202415 min
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Archive 33 Bigfoot

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Transcript

Let me preface my story by saying that although I grew up in a suburb of Raleigh, North Carolina, I've always been a country boy at heart. My paternal grandparents had a farm in central North Carolina, and when I wasn't there, I wanted to be. There were rolling hills, creeks, and milo fields, separated by tracks of hardwoods teeming with squirrels, rabbits, and quail. Some of the happiest times of my life were spent on this farm, roaming the woods, camping, hunting, and fishing. For a young

boy who craved adventure, it was paradise. I would disappear into the woods for days. Back then, it simply wasn't a big deal for a young boy to go off camping by himself, as long as his parents had a general idea as to where he would be and when he would return. Looking back, I was probably safer in the woods on my grandfather's farm than just about anywhere else. There were no dangerous animals in this part of the state.

The only things that caused concern were tex jiggers in the occasional copperhead. When I wasn't playing Daniel Boone on the farm, I would often go on trips with my boy Scout troop in the nearby yu Werry National Forest. If you aren't familiar with it, this National Forest is about fifty one thousand acres, with most of it in Montgomery County. I've hiked a considerable amount of this forest, sometimes willingly and sometimes begrudgingly. Due to a directionally challenged assistant

scout master who we nicknamed lost Again Luis Lost Again Lewis. His shortcuts could turn a five mile day hike into a twenty mile over night hike. I mention all this simply to establish that from an early age I would regularly spend time in the woods. I'm familiar with the local animal and I don't spook easily. Unfortunately, when relating to stories such as this, you feel obligated to qualify yourself in order to preemptively silence some of the questions from armchair critics.

I never understood why, but to me, a lot of the Yuey National Forest has a foreboding feel. There are places that, even on a sunny day and winter when all the leaves have fallen, seem unnaturally dark and sinister. Several books written by local Folklorest Fred Morgan support this observation and contain many accounts of disconcerting and awful and violent events that have occurred in the area.

In early March of twenty twelve, I had some time off decided to load up my old land Rover and head out for remote camping spot in the northwest Yuaries. I've always preferred to hike, hunt, fish and camp alone. To me, the solid it is cathartic. To my delight, the campground I chose was completely deserted. There was a host site that contained an older travel trailer, but its condition indicated that it was abandoned. I selected a site at the very end of the loop road, as far from the

unoccupied trailer and as close to the dense woods as I could get. I planned on being there at least four or five days, so I set up my large, six person Cabella's dome tent rather than my smaller backpacking tent. After eating supper, I decided to turn in early. It was already getting dark and I was bushed. I settled into my sleeping bag, turned off my lantern, and was very quickly fast asleep. Around midnight, I was awoken by distant howl that my sleep addled mind told me was probably a wolf,

even though I knew there were no wolves in central North Carolina. In response to the cry, I a pack of dogs began to bay. I lay still for a few minutes, listening to all the racket, but soon it died down and all was quiet again. Having heard many odd noises while in the woods and being pragmatic, I chuckled to myself and tried to go back to sleep. My sixth sense was tapping me on the shoulder and saying

that something wasn't exactly right, but I closed my eyes anyway. Ten to fifteen minutes later, as I began to drift back to sleep, the howls repeated, and this time they were closer. Again. It was similar to the cry of a wolf, but the tone wasn't quite right. It was lower and deeper. The dogs again reacted with a chorus of yowling, but they still seemed farther away. They were reacting to the unknown caller, but they were not following it, or it had eluded them. At this point,

I was a bit puzzled, but certainly scared. It bothered me that I couldn't identify the animal that was making the yells, but I know for an absolute fact that there were no dangerous animals in this part of the state. Also, I had a pistol with me, and what were the eyes that this animal, whatever it was, would come directly towards me into my camp. There was no chance at all. Right, Again, I shrugged and I closed my eyes. This time I fell to a deep sleep,

a real comfortable sleep. Forty five minutes later, I was jolted away by a rumbling bellow that seemed right on top of me, and it was loud, very loud. My first thought as I shook the sleep from my head is that someone was outside my tent, roaring at me through a bullhorn. It was so close, so unidentifiable, and so loud that I was immediately

terrified. Even more disturbingly, as the scream slowly died out, it was replaced by heavy breathing and bipedal footsteps in the leaf litter heading towards my tent. I tried to convince myself that this must be a person playing a dangerous practical joke, but the steps were much much too heavy. I remember having a bizarre thought that this prankster must be stomping around with anvils tied to their shoes. That absurd idea made me quickly realize that this was no prank.

There was an exceptionally large and angry animal outside my tent, and I had no idea what it was. Sitting up but still halfway in my sleeping bag, I slowly and quietly scooched to the middle of the large tent, ridiculously believing that somehow being in the center would provide some safety. I quietly grabbed my compact nine millimeter out of my duffel bag and slowly flipped off the safety and I listened. When you're truly frightened, you feel flushed. Your senses

seemed sharp, and time appears to slow. I could hear every leaf and twig that broke under the creature's feet as it approached. I also vividly recalled turning my head towards the oncoming noise, and with each footfall, seeing small ripples being created in a half empty bottle of water across the dark tent, exactly like in the first Jurassic Park movie. Options ran through my mind. I could yell out and hope that whatever this was would be startled and leave.

I could step out of the tent and confront it, or I could remain quiet and see what happened. I had no idea what was outside, and I decided to sit still and wait. The footsteps were getting closer, but they slowed in pace. They stopped at what I guess would be about ten feet away from my tent. I had my pistol pointed in the thing's direction, and I was debating whether to fire off a couple of blind rounds

through the tent wall. I'm conscious about gun safety and would normally never consider this, but abject terror can result in bad decisions, and in retrospect, I genuinely believe that had this creature taken another couple of steps toward me, I would have emptied the clip. Thankfully it didn't. The animal was now standing still, and it began making an odd snuffling sound that led me to believe it was smelling the air. It reminded me of a pig grunting,

only deeper and was always followed by a long and heavy exhale. The animal was a few feet outside, sniffing, grunning, and snorting, trying to determine its next step, and I'm sitting in the tent, sweating and horrified, with a death grip on my pistol. This went on for what seemed like several minutes, though more likely it was only thirty to forty seconds. I was so tense that my arm holding the pistol began to shake, and

I felt like I was going to hyperventilate. I felt that I was close enough to physical and mental breaking point, and I know that I desperately needed for this to end. After a few more frantic seconds of thought, I realized that, for good or bad, I was going to have to try to take control of the situation. I resolved to quietly slip out of my sleeping bag, slit open the back of the tent, and jump out,

ready to shoot. I made some noise while trying to slide my legs out of the sleeping bag, and the animal let out a grunt that almost sounded like a question. There was an upward inflection at the end of the noise that made me think it might have been confused. Looking back, I believe it may not have been certain that I was in the tent until it heard me move. I froze, and for a few more seconds there was an absolute and terrifying sight. Then there was a deep in what I imagined to

be a derisive grunt. It sounded like a bull snorting, but seemed to have an almost cynical tone. It then began to stomp off in the direction from which it came, grunting loudly with every other step. As the thing trudged off, I heard a loud cracking sound, as if a large tree branch was being broken, and then another deafening roar, the sound of something

being dragged in the leaves, and heavy footsteps continued to move away. I stayed perfectly quiet until I couldn't hear it any longer, and then I took a deep breath to relieve some of the stress in my body. I was still on alert, but slowly beginning to relax a little. After a few more minutes of silence, I decided that the animal was probably gone, but there was no way that I was going to spend the rest of the night

in this flimsy nih line. I grabbed my car keys and stealthily unzipped the tent door to creep to my vehicle, pistol still in my hand, so I fired up my rover, turned on my headlights into my horror. There was a large tree limb about ten feet in front of the truck, blocking my exit. It was big enough that I didn't think I could drive over it without doing some significant damage to my vehicle, but it was not so large that I couldn't drag it partially out of the way and drive around it.

I decided, however, that I was not going to get out of the car until daylight, so I turned off my lights, lowered my seat all the way back, rolled the window down about a half inch so I could hear, and I turned off the ignition. The rest of the night was a blur to me. I didn't go back to sleep, but there were times that I wasn't completely awake either. I would start to nod off,

but my mind would not allow it. Thankfully, nothing else happened, and at first light I was able to quickly break camp and move the tree branch enough to get my vehicle out. When I returned home, my wife immediately asked, why are you back so soon. I didn't want to lie, but I simply couldn't figure out a way to explain what happened without sounding like a lunatic, so I just made up a story about not realizing that there was no self service and that I didn't feel comfortable being out of touch.

For four or five days before this incident, I had no real interest in cryptids. However, I immediately began reading everything I could on them, focusing on reports from the Ewery region. To my great surprise, I found

several accounts from this area, including a rather famous one. I learned that I was remarkably close to the sighting made by Michael Greene I think that's his name, who at the time was involved with the BFRO in North Carolina, and who had recorded thermal video of a humanoid figure snatching a candy bar from the top of a tree stump at a family gathering. Not long afterwards, my maternal grandmother, who grew up just outside the northwest boundary of the forest,

became upset when she was told I had been camping there alone. She said I shouldn't go there by myself. It was dangerous, and when I ask her why, she wouldn't give a straight answer. She would simply repeat, don't go there alone. You shouldn't go there alone. Ever, I'm still not convinced that I had an encounter with a hairy linebacker, But I don't know what animal walks on two feet, causes the ground to vibrate and roars louder than a line and breaks tree limbs. If you can come up

with one, please let me know. However, I didn't actually see anything, and the more practical side of me believes that there must be a rash explanation. If it was a bigfoot, then I'm glad I didn't see it, and I'm very happy not having an upclose image of that ugly mug in my head. The event alarmed me enough that I didn't go into the woods for a while, but I couldn't stay awake for long. I gave away my tents, I bought some larger guns, and eventually purchased a small travel

trailer. When I'm out overnight. Now I sleep like a baby. Maybe it's a false sense of security, but it works for me.

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