Bigfoot Observed on the Mississippi River - podcast episode cover

Bigfoot Observed on the Mississippi River

Jan 07, 20266 min
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Episode description

Bigfoot Observed on the Mississippi River

In the summer of 2017, while fishing alone on the lower Mississippi River near Osceola, Arkansas, a man encountered an approaching storm. He moved his boat upriver to shelter behind a small island with trees and overhanging willows, tied off, and covered himself with a tarp as the rain began. From his position, he noticed a large, dark, hairy figure—approximately 8 feet tall—about 200 yards away on the opposite bank. The creature waded waist-deep into the water and deliberately moved to startle invasive Asian carp, causing them to leap out of the water. It then swatted the jumping fish onto the bank, successfully catching several.As the rain intensified and visibility dropped, the narrator last saw the creature gathering the fish in its large hands and retreating into the trees. The narrator concluded that the creature had secured a good meal that afternoon.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

The summer of twenty seventeen, I had a day off and I was fishing on the Lower Mississippi River near Osceola, Arkansas. I was anchored in the water below a sandbar when a summer storm started brewing. I watched it for a while, trying to decide what track it was going to take, whether to run from it or see if it would go around me. I knew it wasn't going around me when the wind hit me, swinging the boat on the

anchor line right into the current. I gathered my gear and reeled in my lines, knowing that wind was bringing a nasty storm with it. I started the motor and I went up river away from the storm a couple of miles until I found what I was looking for. On that part of the river, the banks are separated from the main channel by small islands and places. Most are just old sandbars, but I knew about one with

some trees at the upper end. They might block the wind, and the low overhanging willows is a place I could park the boat and avoid some of the rain. I tied off and I wrapped a tarp around myself just as the rain started, and I hunkered down to wait it out. I looked up into a cove created by the island, and I noticed something moving on the bank two hundred yards away. Now I'm only guessing, but it looked like it was eight feet tall. It was dark,

and it was hairy. It walked down the bank until it was waste deep in the water, and then slowly began walking around, indifferent to the rain and wind, and it was working its way toward the end of the cove. I was wondering what the heck this thing was doing and what I was looking at when I realized what it was doing. Now, Asian carp are an invasive species in the river. If they're startled, several will jump straight out of the water. Sometimes they'll land in your boat.

This thing was scaring the carps so that they would jump, and then he was swatting them onto the bank with his hand. I saw it connect with several the fish, flying pinwheel style toward the bank, and then the rain fell in buckets. I could hardly see this thing anymore. The last I saw of it, though, it was gathering its meal from the bank, and I could make out that it was heading up into the trees with a mess of fish in its big hands. I think that

creature had a good meal that afternoon. Uh, just one story in this podcast. I thought this was great. I kind of identified with it because I've been on the river several times up in that part of the country. That's a wide area of the Mississippi River. It moves pretty fast through there. You know, there's some pockets in the Mississippi River that are eighty and one hundred feet deep. All my life, I thought that river was maybe ten

feet deep the most. But I was involved in the steel industry, the steel making industry for a while, and all those mills that are being built and producing steel on the Mississippi River up there close to Osceola and Blivel when they build their harbors. There was a guy there one time telling me, he goes man, that river's one hundred feet deep in that spot. I couldn't believe that.

That just blew me away, and it scared me because I always thought, well, if I ever if you ever come out of the boat and the Mississippi River, you're probably gonna be okay. But there's suckholes, and there's whirlpools, and there's debris floating down the river. All the time. Just get to the bank as quick as you can. But I never knew it was that deep, and that's where all those big snapping turtles go. I don't know. It just kind of spook me. Anything underwater that you

can't see is kind of spooky. It's kind of like sharks. You know you can't see them, but you know they're gonna come up from the bottom in each you. But anyway, I love the story. I thought it was really good, and I put some chickens in this video. People have been asking to see my chickens. I quit showing them about a year ago because for years every other video I did, I would show the chickens only because I'm not a visual YouTube creator. I don't create a lot

of visual stuff. I kind of like doing that, but with this podcast it's not necessary, so I just concentrate on reading the stories. But it was kind of the only thing around my house I could film, and I just didn't realize how much people like to watch chickens. I guess if you don't have any around your place, it's fun to watch them pack around. And if I'm honest, in the summertime, I'll take breaks and put out a lawn chair right here in front of my little work shock,

and I'll just watch the chickens scratch around. This time of year, they don't there's not a lot of insects and things around for them to forge on, so I feed them a little more scratch just to keep them full fat and happy, keep them laying eggs. And they are laying eggs. Anyway, it's fun to have them around. And there's the chickens, and I'll do more chicken videos. It doesn't take me long to go out and throw

some scratch out and show the chickens. So I'll show more of the chickens, and I'll start putting the GoPro on and getting our bike rides in the morning with the dogs. I don't you know, I don't have all my dogs anymore. My two big ones died and I've just got two little ones and one medium sized dog. So it's uh. I guess they're fun to watch too. Anyway. I just I had no idea of people love to watch these chickens, but there it is. Now you got

some chickens. So anyway, it's only story. I'm putting this podcast. I got some things to do today. I'll be back tomorrow and I may put another one out, but they will start coming at a more regular interval. And I appreciate you so much for hanging with me, and we'll see you guys on the next one. Thanks,

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