Episode Transcript
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I grew up camping in Red River Gorge.
My dad showed me the gravel spurs off the scenic byway,
which roadside sites were legal and which pull offs looked safe
but weren't. I learned the sound of a car on
Chimney Top Rd. long before I learned the names of the trails.
In early October last year, my cousin and I planned a quick two
night trip to catch the sunrise at Chimney Top Rock and try out
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a new hammock setup. Weeknight cool air, light
traffic. We wanted a quiet spot close to
the overlook lot so we wouldn't be fumbling in the dark for.
Long We rolled past the last paved turn that afternoon and
saw a white pickup nosed out on a gravel pull off passenger door
a different color, driver's window down, one cloudy
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headlight lens. Two men stared through us like
they were waiting for someone else to appear behind our
windshield. No nod, no wave.
We kept going. About a mile short of the
Chimney Top Rock lot, we took a legal roadside sight tucked
behind young hardwoods and Laurel.
The fire ring was already there.The place looked used and not in
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a good. Way a few.
Piles of broken glass half buried in ash and a cutting
board that someone had burned onone side.
We picked up what we could, set the hammocks 12 feet apart.
I pitched the flies low and stashed the cooler under the
bumper for shade. I lashed food in a tote with
cord and kept bear spray clippedto my hip belt.
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We ate ramen and jerky and talked through the plan for
mourning. I told my cousin what my dad
told me the first time he let mecamp roadside.
If a truck parks on the road with the lights off, don't
pretend it's nothing. At 10, an engine came up the
grade with the lights off. The same white pickup slid by
slow enough to feel like a hand dragging across a window.
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It stopped where it could see the edge of our vehicle through
the trees and idled. My cousin made a soft joke about
someone spotlighting deer. I didn't answer.
I could hear the fan belt. The truck crept away and the
sound fell back into the dark. For a minute, we just listened.
It's strange how quiet that roadcan get when the wind dies.
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We decided to do a quick walk topreview the route to the
overlook so we wouldn't burn time guessing in the morning.
Better to move with purpose thansit there wondering if that
truck was coming back. We took the spur under headlamps
set to low. No moon, just the narrow tunnel
of light on rock and leaves. It's a short walk and we kept it
quiet. We turned around at the last
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bend before the lot and headed back out.
Maybe 35 minutes total. Near camp.
There's a damp patch where we had stepped off the path on the
way in. I saw our tracks plain as day.
On the way out, there was a new print laid over my cousin's
outward step. Deep heel, different tread,
angled toward our sight. I looked up the slope, Nothing
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moved. Then a single clean whistle
carried down from above the camp.
Not a bird call, not a random noise. 2 breaths later there
were three hard clacks spaced evenly.
The sound of smooth rocks being struck together.
I have spent enough nights out there to know when a noise is
made for someone to hear it. We walked into camp and knew it
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was wrong before we saw the details.
The cooler lid hung open. The cutting board we'd set on a
Flat Rock had been moved. A small kitchen knife we'd
cleaned and left next to it was gone.
On the dark edge of camp, along the path to our hammocks, a
bright orange cord had been tiedat shoulder height between two
saplings. The knots were new and tight.
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It wasn't ours. The food totes lash was loosened
like someone tested it and put it back the wrong way.
Nothing else seemed missing, butthe feeling of being handled
made my skin crawl in a way the quiet never has.
Leaving would have meant walkingthe road with that truck in
play. I've always told people not to
do that unless they have to. We agreed to black out the camp,
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sit tight and be the ones to setthe next move.
I coiled the orange cord so we wouldn't clothesline ourselves
and put it near my pack. We sat back-to-back on a foam
pad, each with bear spray and a trekking pole within reach.
I had a pot and spoon ready to bang and an air horn on my lap.
I cupped my headlamp in one handand kept it on the lowest red
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mode. We said we'd give it 20 minutes.
If nothing happened, we'd hike to the lot and sleep in the car.
Footsteps touch leaves up the slope, like someone testing a
floorboard. They paused when we shifted.
A voice murmured something too low to catch, and another
answered in the same tone. They moved again, spread out.
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I felt the line of my front guy line, as if my eyes had moved to
the cord. It twitched once, then it pulled
hard, like someone had wrapped ahand and leaned.
I cut it free with a small bladeand it snapped back.
I shouted, clear and loud, that we had already called 911 and we
were armed. We hadn't and we weren't, but
the words came out solid. A shape rushed in from the left.
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My cousin brought the bear sprayup and swept it flat at chest
height. The man screamed and stumbled
into brush, coughing hard. The second voice cut wide to the
right. I hit the pot like a bell, fired
the horn, and kicked my headlampto strobe, keeping the beam low
so I didn't blind my cousin. The brush shook where the first
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man fell. Then I heard a third engine,
closer than I expected, and a sharp spotlight broke through
the trees from the road. Forest Service volunteer patrol.
A voice called from the road edge.
Calm, loud, not shouting. Stay where you are.
His truck's headlights washed the brush line, and the handheld
beam swept the slope above us. Both men broke cover and crashed
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down slope toward the road. 100 yards up the grade.
The white pickup roared to life,tires spitting gravel, and
fishtailed before it straightened out and ran.
The volunteer told us to stay put.
He said he was calling dispatch for sheriff units and would keep
his lights on the slope in case anyone circled back.
He met us at the Chimney Top Rock lot about half an hour
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later when 2 deputies arrived. It felt strange stepping into
that wide gravel space under working lights, having to
explain why we hadn't just left.As soon as we saw the first
pass, we gave them what we had. I had written plate characters
on my paper map after the first slow roll by.
Not the full string, but enough sequence to run.
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We describe the truck, mismatched passenger door,
cloudy headlight lens and the two men as best we could.
Local accents, mid 30s to 40s, one heavier, 1 taller.
We handed over the orange cord. A deputy bagged it.
They took photos of the camp area and dusted the cutting
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board and cooler lid. The volunteer gave his name and
the time he lit up the slope. The deputies told us to break
camp with them watching and go sleep somewhere with a deadbolt.
We booked a room in Stanton and slept like people do when the
body shuts down from tension, not because the mind is at ease.
I expected that to be the end ofit.
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Most of the time you get a card with a case number and that's
the last anyone hears. 2 days later a deputy called me back.
The plate sequence and the truckdescription put them on a
residence they'd been looking atfor a string of roadside thefts.
A search turned up outdoor gear,camp stoves, coolers, and a
small knife that matched ours. He said our fingerprints were on
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the handle from when we cleaned it that afternoon, which was
enough to tie it to us in a way they could use.
They also had a partial shoe print lifted from damp ground at
our site that matched a pair of boots in the house.
One man was arrested that day and the second was identified
and picked up later. They filed on theft and
attempted assault. The volunteer statement
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mattered. Our timeline mattered.
The fact that we called out and tried to hold our ground without
turning it into a fight mattered.
That fall, the Forest Service added extra night patrol loops
along Chimney Top Rd. on busy weekends.
The bulletin board at the Gladi Visitor Center had a printed
sheet reminding people to securecamps and report suspicious
behavior as soon as they saw it,not after they packed up to go
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home. The deputy mailed me a copy of
the property receipt that listedthe knife.
I still have his card and the case number written on the back
of my map right under the scrawled plate characters.
I am not sharing this to argue with anyone about what we should
have done. We could have tossed our gear in
the car after that first pass and driven to a campground.
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We could have tried to sleep in the car at the lot We chose to
black out and hold because that felt like the safest option in
that moment. It worked, but I don't pretend
it would always work. What I want to get across is
simple. The road right up near the
scenic overlooks is not a bubble.
People cruise those pull offs tosee who is careless with food,
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who leaves gear loose, and who will scare easy.
If you camp A roadside sight outthere, keep a noisemaker handy.
Keep bear spray where your hand can find it in the dark.
If a truck rolls by with its lights off, write down what you
can on something that won't losebattery.
And if a stranger ties anything new at shoulder height on the
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edge of your camp, understand what that means.
We still hike the gorge. I still love those overlooks
when the first light hits the sandstone.
I just don't pretend the quiet means we're alone.
On that night, two men tried to work our camp, and because a
volunteer came by and because wewere ready to make noise and
stand our ground, they left withburning eyes and no gear.
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The county got a suspect they'd been chasing for weeks.
Charges stuck. Patrols stepped up.
It's not a legend or a warning Iheard second hand.
It happened to us a mile shy of the Chimney Top Rock lot, with a
white pickup and an orange trip line and a piece of paper with
crooked letters written in the dark.
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I planned the trip because I wanted to see how my winter kit
held up when daylight gets shortand mistakes get loud.
The idea was simple. Start at the Gooseberry Falls
trailhead on the Superior HikingTrail, push S to the Split Rock
River loop, sleep one night out,then double back to the car the
next morning. Late November on the North Shore
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can be kind or it can make you pay attention.
I packed like it was the second option.
Stove, light shelter, extra socks, real tape for feet, a pot
that actually boils fast, and enough food to cover an
unplanned second night. My friends were Kayla and Mark.
Kayla can run all day and hate slowing down.
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Mark is strong. New boots already talking about
breaking them in like boots careabout your plans.
We picked that section because it's well marked and you can
bail in either direction with good visibility along the river.
This is my warning. I've done a lot of miles and I
have never felt watched the way I did on that loop.
If you go out there when it's cold, read this and change how
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you camp. We hit the trail late morning
with thin snow over hard ground.The temperature in the shade
felt like the mid 20's. The river valleys carried wind
that went right through my gloves.
If I stopped moving. The sky had that flat Gray that
doesn't give you a dramatic sunset, just a slow dimming.
We made time at first. Trail markers were easy to
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follow. Boardwalks were icy but
passable, and the only tracks ahead of us were old.
Around 3:30, we reached the Split Rock River footbridge.
The planks had a frosted Sheen. We took it slow, one at a time,
poles out, boots careful. On the far side.
About 30 yards beyond the bridge, I smelled something that
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cut through everything else. It was sweet and rotten and warm
in the wrong way. 10 steps off the trail, there was a shallow
scrape with leaf litter and snowpulled back and a deer's
hindquarters tucked into it. Ribs showed.
The angles were too neat. Coyotes don't place things like
that. You could tell something planned
to come back for it. We didn't stand there long.
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Light was bleeding out and we needed a spot to sleep.
We set camp a couple 100 yards off the loop in a stand of Birch
where the ground was flat and the brush thin.
I kept everything tight, shelterlow, guy lines short, fire small
stove set with the wind in mind so it wouldn't sputter.
We kept food sealed, cooked quick and ate fast while we
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still had feeling in our fingers.
Mark admitted his heels were hotwhen we checked.
The skin had that glazed look right before it.
Tears we drained and taped with real adhesive and adjusted his
lacing. Kayla kept saying we'd make up
time in the morning. I was thinking about that
scraped out pocket in the dirt and how the.
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Smell had seemed to move with the air.
It started as we were settling down.
The sound was a long wet breath somewhere beyond the ring of
Birch trunks. Not a growl, not a snort.
More like a heavy mouth pulling cold air past meat.
It came and stopped and came again.
The wind kept pushing the same direction, and the sound always
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held its position upwind. It never crossed downwind of us.
That told me something smart about scent, and I don't use
that word loosely for animals. Every few minutes there was a
dry tooth on wood scrape, and then quiet.
Kayla sat up and whispered that she'd rather hike on.
I did the math on Mark's feet, on the cold, on the bridge, now
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slicker than before, and I said we should hold where we were.
We shifted the fire to the windward edge and kept our
little stove going so a pot would be ready to boil.
We didn't say it out loud, but we were building options.
Before dawn you can feel when the dark is still at its
deepest. I stepped out to take care of
business and lifted my headlamp low so it wouldn't blow out my
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night vision. The beam crossed the snow and
showed the story nobody wanted. Prince circled the camp.
They were deep and they landed one after the other in a tight
line, almost on the same center line, the way a cat walks, only
these were long and splayed at the toes.
I've crossed human prints that wandered and shifted and deer
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tracks that double register. This wasn't that.
Each step dug in like weight dropped onto it.
I followed them with the light and found a Birch with bark
scraped down in strips 8 feet upin a crack of the trunk.
There was a tuft of coarse Gray brown hair.
It didn't bend between my fingers.
It snapped. We broke camp fast.
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The plan was to skip finishing the loop and backtrack to
Gooseberry. A storm wasn't coming, but the
temperature was drifting down and our daylight was short.
Mark's blisters had opened. We retaped and tightened his
heel lock, then laid out a pace plan. 15 minutes steady, 10
seconds to listen. Repeat.
Keep moving to stay warm. Pause just long enough to hear
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if the woods were moving around us.
We started up the Ridge and hit the first bend and the smell
reached us again, heavier than the night before.
There was another shallow scrapedown off the tread.
Same neat placement, same kind of smear in the dirt that looked
like fat. We gave it a wide berth and
didn't talk about it because saying too much makes people
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speed up and then they trip. An hour in, we got the thing
that still makes my stomach go cold.
We stopped for one of the short listening breaks.
The river noise was a light rushbehind the trees.
Kayla stood to my left from the right from the brush.
A voice said her name in my voice and then said come see.
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Like it was trying to match cadence and mist.
It wasn't quiet. It wasn't loud either.
It sounded like a person forcingthe words through a cracked
throat. I was still standing next to her
so she knew it wasn't me. She went rigid.
Mark swore under his breath and then squeezed it shut.
We didn't run. Running on that surface is a
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good way to split a knee open and spend a night you don't
want. We moved on the plan. 15
minutes, then 10 seconds. I watched the wind.
Whatever held the upwind position the night before did it
again, like it understood the rule better than we did.
By the time we reached the footbridge again, the icing was
worse. The planks gave a faint hollow
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note. Underweight, we went across one
at a time, with poles braced wide.
On the far side. The snow showed a trench where
something heavy had pushed across and then stepped back
into cover. We kept moving.
The air felt colder down by the water.
Our breath hung and drifted toward the bank where the timber
closed in, up in the Birch and spruce.
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Yeah, there were conifers around, but not the kind some
folks like to name. The wind showed its path in
little ripples along the tops, and then those same ripples went
still. Not because of magic, just
because air does that in pockets, and those were the
pockets where I felt watched. Dusk came early.
Light was thin and blue. I kept calculating.
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The carriage rode miles in my head and then tried to stop.
Because when you start counting miles you forget to keep your
eyes up. The thing pressed closer as the
day failed. I saw it between trunks twice,
and both times all I got were bad angles, the width of a rib
cage, the line of a shoulder toohigh for a person, and the
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feeling that it could cover ground quicker than we could,
even if the footing was perfect.We agreed without much talk that
we were going to put heat and flame between US and it until
full dark, then hold a position rather than walk blind into a
fall. We cleared a patch down to
mineral soil with our boots and knife tips, fed a small fire to
steady coals, and had the stove roaring with the pot at a roll.
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The plan was to keep that pot ata near boil and use it as reach.
You improvise out there or you freeze.
It tested us right away. There was a rush low to the
ground that broke dead branches and pushed snow aside.
I held the pot up with both hands and threw the contents
into the sound. The splash hissed hard against
something that was not bark. The noise that came back was
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wrong. It started low and then climbed
until it sounded like a person trying not to cry and a wounded
animal at the same time. It cut off fast, like whatever
made it decided it had already said too much.
We didn't cheer or shout. We fed the fire and kept the
stove running and didn't let thepot cool.
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We turned our headlamps off and let our eyes adjust to the
wobble of the flames. In the flicker, the tree trunks
went from black lines to actual obstacles again, and in the gaps
between them we saw movement. A shape, tall and narrow where
the chest should widen, taking astep that landed straight ahead
of the last one, never breaking that single file.
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It stayed just beyond the ring of light and circled.
It pushed air with each breath. I could smell the same rot from
the caches and something else under it that smelled like an
animal that had been hungry for too long.
We took turns tending heat and watching 5 minutes each so
nobody glazed over. When the wind shifted, the thing
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shifted with it to reclaim its upwind position.
It knew how scent moved. That bothered me more than the
height. It meant this wasn't random
blundering. The temperature dropped a few
more degrees and the firewood shrank to coals.
We kept the stove fed so we could boil on demand.
Every time it drifted closer, I raised the pot and it stayed
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back. We did that for hours.
I do not know what it wanted more, the caches or us.
I do know it pushed when it realized we were leaving.
We made our move before real dawn.
The Gray you get when birds aren't up yet and the sky is
just lifting a shade. We broke down fast and went
light. We left things that weren't
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critical. An extra pot, a spare bag, a
cheap foam sit pad because cold hands, drop zippers and a slow
camp in that air is a trap. The plan was the same.
Interval pace favoring open rockwhere scent breaks up, insight
lines stretch. Mark took ibuprofen with a
little oatmeal paste. We taped his heels.
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Again. Kayla took the lead.
Not racing, just consistent. I took the back every 15
minutes. We paused 10 seconds and
listened. In the early part, I still
caught a breath. Back in the timber, same wet
draw. But once we hit the higher
ground and the sun cleared the trees, the sound thinned.
We kept moving anyway. You don't let up just because
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you want to believe something isover.
We reached the gooseberry lot mid morning and sat in the car
with the heater, blasting our gloves.
A conservation officer rolled ina routine patrol and we flagged
him. He listened to what we saw and
didn't smirk when we told it. He looked at the paper tracings
we made of the tracks with the map legend next to them for
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scale, and at the tuft of hair in a snack bag.
He said a large black bear will cash deer in shallow scrapes and
do odd things when winter hits hard.
He said when people are tired and cold, they hear things that
aren't there. He wrote an incident number on a
card and said he'd walk the loopand see if the caches were still
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active. He also told us not to camp near
a carcass, ever, and to report anything that looks like an
animal pantry so they can track behavior.
We didn't argue much. We just tried to describe the
way it stayed upwind and the waythe voice came when I was
standing right next to Kayla. A week later, he called me.
He said they found two shallow caches on that loop within 1/4
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mile of each other and large melted out prints that didn't
match the usual patterns they see.
He didn't say much more. He told me he logged the area as
sensitive for the season and passed a note to the trail
association. A few days after that, the
Superior Hiking Trail Association posted a seasonal
caution for that segment, askingwinter hikers not to camp near
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active caches and to report unusual tracks or behavior.
We put together our trip report with the gear notes and the
mistakes. Treat hotspots the second you
feel them. Never camp between a food cache
and the thing that made it, and always keep a pot at a boil
before dark and cold country because sometimes you need
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reach. We added one new rule to our
list in bold. If you smell rot, you move.
Call it whatever you want. Say bear.
If that keeps your head straight, say it was a person
messing with us. Though I don't know anyone who
can stand 8 feet tall and place their feet like that.
Or use the old word people out here used when hunger walked on
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2. Legs and didn't stop when it
learned our shapes. Wendigo, I don't think naming it
changes what we met. What matters is this late in the
year on the North Shore, you canrun into a stretch of trail
where something has put food away and wants the whole
corridor quiet so it can eat. If you catch that smell, don't
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build your camp. Don't stay to prove a point.
That night taught me how to leave fast and how to make sure
my friends leave with me. I'm sharing it so you don't
learn it the hard way. I'm not posting this to chase
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attention, I'm writing it so thenext pair of brothers who think
West Fork will be a quiet easy overnight in mid-september will
think twice. We planned it.
Simple hike in late afternoon from Call of the Canyon off AZ
89 A keep going past where most people turn around and sleep on
a dry bench, well away from the water.
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We wanted to be there when the maples went red against the
cliffs and the day use crowd waslong gone.
No big agenda, no risky moves, just two steady hikers in a
Canyon we knew well enough to respect.
If you've been there, you know how the crossings work.
Stone to stone, shallow and cold, and how the light drops
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early between those walls. That's the only background you
need. The rest is why we don't sleep
there anymore. The walk in felt normal at
first. Dust on the paved start, then
damp grit where the Creek spreads thin, then the slick
Gray stones that wobble if you don't place your foot right.
Jays usually make a racket in that Canyon and move like they
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own the place. That evening they were around,
but they kept quiet and tracked us branch to branch.
Nobody else was near us by the time we cleared the last cluster
of day hikers. We did notice one print in the
damp sand that didn't sit right,a boot tread like mine with a
long toed shape smeared over it,the toes spaced too evenly.
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We said Dog slipped and kept going.
Then near a bend where the wall cuts in tight, an older man came
toward us wearing a wool coat and a brimmed hat, pulled low.
He stepped wide, gave us space, never lifted his head, no
greeting. Either way, it wasn't rude, more
like he had his own business anddidn't want ours.
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We watched him go and kept climbing.
We camped high off the main tread on a sandy bench behind a
line of oak and juniper. We were careful about distance
from water and left no ring. We ate hot food, cleaned up, and
sat with our headlamps off whilethe last of the light slid out
of the Canyon. That's when we heard three notes
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drift up from the trail below low, then a little higher, then
low again. Spaced like someone counting.
Not fast and not lazy, just measured.
I told myself it was someone at a crossing telling their friend
where to step. My brother shrugged and we let
it go because there wasn't anything to do with it.
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Later, after full dark, something moved near camp.
No light, no clank, no zipper sound, no normal noise you get
when people are close at night. What we heard was a kind of
rolling quiet, like padded steps, staying on Duff and
avoiding the crisp leaves on purpose.
It passed once to the left of the tent and once behind it.
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Not fast, not slow, and then a small stone tapped A stake.
Not a throw you could hear cutting air, more like it was
set down and nudged just enough to touch metal.
We said it's nothing out loud even though we both knew it was
something. We lay still and watch the
fabric curve in and out with ourbreathing.
I drifted for a bit and came up out of sleep because I heard my
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brother right outside the tent say hey, come, look at this.
It wasn't whispered like he was trying to be quiet.
It was just his normal voice, a little closer than you'd expect.
I rolled toward him, ready to unzip, and found him there
beside me. He was out, cold, mouth closed,
breathing steady. I didn't wake him.
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I didn't say a thing. A minute later, the same voice
came from the tree line and usedmy name.
The pitch was exact. The brakes between the words
were off, the kind of off that hits you in the stomach.
It spaced the sounds too cleanly, like someone reading
and not talking. We shut the lamp down to nothing
and sat in the dark because it felt safer to be two shapes than
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two targets. I wanted to flood the trees with
light, just to make the area small and known.
We didn't do it. We waited.
A figure moved between two trunks at the edge of our
vision, taller than me by a head, arms long, shoulders set
too wide and low for the height.It didn't stomp or shuffle.
It crossed the gap with a drop kneed lope that would be hard to
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copy if you tried. A thin band of moon slid through
a break in the clouds and lit the small clearing.
The space where it had just passed was empty.
We kept our voices low and used words the way we do when we're
on the edge of a bad choice. I told my brother if it calls
again, ask it what? Dad ruined that one Thanksgiving
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from the trees. My brother's voice, not my
brother said what did Dad ruin that one Thanksgiving?
It spoke first. He didn't get the chance.
We didn't move for a long count.Then we heard the three notes
again. Low, a touch higher, low, off to
the left, then to the right, then ahead.
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It didn't bounce like sound does.
It travelled, and it felt like it wanted to be in front of us,
not behind. We agreed without debate to
leave. We packed, quiet hands moving by
memory. The little fire was down to a
faint glow and we drowned it until the color was gone and the
ground was cool. We shouldered our bags and slid
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back down to the main trail withour lamps off, only using them
for a second at a time to check footing.
That voice came again, and this time it used my tone to say one
word. Wait.
The word landed flat, like it forgot to finish.
On the trail centered between our boots.
A smooth stone sat on top of another in a thin strip of damp
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grit. We hadn't heard anyone said it
there. We stepped around it and moved
on. The 1st 2 crossings went clean.
Stones were wet but took weight.The water wasn't deep, just cold
enough to pull heat from your bones.
I coughed once when the chill hit the back of my throat.
On the 3rd crossing we both saw a tall silhouette on the bank we
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had just left. The shoulders were wrong for a
person. The head tipped like it was
lining us up. Then the cough came back at us.
Mine exactly, placed in the quiet like it had been saved up
for that moment. I felt my hands tighten on the
straps and didn't have a thoughtto spare.
We didn't answer. We didn't speed up, We didn't
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slow down. We crossed, cut through brush
and gained a low shelf that paralleled the Creek so we could
keep a better view and avoid tight bends.
Twice we thought we'd bought space.
Twice the three notes showed up ahead of us, Same spacing, same
sound. It didn't sound proud, it didn't
sound angry, it just came from where we didn't want it to be.
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We kept moving. When the reflective strip on the
kiosk at the day use boundary picked up the first smear of
morning, I felt something I could use again.
Distance. The air at the Canyon mouth had
that old charcoal and dust smellfrom the paved lot, and the
shape of the parking area openedin front of us like a diagram.
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There were only two vehicles, our car and an old Ford with
plates from the county dash stub.
Sun faded under the glass. We unlocked our doors.
The trees by the edge of the lotwere still from that edge.
My voice said hey, matching my timing perfectly, like it had
finally learned where to put thebrakes.
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We didn't answer. We got in, turn the key and
rolled out past the bridge. The sound didn't follow to the
road. The Canyon fell behind US1 turn
at a time, and neither of us said anything until Sedona sign
started. We went straight to the Red Rock
Ranger District office, because that felt like the right next
step. We didn't add flair, and we
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didn't skip details. We gave the time, the distance
from water, the three note pattern, the cough that came
back at us near the third crossing.
The Ranger who took the report was the kind of guy who's heard
stories in many versions. He listened all the way through,
wrote down the three notes specifically, and then told us
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in a calm voice to treat local stories with respect and not to
sleep in West Fork. Too many incidents with what
visitors call night imitators, he said.
They get people moving at hours that lead to bad choices.
He asked about an older man in awool coat.
We told him what we saw. He said there's a local who
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walks there near dusk and keeps to himself.
He took our contact info and said he'd check what he could
check. A week later, he called.
They'd reached the owner of the Ford.
The man is known to staff, staysto himself and is not a problem.
He was out of town the night we were there.
The Ranger added, without tryingto push any angle, that another
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pair had reported the same 3 notes earlier in the fall and a
voice asking one of them to comesee something using the other's
tone. He didn't lecture us or try to
explain it away, he thanked us for the report.
That was the end of the officialpart.
We kept two things from that night, his card with the date
and time written on the back anda notebook page where I sketched
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the long toed track over my bootlength with the toe spacing and
wrote 3 notes. Low, mid, low, twice.
That's it. No proof that will convince
anyone who doesn't want to be convinced.
I'm fine with that. A couple weeks after, a
temporary sign showed up at the kiosk that said to exit by dusk
due to increased wildlife activity after dark.
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You can read into that if you want.
We know what we heard. We know what copied my voice and
then learn to place the word theway I place it.
People around here have a name for a thing that can borrow a
voice and move with a body that doesn't match its height.
I'm not trying to tell anyone what to believe.
I'm telling you what happened ina Canyon with red leaves and
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cold water, where sound doesn't carry the way you expect, and
where something wanted to be just ahead of us the whole time.
If you go to West Fork in September, walk as far as you
want and enjoy it. But when light goes, leave.
Sleep somewhere else. Treat the stories like trail
signs. You don't have to put the name
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to it to stay safe. We did, and we still won't sleep
there again. Late September midweek, my
girlfriend Jess and I decided todo the Rim Trail at Conkel's
Hollow and sleep nearby on stateforest land so we could hit Old
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Man's Cave early the next morning before the crowds.
We're careful hikers. We keep our plans simple and
tell someone where we're going. We had two headlamps, a spare
battery, a small first aid kit, and an offline map because the
cell signal out there is spotty.Conkel's Hollow sits off SR374IN
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Hocking Hills, and if you've been, you know how the sandstone
rim gets narrow in places and the drop offs are real.
I'm saying this up front becauseit explains why we reacted the
way we did. Later, we got to the trailhead
in the late afternoon. There were a few cars, not many.
At the kiosk, a woman stood in abright blue rain jacket with the
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hood up, even though it wasn't raining and hadn't all day.
No backpack, no water bottle. She didn't look at us.
We said hello. Nothing.
She stepped away as we started the loop, Not toward her car or
the road, just toward the start of the trail.
I figured she was shy. Jess gave me that look.
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That means stay aware. About a mile in, we came to one
of those openings where you can see straight down into the
gorge. The woman in the blue jacket was
there again, feet square to the edge, hands at her sides,
looking down. Still no pack, still not a
glance our way. We kept moving because that
slope to the bottom isn't forgiving.
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Jess squeezed my hand when we passed her.
I remember noticing that her shoes looked like cheap foam
soled slip ONS, not hiking anything.
Maybe that's nothing, but it's what clicked in my head.
Closer to sundown, light starting to go gold, we saw a
faint side path. It wasn't an official spur, just
a thin line through leaves. My headlamp on low, picked up a
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small stack of flat stones next to it.
The top rock had a hole drilled through it and a thin White
Ribbon looped through. It looked freshly placed, not
the park style at all. We said out loud that we'd stick
to the main loop. Right then, from somewhere off
the trail, we heard a single high laugh.
Not from a kid, not from a group.
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Just one short sharp laugh. Then crunching leaves that
stopped when we stopped and started when we walked again.
It could have been an animal in dry leaves doing a similar
pattern to our steps, but the timing felt too clean.
I don't have a better way to describe it.
We didn't see the blue jacket again before we exited back to
the car. We drove a few minutes and set
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up an illegal pull off area in the state forest.
Quiet place. A truck rolled by once.
Otherwise nothing. The air had that cool edge you
get right before the real leaf drop.
We made a small fire and cooked quick food.
I kept watching the dark just past the light.
That's not me trying to be dramatic.
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I just didn't like how that woman stood at the rim like she
was measuring something. We talked about it, Jess said.
She didn't like that there was no gear.
She also didn't like that fixed stare toward the drop.
I said Maybe she was clearing her head.
We kept our voices normal and didn't linger outside the fire
light. At around 2:00 in the morning,
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Jess shook my arm. Don't shout, she said.
Her voice was steady but low. A shape stood right at the edge
of the light. Bright blue jacket, hood still
up, no headlamp, no flashlight, hands down at her sides again, I
could see the shine of the fabric and the outline of the
hood. Her face stayed in shadow.
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She stepped closer by a foot or two and said, Do you have a
phone? The tone was flat.
Not tired, not scared, not rushed, just flat.
Yes, I said Will. You walk me to my car, same
tone. No please.
No detail about where or why. Just didn't wait.
We can call a Ranger for you, she said.
Tell us what lot you're in. The woman smiled.
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No teeth, just a wide closed mouth smile that went away
without touching her eyes, whichI still couldn't see under the
hood. She turned around and didn't go
toward the two obvious directions, trail or Rd.
She went straight into the brushdown a side slope that gets
steep fast. The leaves were dry and deep,
but the sound of her steps vanished almost right away, like
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she knew a rock bench under the leaf layer or a way down where
the footing stayed quiet. We didn't chase, we didn't call
out. We put water on the fire, made
sure it was out cold, and we satin the tent in our clothes with
our boots next to the door. We listened.
Nothing else came in close at first light.
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We were packed in 15 minutes. We went back to the preserve to
come out at the main lot with more people around.
When we reached that same faint side path, things were
different. The single stone stack had
company. About 15 small stacks ran along
that path like bread crumbs, each with a little ribbon loop
on top. The stacks LED away from the
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main trail, deeper along the rim, where the ground tilts
toward a drop and the footing isleaf slick.
On one stack, under a plastic grocery tag, like the kind you
get with a sail sticker on a bag, there was a box cutter,
blade taped in place, the sharp edge faced out.
Right where your fingers would go if you tried to flip the tag
to read it. It wasn't enough to cut off a
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finger, but it would open you upfast and bleed a lot in the
cold. I took a wide photo for context
and a close photo of the blade. We didn't touch it.
Farther down that side path we found clear fishing line strung
between two saplings at shin height.
You wouldn't see it on a dim dayuntil it hit your leg.
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Beyond it was a smooth slab of rock under a layer of leaves
slanted toward the rim. If you hit the line at a good
pace, you'd go forward right into that slab.
I pushed my trekking pole under the line to show the tension and
took another picture. We cut it with our pocket knife,
coiled it and bagged it. While we were doing that, we
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heard a low two note whistle from the trees off our right
shoulder. Not a bird we know.
We got a glimpse of blue moving parallel to us through trunks,
just enough to know we were still being watched.
I felt that old basic choice, chase control or keep control.
We kept control. We spoke loudly on purpose about
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going to the trailhead to reporthazards. 2 day hikers came
around a bend toward us and we showed them the photos and told
them to stay on the main trail. They turned around and came with
us back at the lot. It was our luck that a county
deputy was already there for a parking complaint.
We flagged him down, showed the pictures, and pointed out the
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exact spots on the kiosk map. He radioed for Park Rangers.
They came with cutters and flagging tape and asked us to
walk them to the start of the side path.
We did. 1 Ranger started removing the stacks, bagging the
blade and flagging the spots where the line had been.
Another Ranger worked the rim from the opposite direction.
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Later in the lot, they told us what they found.
More trip lines, farther in, more ribbon stacks, and just
outside the preserve boundary onstate forest land, a tarp, camp,
blue tarp, milk crate, cheap sleeping pad, food wrappers, and
a spiral notebook with lines about quieting the crowds and
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teaching lessons. No name, no identification, boot
prints that looked like flat foam soles.
The description matched the jacket and shoes we saw.
The deputy took our statements, logged the photos, gave us an
incident number and asked if we'd be available by phone if
they needed more detail. A week later, the deputy emailed
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they'd found the woman living rough along the back roads.
I won't post her name and I don't want to make this a pile
on. The e-mail said she was
trespassed from the preserve andcited for reckless endangerment.
Rangers cleared the hazards thatday.
The deputy asked us to give a short statement for a simple
hearing on the trespass order. We did.
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There was no big courtroom moment.
We went in, the judge asked clear questions.
The photos were entered. The Rangers report was read.
The order was granted. She's not allowed back in the
park. A week after that, Jess and I
went back in daylight and walkedthe Gorge Trail, the easy one
down low with families and strollers and the sound of
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regular conversation. The kiosk had a new notice about
not following unofficial markersand how to report trail
tampering. It was uncomfortable to see the
spot again, but good to see people out and the warning
posted. That same day we bought 3 tiny
key chain headlamps and clipped one to every pack and set of
keys we own. Jess said her new rule out loud
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so I'd hear it every time I checked for my wallet and phone
rescues in the dark. That's the line she repeats when
friends ask what happened. Two last things.
So this doesn't feel like. An open end.
First, I shared the photos with the Rangers and the deputy and
I'm not posting them here because the point is handled and
I don't want to encourage anyoneto go looking for that side
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path. It's not an attraction, it's a
place where someone set things up to hurt people who trust
markers that look official. Second, the deputy told us that
if we had followed the woman at 2:00 in the morning, we would
have been on ground. She knew better than we did.
That stuck with me. People get into trouble out
there when they let someone elsepick the spot.
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If you hike Conkle's Hollow or anywhere.
Like it? Stay on the main trail.
If you see rock stacks with ribbons, don't assume they're
helpful. If someone appears at the edge
of your camp asking for a phone and a walk to their car, don't
go with them. Call for help from the place you
control. You can be polite and still keep
space. You can care about someone and
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still say no to walking into thedark.
I don't think the woman in the blue jacket wanted conversation.
I think she wanted to move people where she'd set things
up. I'm glad we didn't play along.
I'm grateful the Rangers and thedeputy took it seriously and
cleaned it up. And I'm sharing this so maybe
someone else doesn't learn it the hard way.
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I'm writing this as a warning for anyone who.
Thinks the Deep Creek Loop is always mellow and safe just
because it's near Bryson City and has foot bridges and
families on the lower miles. My buddy Dan and I wanted
something. Simple.
Before winter really set in, twonights, easy grades, good water.
Early November, we parked at theDeep Creek Trailhead, signed
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where we needed to sign, and headed out past Tom Branch Falls
and Indian Creek Falls with day hikers behind us.
The plan was Deep Creek Trail tothe.
Loop. Catch the connector toward Nolan
Divide and close it back to the truck.
Nothing brave. We were looking for a quiet
trip, not a story to post pass the falls.
The crowd thins. Fast, the Creek is constant
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enough that you stop noticing it.
We made good time and kept the pace relaxed, enjoying the last
color in the leaves and the feelof the wooden bridges under our
boots. Sometime mid afternoon, near a
horse trail junction, a man in camo stepped off the tread to
let us pass. He had a small day pack and a
cheap handheld radio on his chest.
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The radio crackled like it had been chirping the whole time,
and he reached up with his thumband killed the noise until we
were almost even with him. He didn't make eye contact and
he didn't say anything. We nodded and walked on.
I've met plenty of hunters and Berry pickers out there.
Nothing about one guy in camo ona legal trail should have stuck
to my brain, but the way that radio went quiet right as we
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came up and then popped again a few seconds after we passed did.
A mile past the site we were thinking about using, we saw
fresh holes dug in soft soil offthe trail, Oval pits with plant
stalks tossed to the side. The dirt was damp and fell away
when we nudged it with a stick. Boot prints were layered over
some flattened hoof marks like someone had come through after a
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rider. I'm not a Ranger, but I know
what that looks like. I told Dan I didn't like it.
He shrugged and said we're hiking on the official tread,
not poking around. We'll be fine.
We stopped earlier than. Planned Hung.
The food set a low fire just forwarmth and settled in.
I tried to keep it normal. We ate simple stuff, talked
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about nothing, and kept our voices down for a while.
That helped. Right after dusk, a radio
squelch broke the Creek noise from down in the trees.
Just one quick burst. 10 minuteslater, another squelch came from
upslope. Not loud, just enough to tell
you it was there. If it had been one person, fine.
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2 directions implies two people.That's when I started really
listening. Every so often we heard leaf
noise, like someone stepping andpausing, stepping and pausing,
working a circle outside our firelight.
Whenever we spoke up, the steps stopped.
When we went quiet they started again.
I'm not saying it was close, it wasn't close enough to be seen,
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it was just consistent. We let the fire go out and sat
on our pads in the dark, staringat the dim shape of our bare bag
rope and trying to decide how much of this was imagination and
how much was pattern. We agreed to move at first light
and keep it simple. No shortcuts, no off trail
curiosity. I packed most of my gear before.
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I got in the. Bag just to make the morning
clean. The night never got worse than
that creeping slow circle. But I didn't sleep right.
You don't rest when you're measuring footsteps at dawn.
We were already moving. The plan was to backtrack a bit
and stick. To.
The loop proper when we got to an old service Rd. spur we had
used the day before to shave a corner.
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It had a steel cable across it, chest high with a fresh padlock
biting a hasp on a post. The dust on the post had
smudged, like someone had grabbed it with a dirty hand to
haul the cable across. There wasn't any official sign.
I said. Did we miss a closure notice?
Dan shook his head. We had walked that spur
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yesterday without a problem. We kept going, aiming to stay on
the main tread. A little farther along, there
was a second cable across another spur, this one lower but
just as new. Once as maintenance, twice as
funneling. That's when a man's voice, low
and flat, came out of a Laurel thicket.
On our right, roads closed. Head back to camp.
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I never saw him. The brush didn't move.
The voice was close enough to beclear and far enough to hide.
I said which Rd. No answer.
A radio chirped somewhere else, same tone as the one the camo
guy carried. I got that burn in my chest you
get when you realize you're not just imagining a bad situation,
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you're in one. We stayed calm and kept walking.
We saw small stacks of rocks where the trail split around
downed limbs, like someone was leaving arrows, all pointing
back toward where we had camped.Someone had raked leaves across
the tread in a line low enough to catch your ankles, like they
were testing whether we passed that point.
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It felt like we had been invitedinto a shape they'd set up, and
then the door had swung shut. Dan stopped and said we're being
steered. We got out the paper map and
traced our finger to the nearesthigh spot.
The call was made without a longtalk.
Climb off trail to the Ridge, gain the broad back of Nolan
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Divide and drop back to officialtread where we could expect to
meet someone wearing a badge. It wouldn't be comfortable, but
it got us out of the channels someone had set.
The hillside was ugly with rhododendron and Laurel.
The ground under the leaves was slick and hid rotten logs.
We move slow so we wouldn't snapanything, taking short climbs
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and little traverses. Within 10 minutes the radio
squelch returned. It went from left to right like
someone was matching us on the contour.
Then it sounded above us, between short bursts from below,
like two people leapfrogging. We said nothing.
Dan stopped and gave 1/2 note bird call. 2 beats later the
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same 2 notes answered down the slope.
That wasn't a bird. It made my scalp crawl.
We didn't try a second test. We got small and kept going.
The Ridge flattened at a shallowsaddle where the wind didn't
push much. The smell of camp fuel rolled
through with the usual leaf rot,sharp and chemical in a way that
doesn't blend into a forest. Through the green we could make
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out a blue tarp strung low, a white 5 gallon bucket, a scuffed
cooler, and a few cut branches stacked the wrong way.
When I say wrong, I mean they looked placed instead of
dropped. A man stepped out from behind
the tarp, holding a camp shovel across his hands like a bat.
He wasn't the camo guy from the junction, but he had the same
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wired look. Thin jaw working, eyes not
settling. He said, trails closed like he
was reading it off a wall. No patch, no hat, no
explanation. Dan raised both hands to show
empty palms and said, We're heading to the main Ridge.
The guy didn't move. A radio crackled somewhere
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behind him and he glanced towardit.
We used the look away and backedinto the brush at an angle.
Not straight down, not straight up.
Every branch felt loud, even though we were trying to set
each foot like we were in a library.
We gained maybe another 100 feetand started a slow side hill
toward where the paper map showed the Nolan Divide tread.
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The radio kept up, now closer, now farther, like they couldn't
decide how to play it. When we reached a lump of rock
with a little open dirt on top, my phone showed a sliver of
signal, one bar that kept blinking in and out.
I called the park's emergency line.
I told the dispatcher our names,that we were near Deep Creek,
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that we had passed Tom Branch Falls and Indian Creek Falls
hours ago, that we had seen fresh holes a mile past our
site, and that we were now on a Ridge with a saddle and a blue
tarp camp near it. I gave plain language direction
of travel off the loop toward the Nolan Divide and said we
could hold position. The dispatcher asked for
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clothing descriptions, our general condition, and told us
to stay put, stay quiet, and notto go back toward any
unauthorized camp. We ended the call with a plan.
We would wait in place, watch, and not make ourselves easy to
find. Those two hours felt longer than
the hike in. We didn't talk, we didn't eat.
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We didn't want to open wrappers.The radio sounds came and went
below us. Once we heard quick steps that
turned into a rush, then stopped.
It wasn't a bluff or a show. It was like someone moving to
test if we would bolt. We didn't.
The sound moved away again. I watched a small square of sky
through the leaves. It didn't feel dramatic.
(54:26):
It felt like waiting for a dentist to call your name when
you know the news is bad. When they came, they came quiet.
I saw a flash of green first, then two people in uniform
slipping through the brush, one with a dog and a county deputy
behind them. They didn't shout.
They paused every few yards to look and listen.
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The way people look and listen when they know the ground better
than you do. The radio noise below us
changed. It went from casual pops to
short sharp bursts. 2 men broke from the tarp camp almost at the
same time, one along the contour, one straight down a
draw. The dog went down slope with the
deputy, The other Ranger cut left to try to head off the one
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on the contour. I didn't see a big tackle or
anything out of a movie. What I saw was a lot of
controlled movement and then a long section where it was just
quiet again. The Rangers waved us down an
hour later and walked us out on official tread.
No more shortcuts, no more spurs.
Back on Deep Creek, it felt likethe day should have had a crowd
(55:30):
again, but it didn't. We reached the lot in the
evening. The Ranger who did most of the
talking took our statements and thanked us for calling with
clear details instead of trying to handle it ourselves.
He said they'd been looking for a small group who were digging
roots and trying to keep hikers away from their setup when they
were working a section. The cables, he said, were
(55:51):
pulled. Across.
To redirect traffic and to slow anyone chasing them, he gave us
a card with an incident number and told us the area might get a
temporary closure while they swept hazards and hauled out the
junk. We went home that night.
I slept hard but woke up with myjaw sore from clenching.
A week later, the park posted a short closure notice for a part
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of the loop while they finished the sweep.
About a month after that, there was a public note that a few
people had been arrested in connection with root poaching in
the Deep Creek area and charged with trespass and interference.
None of that felt like a victorylap.
It felt like confirmation that our heads weren't inventing
things in the dark. Since then, Dan and I both.
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Bought bright orange caps for shoulder season and made one
rule that we don't bend if we hear radios.
Shadowing us from 2. Directions, or if anyone tries
to steer us with makeshift gatesor strange instructions without
a uniform to back it up, we turnaround right then.
No argument, no pride. I'm not posting this to be
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dramatic. I'm posting it because the signs
were there from the start, the radio going quiet when we walked
up on the junction, the fresh holes, the footsteps that
matched our voices. We didn't want to admit what it
meant until we had a cable at our chest and a voice telling us
to go back where we were easiestto manage.
(57:18):
If you're planning Deep Creek this fall, enjoy it.
It's a good. Loop when people are there to
use it the right way. Just pay attention to the small
things that repeat. Don't get funneled by someone
else's setup. Don't be curious about the wrong
kind of camp. And if you realize you're part
of a shape that someone else drew, climb out of it as fast
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and as clean as you can. I've day hiked Linville Gorge
for years. And always told myself I didn't
need to sleep on the rim to respect it.
I'd hit Table Rock for lunch. Drop.
To the river when levels were low and end days at Wiseman's
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view to let my head settle. I knew the pull offs on old NC
105, the way the gravel washboards worse after rain and
which little side paths punched through Laurel to reach a clean
overlook. I also knew my habits.
Check weather twice, carry a paper map with mile notes, and
pack an air horn because noise carries better than yelling.
(58:22):
What I didn't know. What I had never.
Tested was how the rim feels at 2:00 in the morning when the
brush holds still and a man you met at dusk has a reason to come
back. My buddy Tyler talked me into
the. Overnight, he wanted sunrise
from Wiseman's view. And.
Then a quick scout towards shortoff mountain.
Mid November felt right leaf offquiet, cold enough to empty the
(58:44):
crowds. We checked the Forest Service
site before we left. No burn ban posted for that
area. We planned a small cook fire in
an existing ring. Nothing that would throw sparks
and we'd let it burn down early.He brought his tripod and the
big flashlight he uses for lightpainting.
I brought a small Med kit, extraheadlamp, batteries, and a copy
(59:06):
of our route in a zip bag. The gravel Rd. was empty enough
that we saw. Only one other vehicle in the
last mile we eased into a pull. Off I'd used for day.
Hikes. Nothing special, just a spot
where the brush opens to a faintpath toward a broad ledge.
We walked in a short ways and found an old ring on scraped
soil. The view across the Table Rock
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was clean, river down in shadow.We pitched the tent, guide it
low because the wind cut straight across the rim and got
the fire going in the ring long enough to cook ramen and take
the edge off. I was measuring water and
fussing with the stove when he came out of the Laurel.
He was lean. Older than me by 10.
Or 15 years blaze cap orange work vest, a cheap handheld
(59:52):
radio clip to a strap. No belt gear, no badge, no
sidearm. He didn't introduce himself, he
didn't ask where we were from. He opened with burn ban
enforcement sweep. Y'all are lucky I found you on
the spot. Cash saves you a drive to town.
He produced a laminated card. It had a green seal on it that
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didn't look like any seal I've seen on a federal credential.
The Prince sat a little left of center, like someone ran it
through too fast and called it good enough.
No raised anything, no unique number.
My stomach went cold in the sameway it does when you realize you
left your wallet at a gas pump. I said we'd be happy to take
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care of any citation online and asked for his name badge or
employee number and which officehe was with.
He just tapped the card with hisfinger.
I repeated the question and toldhim we'd checked the website
that morning. He didn't like that.
His mouth made a tight line and he took a step closer and raised
his chin like he was lining me up under the brim.
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Rangers don't come out here after dark, he said.
You boys keep it safe. It read like a rule he knew we'd
assume was true. He backed out the way he came,
feet finding gaps between stems without looking as he turned the
radio on. His chest squelched.
No voice, just a test. Maybe he was gone in seconds.
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Tyler let out a breath and shookhis head.
Guys full of it. He said, and tried to go back to
talking about morning light angles.
I let the fire die down to coalsand put half my water on to make
sure we had enough hot bottles for the bags.
We went over what we'd say if hecame back.
No cash, name and unit. If he claimed authority, we'd
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break out the air horn if he tried to push past us.
I put the card he'd flashed in azip bag, even though it wasn't
ours, just in case he dropped one or forgot it on purpose.
The temperature kept dropping. The sky opened with stars.
The road behind the brush went quiet enough that any engine
would carry. A little after full dark, I saw
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it. A blue light pulsed through the
brush at. Shoulder.
Height. It wasn't the warm blink of a
dying headlamp, and it wasn't a steady beam.
It was the same kind of cold blue you get from cheap LED
strips or the quick wake of a phone screen.
It hung for two long. Beats and went out.
Then it blinked again from a slightly.
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Different. Angle.
I waited for 1/3 pulse and it didn't come.
Our guy line started singing like a guitar string hit with a
nail. I crouched by the corner stake
and my fingers slid over slick line.
That wasn't our cord. It was clear monofilament.
Looped. Twice around our guy and snugged
under itself with a neat little tuck.
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Brand new. The knot had been tied in good
light by hands that knew what they were doing.
I told Tyler I was going to check the corridor we came in on
with red light only. As soon as I stepped out, the
brush swallowed the camp's little glow.
I kept the beam low and close, 10 paces down the path, the
ground open to the broad ledge Iknew.
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Freshly cut stem stuck out alongboth sides of the faint track,
bright wood showing where bark used to be.
Someone had trimmed them at a consistent height, like lane
markers, only shin high and aimed at the kind of feet that
wander toward edges at night across the path at that height,
another run of clear line, not asnare for an animal.
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It was set where legs swing through.
The radio squelched again, but this time there was a whisper
that rode the noise. They're still at the ring, Move
in slow. Tyler hadn't heard it.
He was stuffing his camera into his pack.
I motioned him out to me and lethim listen for the next one.
It came after a full minute. Slow, the voice said, and I
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could tell he was working to keep it low.
A small stone tapped my boot, not thrown hard, just enough to
see if I'd jump. I didn't.
I put the stone in my pocket like I needed one more useless
thing to carry. Running straight out would put
us across that trip line and onto leaves that would slide
toward exposed rock. Staying meant they could pick
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how to come at us. Going loud might spook them, but
it might also bring the wrong kind of attention.
We did the only thing that felt honest.
We killed the fire all the way. We packed in silence, red lights
only. We taped loose straps with small
strips I keep in my kit. Tyler broke his tripod down and
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shouldered it like a stick. I clipped the air horn to my
shoulder strap and put fresh batteries in my main headlamp.
Because strobe mode drains fast,we didn't take the marked
corridor back. We cut low and side hilled
parallel to the road, moving through Laurel at knee speed.
The brush crowded my sleeves andscratched my hands every 10
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steps. We stopped and listened.
The blue light drifted parallel off our right shoulder, like it
was trying to line up with our pace without getting any closer.
Every so often it blinked once, then nothing for a while.
Whoever held it understood enough to show us, just enough
to remind us he was there. My trekking pole hit a second
line across another faint lane, lower this time closer to ankle
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height. I clipped it with a knife tip
and pocketed the length. The knot was different, but just
as clean. We kept moving, feeling for
ground that didn't crunch and keeping our feet on the edges of
bare soil where we could find it.
The road's shape came up as a darker band.
Gravel edges feel different under boots than Duff and rock.
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We stood still and let our breathing settle.
A low idle hummed to our right. With no lights on, I peered
around a cluster of stems and saw the squared shape of a
pickup nosed out toward the downhill grade.
The rear plate was folded up under the bumper or on a hinge.
There was no mistake in it. We kept our lamps off and eased
left toward the nearest pull offwhere there's a map board.
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Once we had open space behind us, we raised our headlamps to
low and drew a clean line acrossthe gravel with our own light so
we weren't stepping blind into anything.
That's when he stepped into our cones.
Blaze cap orange vest, same man.He held a shovel upright and let
his hand rest on the grip like it was a cane.
You gentlemen. Oh, he started.
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I didn't let him finish. I punched my headlamp to strobe
center chest and then up toward his face so he'd have to look
away. Tyler laid on the air horn.
Short blasts, three in a row, then a longer 1.
The sound hit flat and hard across the cut.
The man flinched and raised a shoulder like the noise hurt.
I said loud and clear, Calling 911 for Burke County.
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We're at the wise men's view. Pull off plate is obstructed.
Two males attempting to collect cash.
I pulled the folded map from my chest pocket and read the
nearest mile note into the phonewhile the line rang.
He backed into the brush. The truck didn't flash lights
or. Lurch.
It just rolled backward in a slow creep and then coasted down
the grade until the idle sound faded.
(01:07:03):
The dispatcher answered and I gave her our names.
What we saw the trick with the plate and the line across the
path. She told us to stay in a well
lit area if possible and to keepour backs to something solid.
We stood with the map board against our shoulders and kept
our headlamps pointed at the dark edge of the pull off so
anything that stepped through would have to step into light. 2
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units arrived after midnight. They were calm in a way I
appreciated. First question, were we injured?
Second, did he touch us or take anything?
We handed over the laminated card I'd bagged, the
monofilament I'd cut, and the photos I'd taken of the guy line
with my glove for scale. One deputy walked us back to the
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corridor and took his own photos.
He crouched to look at the freshcuts along the path and the
placement of the line across theShin Zone.
He didn't have to say it. The setup told its own story.
He radioed the details back to whoever logs these things and
asked us to write statements. He said they had heard rumors of
people trying to collect cash for on the spot fines in the
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woods, but hadn't been able to get a clean report with
evidence. A Forest Service law enforcement
officer met us in the morning. He took the card, photographed
front and back, and shook his head at the fonts and the seal.
He told us straight there are nocash fines in the field.
For something like a campfire inan existing ring.
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Even if a violation happens, it goes through a process and you
don't pay. A stranger in the dark next to a
truck with the plate hidden. He walked the corridor with us
and marked the anchors where theline had been tied.
He took our contact info and told us to expect a follow up.
A week later the deputy emailed.Same truck, same folded plate
trick. Two men stopped on another
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stretch of the rim after someonecalled in a suspicious situation
at a pull off. They matched our description
down to the Blaze cap. And vest.
Charges attempted fraud, tampering with natural features,
harassment. The truck was impounded on the
spot. Pending the.
Case He attached a case number and the business card for the
Forest Service officer in case we needed to coordinate for
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statements. He thanked us for staying calm
and for bringing the map notes into the call I didn't know what
to do with. That so.
I just wrote back that I was glad no one fell.
A safety notice went up online and at kiosks a few days after
that. The language was plain.
If someone asks you for cash in the woods, don't pay.
(01:09:36):
Call it. In Old NC, 105 got a little more
attention. For a few weekends.
I saw more official rigs parked at odd hours.
I don't know if that lasted, butI know it helped.
Right then. Tyler wanted to go back as soon
as the e-mail landed. I waited a month.
We chose another cold, clear morning and drove up before
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dawn. We skipped the fire and sat on
the ledge by Wiseman's view witha thermos each.
The river was just a long sound.Far.
Below, the wind pushed across the cut in a steady way.
Tyler set up and took his shots.As the line of light moved down
the far wall toward Table Rock, I closed my eyes and let my
shoulders drop. No blue flashes in the brush, no
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radio squelch, no crunch of someone testing lanes through
Laurel. Just a clean morning on a piece
of ground that doesn't need muchfrom anyone.
When people ask how it got that far without a fight, I tell them
we had an air horn, a strobe, and a plan.
That's true, but I think the real answer is that we listened
when the little thing started tostack up.
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The wrong card, the wrong words,the quiet detail of a folded
plate, the line around our guy line, and the careful trimming
of stems along a path to a drop.None of those alone would have
been much together. They were enough to say it out
loud, even if only to each other.
This is not an accident. I still carry a paper map with
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the. Mile.
Notes and I still keep the air horn on my strap.
I don't hold the rim responsible.
For men who. Work angles out there, it's just
a road and a line of stone. And.
A lot of brush that hides you until it doesn't.
The night of the blue light didn't cure me of staying out
late, it just trimmed the way I move.
If you camp above the river and someone steps out wearing a vest
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and a smile that doesn't meet his eyes, ask for a name and a
number. Then stand where your voice
carries and your light reaches the road.
If a fee is real, you'll have a real way to pay it that doesn't
run on bills in the dark. And if a stone taps your boot
from the brush, don't step wherea stranger wants your foot to
land.