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Archive 35 Bigfoot

Jun 26, 202415 min
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Archive 35 Bigfoot

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Transcript

Like most people, I never believed bigfoot existed outside of stories. Always figured if they did exist, there'd be some kind of proof, like bones or excrement, hair or nests. And like most believers, I've had some experience that have changed my stance on the topic. In twenty thirteen, we had been in charge of taking care of nuisance hogs at a pecan farm for over a year. The farm also included a few fields of cotton, but the

hogs tended to leave those fields alone. The pecans ended at the tree line, and that led to thousands of acres of untouched Georgia forests, and the creek ran through the forest as well, along with a whole lot of deer. I was partnered with two guys from my office. One was my best friend, Jim, who has influenced me into becoming a Southern speaking Red Mexican Red a Southern speaking Red Mexican I am today, okay. The other was Gregg, he runs a hunting guide business on the side by the way.

The man's name who wrote this. He has a Spanish sounding name, so I'm guessing he may be or his family may be from south of the southern United States border. We were having a great success baiting the hogs at the treeline using automatic feeders, but the population was so dense we were barely making a dent. It was probably the heavy concentration of game that drew in a

family group. One night, we were spread out and using the last picond trees as natural blinds from the tree line that was about thirty yards away. I was sitting at the base of the tree to hide my outline. There was a farmhouse near the entrance to the field where a light was just brought enough to backlight us. Well. I didn't expect to see anything anyway, and the wind was behind us, blowing our scent straight into the tree line.

Surprisingly, I started hearing movement and twigs snap, so I readied my rifle. It was a clear night with plenty of moonlight to see the tree line. I didn't see any shadows moving around yet, but I was patient. Thump, something hit the ground right in front of me, scaring the crap out of me. I thought a branch had come off the pecan tree.

They're always losing branches. Well, I jumped to my feet and turned on my weapon light, and lying just a few feet in front of me, was a two foot piece of oak branch, dug into the ground like it had been thrown. It was three inches across and it did not come from the tree above. I jumped behind the tree and swept my light across the tree line, and then I called my buddies to come over, and as soon as I told them what happened, Gregg started shouting that they were

trespassing on private property. We were the only ones with access to hunt there, and we pressed up to the tree line and shouted for them to come out and show themselves well. After a few minutes of shouting with no response, we figured our hunting was ruined for the night, and so we packed up. The next day, Jem and I went back to try to find

tracks or signs of who was messing with us the night before. We were hoping to find what direction they'd come from, but the underbrush was too thick, and while we searched, we talked about what kind of arm the person must have had to throw that log. Thirty yards is a pretty good throw for a stick that size. For a while, that's how things went for us. We'd be hunting, and then sticks and rocks or cotton seeds would be thrown at us, and we'd yell like we did the first night,

and it became a hunting as usual routine. We figured someone was set on roots our hunts, but we weren't going to be run off by someone that didn't like us hunting there. It did make us extra careful about what we were firing at. We made triple sure that we weren't firing on the harasser or harassers, and as annoying as it was, we decided that none of us was ever to hunt alone on that property anymore. And we continued bagging

our fair share of hogs, but we never found any tracks. We made up our minds that it was someone poaching the land and they were good at hiding their movement. We had several game cameras set up throughout the property, but we never got any pictures of anything other than normal wildlife. We did sometimes catch a whiff of something that didn't smell like any animal that I know of. It was an ungodly mix of wet dog and hot garbage with just

a hint a sulfur or ammonia. Then things began to happen that convinced us that we were dealing with something more than the human harassers. My father, he's my best friend, and my brother came in from out of state to do some hog hunting with us, and we began our hunt at the edge of the pecan field as usual, but we never saw anything. Our visitors were only there for the night and the moon was full, so we decided to go down to the farm's dirt service road that was cut into the trees

leading to the creek. We figured we might get a chance to run up on a hog near that water. We've killed a few of them down that road when they were wallowing in the mud to cool off. We moved near the water until we could hear some movement coming from the creek, and as it got closer, we took a knee to wait for it to expose itself near the road. Whatever it was, it stopped just shy of the road beyond our site. After a couple of minutes that felt more like hours,

something hit me in the chest. It didn't hurt, it's just surprised the heck out of me. And I looked down and I saw a cotton seed at my feet. Well, that freaked me out because we were a long way from the nearest cotton field, and I jumped up and was about to turn my weapon light on when Jim told me to wait. There was some more movement closer to the road, and then he heard a loud grunt right before it ran away through the shallow creek. The grunt was not a hog

or a deer. The sound of it running through the water told us it was by a peedle. It was making a loud splash, like a person running ankle deep in water, but the splashes were too far apart. Whatever made that sound, it had a huge stride. We pulled out of the woods and returned to our cars, and our visitors drove separately. In our car, Jim and Gregg and I were in a tense conversation about what could

have made those noises. We figured it didn't expect so many of us to be on the trail, so when it got eyes on us, it turned and ran. We were beginning to lean toward the possibility of the stories about sasquatch being true, but with the jobs we have, never making assumptions and seeking solid evidence before confirming suspicions is ingrained in us, so we continued on, but with extra caution and large caliber weapons. One night, Greg brought

in a couple of friends for a dog hunt. These guys had two catch dogs and one bay dog. They were no slouches. The catch dogs were pitt mixes and they were well equipped with GPS, trackers and night vision and a lot of success in previous hunts. It was a hot summer night and we were excited to get our first dog hunt in. The handlers sent the dogs into the tree line to start the hunt, and it wasn't long before the dogs had their cat and the bay dog began barking to let us know.

We tracked the dogs using the GPS and we got within two hundred feet of them. When the dogs moved away from us, and as we pushed further in, we got a whiff of that same scent we'd smelled in previous hunts. For the next hour, the dogs would stop and we'd move toward them, and then they'd move off before we could see them through the underbrush. The handlers thought the dogs might have gotten into a hog too big for them to pin down completely. We decided to pull back to our park vehicles

while the handlers tried to recall their dogs. Only one of the catch dogs returned. He wasn't injured, but he had some blood on his muzzle. They put him in his kennel and the bay dog continued to holler when they tried to recall him. On the GPS, the dogs were showing as being a bit less than a quarter of a mile away, and we decided to try to get closer to the dogs in case they couldn't hear us, or the collars were malfunctioning or something. We pushed into the woods, and again

when we got close, the dogs moved away. The handlers were getting worried and started yelling as loud as they could to get the dogs to return, and when the dogs moved away yet again, we started running to try to get close enough to see what was happening. After running a hard mile through the woods and thorny vines and thick underbrush, we finally caught up to the dogs near the creek. The catch dog was laying on his side with a circular stab wound in his left temple. He was dead. The bay dog

was standing over him, barking toward the brush. We thought a hog's tusk had finally gotten him, but when we inspected him rigor mortis was beginning to set in. If he just recently stopped moving, that wasn't possible. His fur was wet, but there was no blood or other injuries anywhere on him, and it was as if he had been carried and put down where we had found him. If a hog had dragged him, he'd have been dirty and beat up. And again that smell permeated the area. The handlers collected

their dogs and we all walked out to the cars. The handlers loaded up their dogs and left without saying a word. They were definitely spooked and refused all invitations to ever hunt with us again. Despite all of this, we never did officially call it a sasquatch encounter. We had several more similar encounters, but we never did lay eyes on one. The South Georgia brush is so thick that you can hardly see a few feet in front of you.

We spent the rest of the summer trying to find hard evidence. To provide proof, we set up game cameras, but all that did was convince me that they can see infrared illuminators and smart enough to avoid them. Jim had read about tree knocking, so we finally decided to give it a try to challenge them into coming out. We parked about two hundred yards from the tree line and we walked up to one hundred and fifty yards from the tree line

and the pecan field. We borrowed a PVS fourteen monocular to get an advantage with good night vision, and after being there for about an hour with Jim knocking on a pecan tree with a dial rod, we finally saw them. Jim unclipped and handed me the monocular, saying scan the tree line to our left. Near the first row of pecan trees outside the tree line, there were three of them, with two more further back in the tree line itself.

It was a clear night and plenty of starlight to feed the night vision. They were absolutely massive, and the tallest of the three was a good eight and a half to nine feet tall. The two of the tree line were, though with a perspective and the trees shading them from the light, it was hard to tell if they were significantly smaller. The night vision didn't let us see the color, and we were too far away to see a good detail on their faces, but they were muscular with thick shoulders and short

necks. Their hair was matted and it reflected some light in the night vision, as if they had been in a creek water and they were standing there watching us with no idea that we could see them with our passive night vision. We were never fans of shooting one to use the corpse as evidence. They're just animals doing their thing. We're not sport hunters. We eat or donate the meat from our kills. But we didn't like our chances against five of them if they decided to attack, so we decided to bug out.

I handed Jim the monocular and we walked backwards to Jim's truck slowly with rifles. Out said that they were not advancing on us, but they were keeping pace with us. When we got to the truck, I jumped into the bed and covered Jim while he got into the driver's seat and got us out of there. We started referring to them as our friends whenever anyone might be around to overhear us talking. We never did get them to come out into

the open again. They still throw stuff at us to remind us that they're still out there. We decided as long as they made no overtly aggressive actions toward us, that we would not shoot at them. The sticks and rocks and seeds smarted on occasion, but we did not see it as enough to respond with deadly forced We did, however, start wearing our armor while we were out there. The next year, the farmer who on the land leased

a property out from under us to a friend for deer hunting. We found out later from his son that the guy only hunted once and he never came back. The farmer has since passed away and we have not been able to get permission from his estate to continue our hunts. We're still working on it. We have better technology now to obtain proof that they're still out there.

And one last thing. Once, when I was working the night shift, I got a call from a coworker who had gone out with Jim and Greg, and as soon as I answered, he started to cuss me out. Well, as an ex marine, he had a lot of inventive ways to swear, and after his verbal assault calmed down, he asked me why I never told him about our friends on the hunting property. Well, I ask him if he'd ever believed me, and he said probably not, and he hung up on me. We never talked about it again. That short chat

proved to me that we were not crazy or seeing things. I believe the behaviors we witnessed from these creatures were threat displays to protect their hunting grounds. They could just as easily be very dangerous if they wanted to.

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