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February 22, 2025 64 mins
On this paranormal podcast we talk to Hugh Knight of NW Yeti Quest. He lives in Washington State and became a Sasquatch believer one night after finding a deer gutted in a strange way. So he started exploring the nearby woods for more signs of Sasquatch. As he did, he began to see things he couldn’t explain. The more he researched the more possible Sasquatch evidence he has found. This is going to be a good one.  

NW Yeti Quest Youtube link:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYpi8fkn0l2SM4l7_HmVmJQ


Contact us Deep Woods Paranormal:

Email: deepwoodsparanormal@gmail.com
Phone: Matt 979-250-0072
Website: https://www.deepwooodsparanormal.com/

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, hello, my paranormal peeps, and welcome back to another
Deepoits Panormal podcast. My name is Matt Harvey. I am
the founder and the investigator with Deepoit's Paranormal. My wife
and I, along with others, investigate everything paranormal in nature.
Every week we will discuss everything from creepy haunted locations,
to ghosts, to bigfoot, UFOs, dog man, and other cryptic

(00:24):
creatures and explore all things paranormal and nature. Tonight we
have on you Night with us. He is a bigfoot
researcher from Washington, and he's gonna kind of tell us
about his bigfoot experiences. So with that, Hugh, why don't
you go and tell us a little bit about what
got you into the into finding bigfoot?

Speaker 2 (00:41):
Literally yeah, so yeah. Prior to getting involved with this,
I was not necessarily a bigfoot believer. I just I
didn't really think much about bigfoot either way. I guess
in my back of my mind I thought maybe they exist,
probably not. But I was a big believe in paranormal.
I've had a lot of weird experiences in that, but

(01:03):
I never really thought a big, hairy ye forest welling,
you know, hominoid made sense. To even be correlated with
UFOs or you know, paranormal spirits or whatever. Yeah, and
uh so that all changed one day. I live in
a neighborhood, kind of a nice middle class area, just

(01:26):
houses in every direction, not wilderness whatsoever, but lots of
trees and lots of green spaces and little forest areas.
So it kind of has this artificial feel like you're
out in the wilderness, but you're not. It's highways and
homes and everything in every direction, but just thirty minutes
away you are pretty deep wilderness into the Columbia River Gorge.

(01:49):
The Columbia River runs right by my neighbor You can
actually see the Columbia River from my house, so we're
right by the Columbia River. And so I'm walking one
night with my dog. It's about eleven fifteen at night,
and that evening we were catching a flight at midnight,
so I was taking my dog on a quick walk

(02:10):
because I had a house sitter and a dog sitter
going to stay at my house, so we didn't have
a lot of time. So I took her on a walk,
went up this road about a quarter mile from my house,
less than a quarter mile and right on the side
of the road. This is a very private road. There's
only two houses that are at the end of this road,
up on top of a hill. They're both like multi
million dollar homes up there. And on the side of

(02:32):
the road was a deer. My dog sniffed it out
and I saw it, and I shined the light from
my cell phone on it. And this deer had been mangled.
Every organ removed from it, its lungs, intestines, everything was gone.
The front legs were ripped clean off, and there was
no cut marks that showed that a hunter did it

(02:55):
with a blade. It was all like ripped, torn, peeled.
I mean, this thing looked like it got hit by
a tree. And there was no blood in the grass
around it, but there was blood inside the rib cage.
But wherever this thing was gutted, it didn't take place
right there, because there would have been a mess of
blood all over the place and in the stomach sack.

(03:16):
The bile sack was completely untouched, which that's hard to
do for a skilled hunter to knock rupture that because
if you rupture that, it ruins the meat, it gets
that acid all over everything. And so this thing just
blew my mind because I knew it wasn't done by
a cougar or a bear, you know, cougar's We do
get a deer occasionally come through the neighborhood. We get

(03:37):
a coyote that will run through the neighborhood every now
and then, But you never see bear or cougar around here,
you know. And it's possible, you know, but they're incredibly
rare in these neighborhoods, you know, they're way more and
so and it didn't make sense to me that a
bear or cougar could have done this because they don't
eat their animals like that. You know. This was like

(03:58):
a full blown heart harvest of all the innards of
this animal, done carefully without rupturing in the stomach sack
and all of the meat that a human would want
was untouched, like they wanted nothing to do with that
type of meat. And uh, and it was laid in
this path that I walk all the time, and and

(04:19):
it just creeped me out, like whatever did this is powerful,
is carnivorous, you know, whatever did this. And I'm sitting
there with just my dog. My dog's a three legged
pit bull, you know, she's she's a good protector. But
I mean, whatever did this to this deer, we weren't
going to be able to stand up to. And I'm
looking around kind of paranoid. I took a couple quick

(04:41):
pictures with my phone, and I got back home and
I sent some pictures to some hunters I know, and
you know, have you ever seen anything like this? You know?
And I didn't have time to really do anything. I
wanted to report it to, like the game people, you know,
like I wanted to do a lot, but I couldn't
because I had to come home, load the car, drive
airport and we flew to Mexico. So, I mean an

(05:02):
hour after seeing this thing, I was at the airport,
and so I was in the back of my mind
though the whole vacation. We were gone for a week,
and when I got home, I immediately went up there
to see what was left of it, and the deer
was gone, no sign of it. And that sent me
down this path of watching bigfoot stuff, watching dog man stuff,

(05:24):
like trying to really understand what might have been responsible
for this, like is there a werewolf in my neighborhood?
Like it like, you know, it's creeping out. And I
started finding all this stuff about Sasquatch that I wasn't
aware of. You know. I watched a bunch of like
Todd's standing videos, you know, and stuff like that, and

(05:45):
I actually could go on about Todd. I he and
I started talking for a while, but that's a whole
nother story. I'm not a big fan of Todd anyway.
I but at the time I'm seeing his video as
I'm seeing the faces, you know, that he captured, and
I'm thinking, are these real?

Speaker 1 (06:03):
Like?

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Are these like? Why have I never heard of this guy?
You know? And a whole bunch of other stuff, you know,
And so Bigfoot was on my mind, prevalently on my mind,
and I had a trip scheduled. I was going mining
up in the mountains for AGTs and crystals, because that's
I'm just amateur miner rock hound, you know. I've been

(06:24):
collecting crazy rock. I don't know, if you get behind
me with a bunch of rocks, I'm cut and polished
stuff like that. And so I was up in the
mountains near the Oregon Washington coastline, near the Columbia River
real rural logging wilderness area, and I was up there
running at jackhammer and breaking these rocks out of these

(06:45):
other rocks and spent hours working on this rock. I
couldn't get it out, and I just kept thinking about
sasquatch because I was alone at this point in time.
I had my son and my father with me earlier
that day, but they had left and went back to
my parents' house, which is about forty five minutes away
from where I was at at this point, and I

(07:06):
decided to take a break, and I wanted to just
kind of climb this hillside and look for rocks, see
what I could find in this hillside. And I wanted
to get to this viewpoint and look out because it's
a phenomenal viewpoint into this valley below. And I was
just telling myself, I'm gonna go see if I can
spot a sasquatch, you know, why not. I just feel
like your break, you know. And so I'm climbing up

(07:29):
the embankment. I'm putting rocks in my pocket along the way,
because I'll fill my pockets with rocks and then I
check them out once I can rinse some and a
lot of them just get thrown back on the ground.
It's just kind of my process. And so I get
to the top, my pockets are bulging with rocks, and
I look out into this valley and it's maybe like
ten seconds into my scanning of the lower valley, and

(07:52):
I'm like saying to myself, like, oh, that's funny, because
that black object down there actually looks like a sasquatch,
you know, And I'm not thinking it is one. I'm
thinking it's a shadow. It's a stump, you know. Like
there's no way you don't climb up to look for
a sasquatch and see one, you know. And I'm staring
at it, and it starts walking and it has long

(08:14):
arms and legs and it's walking, and I'm just staring
at this thing, like what the like, I don't know
whether well, you know, I didn't even know how to
even take it in, you know. And I'm just staring
at this thing, and I'm like, that's a freaking sasquatch,
you know. Like, and so I'm like, where's my phone?

(08:35):
Where's my phone? Every pocket is full of rocks. I
don't have. I look over my shoulder. I could see
my truck from where I was at. It was down
below me, parked on the gravel road. I'm way up
on top of them, and I'm just like, shit, what
do I do? What do I do?

Speaker 1 (08:49):
You know?

Speaker 2 (08:49):
And I'm looking at Sasquatch and I'm looking at my truck,
and I'm like, I'm like, oh, oh, oh, what do
I do? What do I do? You know? And I'm
thinking take my eyes off of it, and just because
I'm like, as soon as I leave and get my phone,
come back, it's gonna be gone. And I'm just what
do I do? What I do? And then I said,
you know what, nobody's gonna believe me. Nobody's ever gonna
believe this. I'm like, I'm going to get the phone.

(09:10):
So I turn and I jump, and I tumble and
run down this cliff, making an avalanche of rock and debris,
and I get to the road and I run to
my trucks fast i can grab my phone. I turn around,
start running back, and I get start rocks in every pocket,
so I stop. I pull all these rocks out and
just drop them on the ground and climb back up there,

(09:31):
and I get back to the top record time. I've
never climbed that hill that vast in my life, and
I'm just out of breath. Like if you watch the
video on my YouTube channel, it starts out with me
just because I'd just done this run and this climb
and it took me a minute. But if my first
scan I couldn't find the asquatch anywhere, you know, I'm

(09:53):
looking all over for it and like, oh, it's gone.
Not this video, but it it would be one of
my first videos ever put on. It would be uh,
this one mountaintop view of the sasquatch. Yeah, are you
gonna play it right now? Yep?

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Okay it sound?

Speaker 2 (10:18):
Oh, it won't do sound.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
I'm not gonna put the sound on pause.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
I just watched it as you're talking about it.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
Keep going. Yeah, so this is It took me a
minute to find it, and I thought it was gone
and then I found it. And it's unfortunately that my
phone doesn't zoom very well. And right now, I'm okay,
it's the little dot right in the middle of the screen,
right there, and yeah, right there, that's it. And you know,

(10:43):
it's it's frustrating that I could see it so much
clear with my eyes. I have really good eyesight, especially
far sighted, and I filmed this thing for like forty minutes,
but a lot of it was just so jump that
we deleted it out and turned it into an eighteen
minute deo because clouds will eventually start rolling in and
blocking my shot, and so I would turn it off

(11:06):
and start filming again. But what's so bizarre is once
I started filming, it didn't walk anymore. It's and I
don't know if it could sense me filming it or what.
But the whole time I film it, it stays in
this spot. But if you look close enough, you can
see the movement of the creature. And what I didn't know,

(11:29):
and I found out the next day when I came
back up there is there's a big stump directly on
the other side of that creature, and so it's possible
that it was digging grubs out of that stump, because
since then I have documented how all of the old
punky stumps in that area have been dug through. In fact,

(11:50):
if you go to a different video called Sasquatch Feeding
Grounds of Mine, I can show you what all of
the stumps in that area look like, very top left.
And so every stump of this age, which that's the
same age of the stump that that creature was in
front of, has been ripped and torn and dug through,

(12:12):
and there's you know, the red crumbly duff from the
inside is strewn about everywhere, and bears do that too,
you know, So obviously a naysayer would would bring that up.
But I mean, I literally watched that sasquatch in front
of that stump for an hour. Like I originally I
didn't know there was a stump there, but now I
know what he was doing. What I believe he was doing,

(12:34):
was digging in these stumps. And this video, you let
it play for a second because there's a good example
of one that they've really just tore out, and I'll
have you pause on it. It's you know, and it's
all over this wilderness where I'm finding all kinds of
evidence of sasquatch. But these stumps of this age, every

(12:57):
one of them has craters in it. So I really
strongly believe that these grubs in the springtime right there,
that one they really dug that thing out. And so
my plan is to put a whole bunch of game
cameras up in these areas where all these stumps are
in the spring, because I think that's that when these

(13:19):
grubs are hatching, you know, it's early spring when the
eggs start hatching. And so because that's when I saw it.
It was right around Father's Day, and you know, I
think these stumps are going to lead to me getting
some footage, you know, or getting more evidence, you know.
And so okay, so I have this footage, and the

(13:43):
footage isn't good. I mean, I'm the first to admit
that it's so far away, it's really vague. I knew
it wasn't gonna blow anybody's mind. So I knew I
had to find better proof. So I planned a trip
three night, four day trip out there and actually made
a video of it, just a short little video of

(14:05):
my first solo camping trip out there, and uh, you know,
yeah alone overnight. Yeah, that was my first going out
and just shows me with getting my gear ready and
my first night there was just I was fogged, so
fogged out. And uh but this trip and it's not

(14:29):
in this video. I don't show my discovery in this video.
I'm working on videos. I'm horrible with all of this stuff,
and I'm brand new at it. My channel's only been
up for like maybe a month, so I have a
lot to learn. But I set out on a lot
of journeys in different directions trying to find evidence, and
I think it was my last my third day.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
I went into do that look did that? You got
one right there? Dude? That looks like something's there, shoulder
head stand them on a tree. There's something standing there. Yeah,
we've been analyzing, if you guys, Just so you guys know,
we've been kind of looking over this video every time

(15:13):
we get tell about what two minutes. I don't know
where he was. He can describe where he was, but
I keep seeing things in these videos.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
This is just a gravel road that I have to
take to get to the main research area. But this
gravel road I call is part of my research area.
And this is a road that I call tree Break
Alley because there's just bizarre tree breaks for two miles
going the whole length of the road, and they're on
both sides of the road and they're everywhere, and so

(15:42):
I just I've always called it tree break Alley. But yeah,
that definitely looked.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Like there's a Yeah, there's a snapped off here.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
Well they see that snap right there is actually done
by a human because that's the tip of the tree
where the tree got pushed over broke off, and that
was in the road blocking cars. So somebody cut that
off with a hatchet, but I showed it in the video.
But the actual tree itself was broke off by a

(16:12):
crazy force that snapped it off. But that little break
is from an axe or a hatchet.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
If we can find this right there, Look at that
there right there, there's something taller on this side.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
Yeah. So originally I thought you were looking more of
at something to the left.

Speaker 1 (16:34):
But so you can see another shadow here. It comes
out like over here somewhere, that's a big one. It's
something hard to see. I've I've had to learn to watch.
I don't know how many trapcam videos I've watched. But
my friend was an avid hunter and he goes, look,
you're missing the big foots. I'm like, what are you
talking about. There's nothing there, And he goes look and

(16:57):
he's immedn't And I'm like, oh my god, there's one
right in the damn tree link. This is what they do.
They stand in the tree line, yeah, and in the
tree line and they watch and they look like trees.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Yeah. They always try to keep a layer of foliage
between you and them because it makes it so hard
to see them and focus on them. That way.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Yeah, but there's definitely something here. You see how big
this one is too. You can just kind of see
what looks like a shoulder coming down here head an
arm You can't see a face almost big burly chest,
So here's an arm. Head.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
It's hard to say, you know, I see stuff like
this in my video, stuff that I missed, you know,
and I I do want to like point it out,
but then again, I don't want people to be like, oh,
that could be anything, So I try to not get
too excited about stuff unless it's more concrete, you know,
just because I'm My whole purpose of this channel is

(17:53):
to sway naysayers to the side of believing, because people
need to know these things are real, you know, and
it's really hard to pull a non believer out of
their socks, you know, unless it's really conclusive, you know.
But like that's why I wanted like the upside down trees,
so I want to get to them. So this is

(18:14):
my first trip up there to find evidence. You know,
I had a bunch of people saying, oh, you probably
saw bear, or you probably saw this, or oh who
knows what it was, so I had to go find
better evidence. And the day before I got to this canyon,
I found a really good footprint and you could show
that video. It's only a minute long. If you want

(18:37):
to go to my shorts really quick. Let's see. Yeah,
go there and then it should be all.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
A lot of time too. We got about eight minutes
of remaining.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
Oh okay, shit, go down all the way down. Uh
and then it's a bigfoot exploring a river right there,
that one. So this was my I was a footprint
I found on that trip.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
And uh here for a second.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
Yeah, you can see the toes come through the moss.
You can see the heel.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
You pause this, it doesn't pause. And that was a
trail I had to walk the toes and stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Well that's the ankle on the back and the toes
are in the moss. And uh. So that got me
pretty excited when I found that footprint, because I was like, okay,
now I'm finding a footprint. I know I saw one.
And so there was another section of canyon I wanted
to get to. And the canyon was over right by
the siding where I saw one, and I'm walking through

(19:45):
that river knee deep in water, using the river as
a path, and all of a sudden off to my left,
I see a giant log upside down standing there, and
I'm just like, oh shit, you know, like and so
I found that site and there's there's a out thirteen fourteen,
fifteen upside down trees in that site. And I have

(20:05):
an one hour long video and hear all about the
upside down trees in Uh really, I really dive in
deep with them explaining the upside down trees. But you know,
that was a big deal for me. That's when I
really knew, Okay, sasquatch is real. I saw one. Now
I'm finding evidence of them. And since then, I've found

(20:26):
more footprints, I found a bunch of ex structures. I
found a lot of evidence since then, and I've had vocalization.
The one time I've been scared, like truly frightened, my
dog and I were climbing out of a canyon and
I had about one hundred pounds of rocks on my
back because I was finding agate deposits that I'd never

(20:48):
even dreamed i'd ever find. That's another interesting thing. I
went out looking for rocks, I found a sasquatch. Now
I go looking for sasquatch and I'm finding rocks like
I would have never thought exists, huge AGTs size of
basketballs and stuff like that. And so I'm hiking out
of a canyon with these rocks on my back, and
this sasquatch down in the bottom of the canyon where

(21:10):
we just came from, built out the craziest roar I've
ever heard in my life. Just it just rattled me
to the core. It my dog, who's a protector watchdog,
she curled up into like a little ball, her ears
went back, and she just looked at me like like
I needed to protect her. You know, normally she's fired up,

(21:33):
like ready to go, but whatever that sound was, it
petrified her. You know, it was a really eerie sound.
It's really hard to even describe. But that's the only
time I've ever really been afraid out there doing it,
and it seemed like a warning. But I've been back
to that canyon several times since then, and so I

(21:58):
know we're running out of time, but I wanted to
get in about the pine cones because that was kind
of so during a hunting season. I was just kind
of assuming that these creatures probably left that area, right, Like, Okay,
hunting seasons a lot of hunters come out here now,
they're probably going to leave the area. That was just
a theory I had, and I came to visit that

(22:20):
area and it was about five or ten days into
the beginning of I believe it was archery and black
powder season, and this brand new arch had been built,
like huge, crazy arch where they took a dug fur
tree and bent it into an arch, and they wedged
the second half of the tree up underneath a neighboring tree.

(22:42):
And you could see big old scars on the neighboring
tree where they had to work it and force it
and manipulate it to hold that position and wedge it
against a neighboring tree. And I had a geologist with
me that day, a friend of a friend who's a geologist.
He was curious about the rocks I always finding, and
we go to investigate this arch tree and he actually

(23:04):
is the one who found this pine cone on the
ground and he picks it up and he's telling me, like,
do you not know how weird this is. I'm like,
it's pine cone, you know, I don't know it's a
weird looking pine cone. He's like, dude, this is a
species of trees. It will not grow in this area period.
It is not from here, and it's underneath your you know.
And he'd say your sous because he wasn't sure if

(23:24):
he is a believer or not, you know, he wasn't
survived crazy or not. And he's like, it's underneath your
arch that you're all wout about. And I'm telling you,
this pine cone had to have been brought here. And
it's a big old pine cone like this big, and
we looked into it. It's a subalpine. It's a rare.
It's a tree that grows in high elevations several hundred
miles away, does not grow there. So the creatures had

(23:47):
to have or something had to have brought that pine
cone there, and it was directly underneath that brand new arch.
And that brand new arch was almost like an announcement
to me, like you think we're gonna leave because a
hunter's no idiot, and they build this thing just to like,
I don't know, rub it in my face or something.
It's just kind of how I perceived it. So then

(24:08):
a month later or so, I'm up there and I
have my son with me, and we're investigating other tree
bends and arches and weird stuff going on, and we
find another tree done the exact same way. Bent arch
twisted all of that, and I'm filming, you know, I
got my camera up and I'm talking about the arch,
and my son goes, hey, Dad, what's this, you know?

(24:28):
And I look over and he's pointing at the ground.
And on the ground something had cleared all the moss
and all the pine cones away, or all the dirt,
all the debris, so it's clear open dirt, and right
in the very middle of it, another one of those
giant subalpine pine cones was stabbed into the earth, intentionally stabbed.
And all this is on video. When I pull it

(24:50):
up and remove it, I haven't put that video on
the channel yet. I'm gonna it's It's hard because I
have all these different pieces of footage on different esty
cards and I'm working on. But it just to me,
that just proves that these creatures are methodical. Uh. It
proves to me that they either migrate or they're transitory

(25:12):
when they travel, you know. I mean, these pine cones
are from that far away. These pine cones didn't come
there by a bird, you know, a squirrel or a chipmunk,
didn't stab them into the earth like that, and you know,
something bent these arches and made them. It's you know,
there's just it's just crazy. And there's there's been other

(25:32):
incidents too with vocalizations. You know, I don't know how
much more in depth do you want? Do you want
to keep going? Or we how many keep going?

Speaker 1 (25:43):
What they can do is after after this is over,
we'll just start another recording.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Okay. So, uh, one time I was walking into this canyon.
I'm always in canyons, and I get to the bottom
of this canyon. I'm all by myself because I do
a lot of this alone. And I don't think of
them as monkeys or apes.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
I just don't. I think of them more as like
I don't know what I think of it, but I
just in my mind, I don't think they're just a
dumb primate. I think there's so much more than that.
And so I was shocked when I came into the
bottom of this canyon. I'm hearing this, like this sound

(26:26):
that sounded like what a gorilla would sound like when
it's curious or stressed out or something, you know, And
I'm hearing this sound and it sounds like it's so
close to me, just twenty feet ten feet. It was
like right around this little bend. And I mean I
had a camera in my hand, I had a helmet camera,
and I had all this stuff. And I don't understand.

(26:48):
I think about this all the time, because instead of
going towards that sound, I turned around and went the
other way. And it was I don't know what was
going on with me. And it's almost like I don't know.
I wasn't even in control of what I was doing,
because it wasn't until like an hour or two later
that I realized why wouldn't I done that? Like, why

(27:08):
didn't I going in? I don't know if it was fear.
I mean, some people say that they have the powers
to like mess with your mind, and I just can't
understand why the hell I went the other way. Hey,
maybe it was out of fear. I just I went
the other way, and I had game cameras that way.
I wanted to check anyway, and so I wandered off

(27:32):
up towards these waterfalls, you know, where I have the
game cameras and check the camera. There was nothing good
on the cameras and it was.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Okay, guys, so we got cut off. Unfortunately, we had
to come back on. So we're back with you and
he's gonna continue to tell his stories. Let me go
back on here and share his YouTube channel because we
were talking about different videos he was talking about. You
were talking about the footprints.

Speaker 2 (27:59):
Yeah, I think the last what we were talking about.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
Was short.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
Yeah. Well we kind of moved on from there. We
were talking about that when I heard that sound and
I went the other direction.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Yeah, that's right. You were down by the creek and
then you turn aroun ended up moved by a waterfall
or something.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
Yeah, and uh. Other than that, there there's been other
vocalization experiences that were pretty strange. I was exploring going
up a creek one time, because the creeks really are
the only way you can get in and out of
these places, because the canyon walls are so steep on

(28:40):
both sides that you just got to get in the
creek and walk in the water and uh. But then
you find areas, you know, that open up and are flat.
But just getting in and out of the canyons is
so hard. You know, I've done it. I've climbed up
and down the walls, but it's it's a brutal climb.
And so I'm walking in this creek and it's just

(29:03):
my dog and me, and I kept hearing this crazy
whistle that would blast down at me from time to time,
and it was just like wherever I went, it would whistle,
you know, and then like I wouldn't hear it for
fifteen twenty thirty forty minutes, then it'd whistle down at me.

(29:23):
And so it was like something was following us and
watching us the whole time we were in this canyon,
and it was like, I don't know letting me know.
I guess I'm watching you. I'm watching you. It's kind
of how it felt. I never saw anything that day.
But another time I was in a different section of

(29:44):
that same canyon. I wasn't hearing a whistle, but I
kept seeing a reddish like fire brown, reddish brown color
flashed through the woods and I just see glimpses of
it because there was so much foliage between me and it.
And I wasn't sure what it was because the sasquatch
I saw was a dark black like brown, dark dark color,

(30:08):
so this you know, fox fire red brown color. I
didn't know what it was. It wasn't what I was
looking for and I kept seeing it, and I got
my camera out and I zoomed into the trees and
I'm telling the camera like, I keep seeing this weird
color and I can't seem to get a sight on it.
And then you know that I kind of forgot all

(30:30):
about that day until you know, months later, I'm looking
at old footage and I'm going through, uh, dusty cards,
and then I starts, yeah, and then I find this
piece of footage where I'm playing with this camera. And
it's a digital camera that attaches to my spotting scope,
and it's just a cheap, little crappy digital camera, but

(30:51):
it's kind of cool. It mounts right to a spotting
scope and then my spotting scope becomes a digital camera,
so I can get footage like a mile away with
that thing. And on that particular day I was using it,
the sun was shining on my back, so the sun
was shining across my screen, so I couldn't see what
I was filming. I was just playing with it, testing
it out, scanning around the lower Valley because I was

(31:14):
on a mountaintop on this day, and I filmed for
like a few minutes, just scanning all over the place.
And then so that was the footage that I reviewed,
and I went right across this stump, and there's this
what looks like, very likely is the head of a sasquatch.
You know, it's not like perfect conical shape, because there

(31:37):
might be some hair or little tufts of hair on
it or something, but it is a red fire red
brownish color, and it looks like the sasquatch was leaning
against the stump. And it's a big old stump because
the stumps out there huge. Those are old growth trees
that were cut down in like the early nineteen hundreds
or something. The rotten ones are at least, so the stumps. Yeah,

(32:00):
I'll way encounter stumps out there that are fifteen feet wide.
It's crazy. And uh so, I don't know how big
for sure this stump is, but I strongly suspect that
the sasquatch was on the back side of it, leaning
against it, just chilling and didn't even probably realize that,
you know, about forty percent of its head or thirty

(32:21):
percent of its head was just above that stump. And
that's what I just I believe I just caught a
little piece of its head. And uh so, yeah, I've
been jumping all over with this interview. Usually I'm I'm
more structured on everything, but so I'm trying to remember
all my little adventures with Sasquatch. I've had some really

(32:46):
weird experiences that I I don't even really like to
tell people about because it almost makes me sound like
I'm insane.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
But you're a paranormal investigator. You are insane. Yeah, you me,
we go people don't want to go, man, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (33:05):
And so on a couple of trips because I use
e bikes a lot, because I can't get past these
gates because all these gates are locked because it's all
logging land. It's all owned by logging corporations, and they're
very tight on security trying to keep people out. So
I use e bikes to get pass the gates and
get into some of these really deep areas to investigate.

(33:26):
And so on this particular trip, I'm deep, deep into
an area I'd never been in before, and I had
this really uncomfortable feeling as I'm getting in there, and
all of a sudden, I wreck. I crash, like I
ran into a brick wall, but I was going really slow,
so it wasn't like bad. My leg was scraped up

(33:47):
and bleeding a little from gravel, and you know, and
I just get up and I'm just like, what happened?
Like how did I crash? It just didn't make any sense,
and I crashed, but I crashed. So I get back
on my bike and I right a little further, and
then I realized I'm missing a power aid, you know.
And I have these saddle bag like pouches on my

(34:07):
bike that I keep gearing. But there's a little pocket
on the top that I had a power aid and
it was gone, So okay, fill out when I crash.
So I turn around and I go back, and I
searched all over the crash site, couldn't find it anywhere.
So I'm like, that's really weird because it's a good
little pouch. It doesn't fall out, you know, from bumps
and stuff like that. But I'm just like, Okay, well,

(34:29):
I guess somehow it came out and I'll find it
on the way home. And I never did ever find
that power ever. And there isn't vehicles up there driving around.
Nobody's driving around up there. They're all locked out. I mean,
occasionally crews do go out there and log, but this
time period, there wasn't any other vehicles out there, so
it was really weird that I never found it. But

(34:51):
you know, hey, I didn't know what to make of it.
And so as I'm cruising around trying to find the
power aid and just kind of exploring the gravel roads
on my bike, I park and I go down this
trail a little ways, look around, make some videos, and
then I go back to my bike and my mace

(35:12):
was gone. You know, this can of mace, it's usually
on my bike, and I'm I'm like, where the hell
did my mace go? And it wasn't like a big
caniser bear mace, because I'd forgotten my bear mace that day.
So I bought this at the gas station, like little
cheapo mailman mace, and it was gone. So I then
I went back up that road trying to find the

(35:33):
mace because it should have been laying on the gravel
road if it just fell off my bike somehow, it
should have been in the road. I never found it ever,
never found the drink ever, and so you know, I
thought that was weird. I thought it was weird that
I crash. I thought it's weird that all this stuff disappeared,
but I I, you know, I wasn't trying to jump
to conclusions at that point. And then another trip weeks

(35:57):
months later, I had two power aids in my bicycle,
and I ride my bike deep, deep into the woods.
I hide my bike in the bushes, completely hidden, and
I open up that pouch and I take one poweraide
and I see the other one in the bag, and
I'm like, you know what, I'm gonna leave that there
because when I get back from this hike, it'll be

(36:19):
here waiting for me at the bike. I don't need
to carry it around. I'm just gonna leave it here.
I remember all this conversation in my head, and so
I go out, I explore, I do what I'm doing.
I come back hours later, and I go to my
bike and open up the pouch and the power Aid's gone.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
Oh no, and.

Speaker 2 (36:39):
It gets weirder. So and of course, you know, you
could say, oh, hunters or or somebody might have found
my bike and stole it. But the thing is, I
had valuables in that pack, way more valuable than a
power aid, and nobody touched those, but the power aid
was gone. So I like actually got kind of man

(36:59):
like yeah, held into the bushes, you know, like at
the Sasquatch, like, you know, I don't even remember what
I said, but I was kind of freaked out, you know,
like this was weird. I didn't know what to make
of it. And then I get on the bike. I'd
ride all the way back to my truck, my truck locked, alarmed,
I opened up the door and the powerades in my truck.

(37:22):
Oh my gosh, and sitting there on the center console thing,
just sitting there, and you know, and I I don't
know how to explain that, man, Like I just yeah,
I mean, I just it was so bizarre because I
I and then of course I'm just like second guessing myself,

(37:43):
Like god, I remember so vividly that they were both
in the in the bike, and why would I have
left it in the truck when I brought them specifically
for this trip, you know, like it just made no sense.
But but there it was, just sitting in the truck.
It was just so me out, really weird. And then

(38:04):
the closest I've ever came to actually being near one
of these things was so I found an old logging
road that nobody had been down in years because it
was all overgrown with brush and trees. Logs had fallen
and blocked it. So nobody had been to this section
of forest in a long time. Other than maybe on foot.

(38:26):
No vehicles had been down there in probably a decade.
So I was there with chainsaws and I cut and
cleared all of that out so I could drive back
and camp in a section of forests that nobody had
camped in in a long long time, because I wanted
to camp somewhere where these creatures, these beings would be
used to traversing at night and not bumping into people,

(38:48):
you know. I figure they know where to go, where
not to go. And so I set up this campsite,
and I set up like this sort of like laser
light display, Christmas light, flashy lights and all this kind
of like look like just a real low budget rave
type setup you know, in the world. And yeah, and

(39:08):
I just wanted to create some kind of weird thing
that they wouldn't be used to seeing, to peak their curiosity,
to see if it would bring them around me like
what is this? What are these lights? What's going on here?
And I set up game cameras the first couple of
nights and in nothing, nothing happened. Nothing came in. You know,

(39:30):
for the background, it be better if you played the
upside down tree video, I think, just because there's big
upside down trees and it's kind of kind of amazing stuff.
Just suggestion. Okay, So back to the camping trip. So
my buddy shows up and he's camping with us on

(39:50):
the last night, and that night, I forgot to set
up the game cameras. I I just didn't think to
do it and went to bed and I had set
my alarm on my phone to wake me up at
four am, three forty five in the morning. I was
gonna go out with night vision in the middle of
the night, but my buddy was talking my ear off

(40:13):
all night and so I didn't end up getting to
bed till midnight because of him. And so my alarm
goes off around three forty four AM, and I'm dog
tired and I'm my alarm goes off and I sit
up and I'm I'm was like I should get up,
And then that's when I realized that there's a giant
shadow on my tent, moving slowly past my tent, and

(40:37):
it's the shadows being created because of all the lights
I had out there. You know, Otherwise you wouldn't be
able to see a shadow, you know, at night in
the woods. And so I'm staring at the shadow, and
I'm kind of nervous, you know, have my son with me,
he's nine. But I reached over and grab my camera
and I hit the turn the button on it and
it goes and then I was I don't know how

(41:00):
I thought this was gonna work, because I still had
to unzip the tent. I had to go out there
and try to, you know. But as soon as the
dude noise went on my camera, that shadow just went
poof across my tent. It was gone. And so I'm
sitting there and I'm like, gosh, I should just stay
in here. My son's in here. I shouldn't go wander
around the woods leaving him all alone in the tent.

(41:23):
You know, my dog was there. But so I ended
up falling back asleep. And then when I wake up,
my I wake up, I start making coffee. My buddy
wakes up. He slept in his vehicle. He has like
a little it's kind of like a super U, but
it's not a super root. It's like an all wheel
drive kind of whatever. I forget what it is. And

(41:43):
he's crawling out of his vehicle and he's like, man,
what were you doing dude all over my car last night?
You know, I didn't get out of the tent. I
didn't leave the tent last night. And and he goes, Dude,
somebody was all around my car looking in the window.
And he goes, I thought it was you playing with
your night vision. And so no, dude, it wasn't me.

(42:06):
Bro I did not leave it. Then, That's why I
told him about the shadow that I saw right by
my tent. So whatever it was, I mean, it wasn't
a bear. Bears are big, dumb, clumsy animals. They make noise,
they bump into everything, you know. They don't tiptoe through
your campsite. They stumble through your campsite, you know. And deer,
a deer wasn't gonna come that close to our tent

(42:27):
and be in our campsite in the middle of the night.
So I I really strongly believed that was a sasquatch
in our camp that night. I can't prove it because
the game cameras weren't set up. And it almost seems like,
you know, somehow this thing nos you know, they didn't
come in the other nights when the game cameras were up.
They come in the one night the game cameras aren't

(42:49):
set up. You know, it's it's just insane.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
What's happened to me? That happened to me too. I
turned off the cameras, took them down. Next night, I
got bumped something literally like the tin in like Joe's camp,
what I'm telling you about before with the guy with
the you know, he had bigfis right on his property.
I camp done his property, which I was terrified of.

(43:12):
And something reaches in and pushs the tent into the
side and touches me. I'm like, oh crap, wasn't quite asleep,
but you know, it's good the hell out of me.

Speaker 2 (43:22):
And there's there's stories of them peeing on people's tents,
you know, like have you ever heard anybody talk about that?

Speaker 1 (43:29):
Yes, I've heard people talk about that.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
Yeah. I mean that shows to me that they have
a sense of humor, you know that they're like, you know,
they're just messing with people, you.

Speaker 1 (43:39):
Know, marking their territory.

Speaker 2 (43:42):
Yeah, but maybe not, maybe it's just just to be funny,
just to mess with you. Like I'm gonna go piss
on this person's tent because they can't do anything about
it because by the time they get out of their
sleep bag and zip their tent stick their head out,
I'm gone. Anyway. You know, let's see what video going
right now.

Speaker 1 (44:02):
I think it's uh because they're just marking their territory.

Speaker 2 (44:06):
Yeah, and they could be. They could be. It just
seems like, uh, the fact that they're peeing on people's
stints while they're sleeping in it almost seems like, you know,
it's more thought out than that. But it could be
just an animal just pissing for sure.

Speaker 1 (44:21):
Yeah, it could be the same thing as marking the trees.
But what was interesting when you're talking about earlier, how
everything had been cleared off and it was just dirt.
I wonder if that was a.

Speaker 3 (44:31):
Grave site where the pine cone was Yeah, yeah, I
mean I marker or something never was Well, it was.

Speaker 2 (44:41):
Only an area about this big just cleared away, so
they could stab the pine cone into the dirt, you know,
So I doubt it's a grave. But like the Upside
Down Trees, that's a different video than this. I've had
people tell me that they think the Upside Down Trees
are grave marks. And I'm like, well, that's the case.
And there's fifteen dead sasquatches buried in there.

Speaker 1 (45:05):
You never know. I mean they could bury their dead.
And I'm not saying, but I mean they could.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Yeah. Now this one, Yeah, if you fast forward like
five minutes or so, it gets I'll be into the upside.
Oh it's frozen.

Speaker 1 (45:24):
Looks like YouTube froze. It's frozen.

Speaker 2 (45:27):
Oh wow, it is. It is interesting how how like
I was recently on a trip in northern Idaho and
we weren't there for sasquatch related stuff. We were there
for a family vacation and I went out hunting for
sasquatch sign in northern Idaho. Didn't expect to find any,

(45:50):
and I found very conclusive sasquatch sign. And like in
my research area, for example, I've gone to a neighboring
mountain and I was I spent all day trying to
find squatch shign, couldn't find any. And then I turned
down one road and I just find squatch sign everywhere.

(46:10):
Bend tree, tree breaks arches, you know. And And that's
the thing, Like people that try to attribute all of
this to mother nature. If that was the case, you
would just find little tiny fragments of squatch shign everywhere,
you know, but it's not that way. There's none whatsoever.

(46:30):
And then they'll just be an abundance of it everywhere,
you know, And that is just no way Mother nature
is responsible for all of what I'm finding, you know.
It's it just can't be, especially like you're about to
see these upside on trees you just pass, you know,
like there's just no way wind water snow, you know,

(46:54):
weather is uh is doing this. It's these things had
to have been done by either people with heavy equipment,
which that would be very obvious because there would be
roads getting in and out of there, there'd be you know,
signs of machinery in there, you know, or they're being
done by subsquad obviously.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
Yeah. It could be markers too, could be a way
to find find their way.

Speaker 2 (47:19):
Were these close to the river, yeah, yeah, right by
the river.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
I imagine it's probably a marker. I mentioned the rivers
changed courses every every once in a while, every you know,
one hundred years or whatever. But these markers are probably
to get to keep them going the right way. Yeah,
maybe their meeting location.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
Yeah, I think I have just a theory, and because
I've noticed a lot of these upside down trees are
at different ages, different stages of decomposition. And I have
no clue why they do it, but I think it
might be something more like a new birth or maybe
a new olfa is in charge, or I think it's

(48:02):
a symbolical of something, you know, and they put them
up as sort of an announcement.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
Yeah, I imagine that's probably that could be too. It's
just like, yeah, mar this is my territory or something,
uh huh.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
And it's just all theoretical, you know. I don't know
why they do it, but I know that they do it.
And and like people have tried to tell me, oh,
laggers do that, that's done by laggers. So I've worked
as a logger. I have laggers working for me right now.
And these guys, the two brothers that are loggers, have

(48:40):
logged from Alaska to Mississippi and all in between. They
work for Columbia Helicopter for almost twenty years doing helicopter logging.
These guys are laggers through and through, and they've never
heard of a lagger burying a tree upside down ever.
And I get that all the time. People are, oh,
don't you know that laggers do that, Like show me
the logging boss. It's gonna spend money on fuel, labor, equipment,

(49:04):
hours and all that to bury trees upside down for
no reason, like like they're they're not gonna do that.
And then to get a machine in here, you would
have to cut a path through all those alders. You
can't drive a machine around all those trees and and
and in order to get to this canyon. I mean,
it's just a nightmare to get in there. Getting a

(49:24):
machine in and out of there would be so risky
to that machine all that just to bury some logs
upside down on the ground. You know, it just doesn't
make any sense, you know, for what to trick some
sasquatch investigators, you know, like it it's it just it's
it's more ridiculous than just accepting yes, they were done
by a sasquat. On this particular day right here, I

(49:49):
had rocks thrown at me three times this day, and
I was filming actually during all three of those those rocks. Wow,
I didn't like freak out about it. I was trying
to be more like, okay, that was another rock, But
maybe it just broke three and fell off an embankment,

(50:09):
you know, like they weren't being thrown at me aggressively.
What but I was hearing rocks going tinkking tink tink
three different times while I made this video.

Speaker 1 (50:22):
Oh does that hair?

Speaker 2 (50:25):
Oh you know, I didn't even notice that. I bet
you it wasn't because there's so much frost on the
ground that uh.

Speaker 1 (50:34):
It went, where's the little thing? There? We go? Hold on,
let's go back to that second right there? Hold on
too far? Oops, that's way too far? Was twenty? Was six? Okay?

(50:56):
You're not seeing anything like that.

Speaker 2 (50:59):
Yeah, it's hard to say because there's so much of
them I see them. How they're all scattered about here,
frozen moisture. It could be because everything was weird.

Speaker 1 (51:12):
What might have happened is it might have the blown
in the wind and then pulled off.

Speaker 2 (51:17):
Yeah, what's strangers.

Speaker 1 (51:19):
It's not on all of them, it's just on a
few of them.

Speaker 2 (51:21):
Oh yeah, it is strange.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
That looks like a clump of hair.

Speaker 2 (51:26):
Oh it does, it really does. I didn't even notice
it when I.

Speaker 1 (51:30):
Was there's a path right here. You can see the
path or somebody's walked through. I thought anything that's covered
with thorns, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (51:39):
Oh no, those are just a little there. But there's
some there and some there.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
It's all along that path. If you can remember that
path is, maybe you can go back around.

Speaker 2 (51:48):
I know exactly where that is. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you
know it's funny you see that. Look at that? Oh yeah, no,
I saw it. I saw it. It definitely looks like
it was.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
Me A hold on a second, where do they go
past it? Going past it before?

Speaker 2 (52:15):
M right there?

Speaker 1 (52:19):
Look at that? Yeah, big plump. No, I'm not saying
it's a big one. I mean it could have been
an elk or deer bear, who knows what it was.

Speaker 2 (52:28):
Oh yeah, but that area right there is a hotbed
for the sasquat because right there in that area there's
you know, well over a dozen of those upside down trees.

Speaker 1 (52:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (52:42):
If you skip ahead a few minutes, you'll get to
the section where there's there's a lot of the bigger,
more impressive ones upside down trees. And I'm I'm working
on a video right now. It's it's not out yet
that it shows all of my X structures, and there's
quite a few pretty impressive ex structures I've found.

Speaker 1 (53:08):
It looks like you found a pretty good area because
if you're looking at anything else, so you're walking through
the harder areas well, there's nothing walking through all of.

Speaker 2 (53:19):
This land is so hard to get to, you know, it's.

Speaker 1 (53:22):
Like where they've been walking through. Ah, you went through
the harder Yeah, but that's rocky.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
That's down there too.

Speaker 1 (53:34):
Yeah, that's hard as hell to walk through.

Speaker 2 (53:37):
Well, imagine trying to dig in that and like where
they stuck those trees in.

Speaker 1 (53:42):
The ground walks but deep, if not deeper.

Speaker 2 (53:46):
It's all rock. Yeah, I mean, it's just basically a
big mound of river rock and somehow they're driving big
old logs into it. I mean, it's mind.

Speaker 1 (54:00):
Absolutely in same.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
Yeah. I would love to like dig one of them
out and see. You know, I don't disturb them, but
I mean I've thought about how coolould be to just
see what the end of it looks like. You know,
did they do they you know, spin them back and
forth and regimen like a drill, or they just hammered
into the ground like I mean, it just makes no

(54:25):
sense how they do it with just their bare hands,
you know, it's real. I mean, I don't know if
maybe they they manipulate the end of the log to
work like a bore or a drill or you know,
it's just and then you're finding upside down trees. You know,
anywhere where there's prevalent taskquatch, you know, they usually have

(54:49):
some kind of upside down tree discovery. You know, in
Alaska they seem to be more common. That's why I
was shocked when I found them, because I'd never heard
of somebody in the lower fifth these states, you know,
find it upside down trees. Since I've gotten more into this,
I have found that they have found them down here.
But at that time period, I was thinking that there

(55:09):
had only been some bound in Alaska. And when I
found mine, I was just blown away that right there
is one of the one of the big well, I
can't tell for sure there's a big one down there.
There's a bunch of big ones. Okay, that's not the big,
badass one one. But my favorite one is just this
big old fat log with this big old root ball

(55:32):
thing on it. But see a lot of these have
been cut with chainsaws, because all of the logs in
that area have all been cut by chainsaws. It's all
logging wilderness. So it seems like they're they don't care
if there's roots on the end of them or not.
They'll pick up a log that's been cut and they
will drive it into the ground all the same, Whereas

(55:56):
in Alaska it seems like all of them had roots
on the end of them. But that's probably just because
that's what they're finding, you know, is rock logs that
had eroded away and washed into the creek and still
had riots on them. And so is this getting to
the end again or is how are we doing?

Speaker 1 (56:14):
I think I think we're running out of time. I
think we have about nine minutes left. Okay, Yeah, that's
very interesting. What we'll do is we'll just wrap it
up here in a few minutes and then we can
have you back on another time. Yeah, I'm sure you've
still got a bunch of stories and told me, you know, yeah,
I think.

Speaker 2 (56:32):
But I'm getting ready to go up on a big
trip soon. I'm hoping to do like ten, maybe more,
maybe twenty days up there, because I never get enough
time a three four day trip. It just seems like
it's over so fast, and I'm always like I didn't
get to go there, I didn't go do there? So
I want to go up there and just get all

(56:53):
my game cameras set up and just investigate every little
nook and cranny that I've never had time to get
to and really really get everything mapped out of there,
because I know there's still a lot that I haven't found.
I know there is, right, and I have game cameras
that I haven't checked on in almost a year right now,
they're probably yeah, and I'm hoping there's something cool on them,

(57:16):
so we'll find out.

Speaker 1 (57:18):
My friend Joe bigfoots on his property. He used to
hang in his street his uh trap gams up ten
fifteen feet in the air, and he got something in
to angle it down, and he caught stuff all the
time on that. He says they don't look up, or
he said they don't look up. He's no longer.

Speaker 2 (57:35):
Yeah, that's that's actually a good point. If they're up
high enough, they wouldn't even maybe wouldn't even notice it.

Speaker 1 (57:42):
Most humans will not look above their eyes, you know, true, don't.
We don't look up a lot when we walk. It's
not comfortable. And if you think about them, they're they're
you know, their necks are like there's no neck. It's
just a big head and you know, little tiny neck.
I've never seen them ever do anything other than to
look at something to turn the old shoulders.

Speaker 2 (58:06):
This. Yeah, so I'll try that. It's just it's hard
to get him up high. Oh yeah, I have some
that are pretty high right now that are way up
in this uh this old maple that I climbed, and
those are right by the river in a canyon that's
really hard to get to.

Speaker 1 (58:24):
I would. Yeah, that's where I put him close to
the river because they're using that by way.

Speaker 2 (58:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (58:28):
Probably.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
Well, man, thanks for having me, and I will definitely
keep you informed if I have any kind of big discovery.
I'll be getting a hold of you for a fall.

Speaker 1 (58:38):
Definitely say touch with me, let me know what's going on.
And what I'll do is I'll put use information down
below to his his on link to his YouTube channels,
so you guys can go watch those videos. He's gonna
be coming out with more. So he's got that big
expedition going on. Jealous of him, for sure. I wish
I could go with him and hang out, but he's
just a little too far away at this point. Yeah,

(58:59):
a little bit much trailer will work real well on
that those roads.

Speaker 2 (59:03):
Who's yeah, well you could get into some of it,
but yeah, you wouldn't get all the spot.

Speaker 1 (59:09):
I think every wanted to come out.

Speaker 2 (59:11):
Man, let me know, we could do trip area.

Speaker 1 (59:14):
We'll definitely let you know, definitely to get out to Alaska.
So we'll hopefully be able to see you maybe next
maybe later this year, maybe next year something. We can
come out and do something or if you're ever in Texas,
I'm out here and we'll around here. There's a lot
of weird stuff out here too, I know there is.

Speaker 2 (59:32):
I want to do a road trip and hit up
a whole bunch of famous spots, you know, and to
go through Texas. If my channel gets successful and like
I have a decent following, I have a plan of
like a big old road trip. I want to go
see like Bray Road and go yeah spots you know.

Speaker 1 (59:50):
Oh yeah, well there's bigfoots down there. We've we've had
encounters down there.

Speaker 2 (59:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:56):
I will stand behind a tree and it walked in,
stepped out. I'm like, what the oh my gosh, it's
a big and then stepped back behind the trio. I'm
like seriously, but it was too late. It was like, oh, Gras.

Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
Do you jerk? Was that Texas?

Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
Yeah, it's in Texas.

Speaker 2 (01:00:13):
Yeah, Yeah, I've heard of sasquatching Texas on YouTube watching
videos and stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:00:19):
Yeah, there's there's a lot of big foots out here,
especially down in the National Forest.

Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
Are you in the part of Texas it has trees
orre you in the Texas?

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
Okay, we're in what's called Brian College Station where Texas
A and MS. Okay, so we're kind of we're like
in We're like two hours from everything. We're two hours
from Houston, two hours in Dallas, We're about an hour
and a half from Austin, and then like three hours
from San Antonio. So we're a perfect hub if you
want to go for about three hours from Louisiana.

Speaker 2 (01:00:52):
I went to Texas when I was a teenager. Spent
like a week in Texas visiting relatives. But we were
in like desert desert Texas.

Speaker 1 (01:01:00):
Yeah, you were on the west side of Texas. We're
kind of the central area, they call it Central Texas.
But yeah, beautiful era. I mean we have forests out
behind our house. I mean, creepy as hell.

Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
But is it warm there a year round?

Speaker 1 (01:01:18):
Well? Right now, we're in the thirties, so we actually
have all the seasons it gets. It probably gets up
in the hundreds here, but yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
Same here. Northwest gets hot too in the summer.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
You know. I mean, I'm eighteen degrees yesterday, so it
goes up full spectrum.

Speaker 2 (01:01:37):
That's super cold. We don't ever get eighteen degrees here.
I mean for us and thirty it's thirty. Is pretty
colder around here.

Speaker 1 (01:01:45):
Yeah, I walked out of my work. Oh my gosh,
it's snow. We got snow flurries. Yah Texas, No, but
yes it does. But yeah, great time to go look
for a prince. And we get a lot of rain.
Probably we don't get probably nearly as much as you do,

(01:02:07):
but we get about fifty sixty inches a year. Oh yeah, Sariah,
East Texas, it's even more than we do.

Speaker 2 (01:02:13):
Huh, Okay, that's good.

Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:02:15):
I thought all of Texas was just desert, but then
I watched videos and see like now.

Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
For half because Texas half the west side is mainly
desert and the other sides mainly green belts. It's all green,
it's all forest. It probably was a lot more before
they you know, they built Houston and San Antonio and
stuff like that, and I'll pass. So, yeah, stuff was
all green. Yeah, a lot of rivers, a lot of

(01:02:45):
a lot of waterways out here.

Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Is that like? Uh? Is the forested mountainous parts of
Texas all pretty rural then? Or is it all kind
of a mixture of everything?

Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Uh? Kind of like where we're at. We have two
hundred thousand people. This is a big town. You know.
You get up to Waco and it's a little bit
it's about half Waco is about halfway to Fort Worth
if you're going north, and that's probably the next biggest
town to us. And if you go south you have Houston.

(01:03:19):
So yeah, it's kind of spread out. Okay, you have
to go a couple hundred miles to get to these
bigger cities and they're kind of few and far between,
and then in between you have towns that have population
eighteen twenty eight hundred, two hundred actually sees little towns
on the side of the highway.

Speaker 2 (01:03:36):
Okay, but no, I love that kind of area though,
where it's spread out like that and rural, creepy little town.

Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
Yeah, we're we're pretty much out in the middle of nowhere,
so we're kind of on our own Island if you will,
But okay, kind of nice though.

Speaker 2 (01:03:53):
I like it, Yeah, i'd love it. I live like
twenty five minutes from Portland, Oregon without traffic, so you know,
I'm in Washington, but we're basically just on the outer
edges of Portland, Oregon, you know. So it's all busy traffic,
you know, shopping centers and people everywhere. But you know,

(01:04:16):
economy is good, has its benefits, right.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
All right, Well, Hugh, thanks for coming on with us.
We really appreciate it, and we'll catch you on the
next one.
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