Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Hey guys, it's Chris here. If you're a fan.
Of the podcast. Then you're in for a treat.
Unnerved is now on Patreon. This is a great place.
To not only support the podcast.But also gain access to.
All our episodes completely ad. Free for just $1.00.
A month. Check out our higher tiers for
(00:22):
more exclusive content made special for the unnerved
community. Try it out and you can cancel at
any time. Visit Patreon dot.
Com forward slash. Unnerved.
Podcast or click. The link in the show notes your
support goes a long way to. Keep this podcast.
Going and I really appreciate it.
(00:43):
Thank you so much. This ball of light starts to
creep upwards above the tree line, and then the whole thing
just exploded like in this blinding light.
According to our watches, it wasseveral hours that went by him
that was baffling. It either didn't happen or we
saw something we probably shouldn't have from HV Studio.
(01:08):
This is unnerved. Welcome back to the Unnerved.
(01:34):
Podcast. It's where normal people share
their. Abnormal Stories.
And if you enjoy true stories ofthe strange and terrifying, then
you're in the right place. I'm your host, Chris Fricke.
When was the last time you were in a place that felt completely
(01:59):
secluded away from civilization?Growing up in Nebraska in the
country, this was fairly easy toaccomplish for me.
I was fortunate enough to have nearby access to hundreds of
acres of land where I could hikewithout seeing a single person
(02:22):
for miles. The seclusion from others and
the hustle and bustle of the city are crucial for mental
recovery, and one of the best ways to do this is typically by
camping. Camping may seem like the
perfect way to escape and be alone, but even when people are
(02:47):
out of sight, a different kind of presence may present itself.
In today's story, Boris and his friend were camping in a
secluded area where they were confronted by a mysterious light
(03:08):
and not only left them perplexed, but also seemed to
warp space and time. This is his story.
I'm Forrest Smith. This story took place in the
summer of 2005 in a remote Alpine lake known as Swagger
(03:29):
Lake in central Idaho. The summer of 2005, I just
graduated from high school and didn't really have a lot of
responsibilities, was just kind of using the summer before I
went to college to just have funand go camping and, you know,
just waste time. A friend of mine, Wayne and I
decided to spend the day fishingat a lake called Upper Swagger
(03:52):
Lake, and that's deep in the Lost River mountain range in
Idaho. That lake is, it's very remote,
it's very hard to get to and it's it's really only visited
by, you know, locals in the areathat are aware of it.
And it's it's at the end of a really long kind of dry Canyon.
It's not an easy task to actually get up to this lake.
(04:14):
It it takes about 100 miles if you're driving from the nearest
large town which is Idaho Falls and then you've got to do some 4
wheel driving up some dirt roadsfor a couple miles and then when
you get to the trailhead you've got to hike another 2 miles and
you you know about 1000 foot elevation gain on that hike.
It's it's pretty grueling once you get up there.
(04:40):
You're just about above the treeline and you can see all the
bald peaks of the Little Lost River range.
It's so nice and secluded and quiet.
It's it's well worth the the hassle of getting out there.
That day we got in around noonish and set up camp and then
(05:01):
we just spent the rest of the day fishing and hanging out and,
you know, chatting. It's not unusual on federal, you
know, public ground to hear people, you know, target
shooting, you know, especially in rural areas, you know, people
target shooting is just one of the normal things that they do.
(05:22):
We kept hearing this periodic blast coming up from the the
Canyon and we just figured it was somebody target shooting.
But it was really loud. It had to have been a large
caliber muzzle loading rifle. You know, it was just, it was
huge at first how far away it was and and these blasts were
(05:43):
spaced out long enough. We knew that, you know, they
probably were manually reloadingand you know, putting in powder
and all that stuff. So it it really didn't throw us
off initially. We were just, you know,
somebody's out shooting guns andwe're off fishing in the
mountains. Nothing, nothing to worry about.
It was we basically put it out of sight, out of mind, and we
were just periodically interrupted with these
explosions as we fished throughout the day.
(06:05):
Nothing really eventful happenedfor the rest of the day.
Towards the evening, when the the lights started to get a
little bit dim, we still could hear these spaced out
explosions. And it was getting to the point
where if you're target shooting at night, it's really dangerous.
You know, you don't know what's beyond your sights.
You, you just don't do it. It's irresponsible.
(06:28):
We kept hearing these explosionsand we were getting ready to,
you know, get ready for dinner and settle down around the
campfire. And my buddy Wayne, kind of, you
know, taps me on the shoulder and he, he points down into the
Canyon. And you can't really see
anything down in the Canyon. It was towards the direction of
(06:48):
the last explosion. But there was a light down in
the Canyon, you know, from the angle of the trees and the
shadows and the way it was positioned, you, you couldn't
see the source of the light, butyou could tell that it was way
off the ground. And it was kind of moving
through the Canyon. Like the shadows were kind of
(07:09):
creeping around and it was high up.
And it was so bizarre like you. You've never, I've never seen
anything like that. It was just very, very strange.
So we just sat there and watchedit, watched this light move
through the Canyon. There was, there was no, there
was no sound. It was all, you know, absolutely
(07:30):
silent as this thing moved around.
And then there was another big explosion like we've been
hearing throughout the day. And this one, actually, I could
feel it like reverberate my chest, like it felt like it was
a lot closer. And when that explosion
happened, the whole Canyon lit up like it was daylight, like it
was just super bright. And then it it went back down to
(07:51):
just that normal background light that it was.
It was showing. We sat there kind of like unsure
of what what is going on becausethis is unlike anything we've
ever seen. 10 to 15 minutes later, this ball of light starts
to creep upwards above the tree line and it just keeps kind of
(08:19):
raising up. And then it's it's about eye
level of where we are on the horizon and then it just kind of
keeps going up another maybe 100feet or so.
And it's hard to estimate the size, but this ball of light and
sparks and you know whatever it was, it was about 20 to 40 feet
in diameter. It was.
It was pretty good size and it just kind of stops.
(08:44):
It had to have been maybe 300 yards from us up in the air.
You know, we're just watching. It's like a little, it was
almost like a little sun that was up in the sky and you know,
it had had like these little feathers of sparks that would
occasionally jump out of it. And it was the surface kind of
shimmered and danced. It was like looking basically.
(09:05):
I get a little sun. It was really weird.
Wayne looks back at me and I'm looking at him and I I the only
thing I could do is just shrug my shoulders and like, I I have
no idea what we're looking at. Like this is totally out of the
realm of anything I've ever, ever seen.
And after a few minutes the the ball just kind of freezes up,
(09:28):
like the surface stopped kind ofshimmering and there there was
no more sparks. It just stopped and everything
was still. There was no sound.
There was nothing. And then the whole thing just
exploded, like in this blinding light.
(09:59):
The explosion just shook everything and I could feel it.
Like in my skull, it was just massive.
It was just a massive explosion in the sky.
Wayne and I instinctively, like,jumped into the dirt, you know,
and covered our heads because, Imean, what else can you do, you
know? That light from that thing was
so bright. It felt like I didn't even have
(10:21):
my eyelids closed. Like it just, it was so intense.
And even if, even though I had my head down in the ground, it
was just so bright, the next thing I know, it's gone.
It's absolutely dark. It's silent.
You know, there's nothing in thesky except stars.
It's just, it's gone, you know, the whole event couldn't have
(10:47):
been, you know, maybe a couple of seconds long, but it felt
like forever, you know, for thiswhole thing that happened.
But it couldn't have been more than 510 seconds from the
explosion to when we looked up and saw that there wasn't
anything there. So now we're just kind of alone
in the dim light and picking ourselves up off the ground.
And, you know, I'm just like, what was that Wayne?
(11:11):
And he just kind of, he kind of laughed, but he didn't say
anything, you know, he just kindof chuckled.
And that was kind of it. We we surveyed the camp and kind
of the surrounding areas, 'cause, you know, with all the,
with all the sparks, this thing was dropping off of it.
You know, we figured there mightbe like some brush fires or
something, but we never, we never did see anything firewise,
which is lucky for us. You know, the only thing that
(11:35):
was really off about the whole situation was it was twilight
when this thing came up above the tree line.
And when we actually checked ourclocks, you know, after that,
this thing exploded, it was like2 in the morning.
(12:00):
That was baffling, you know, That was truly, really weird.
At the time, Wayne had been cooking some fish and some other
stuff, and that fish was completely cinders, you know, in
the pan on the campfire. I'm aware of the, you know,
(12:21):
phenomenon of missing time and everything.
Like, I've heard stories about that, but it just doesn't seem,
it just doesn't seem possible. Like the stupid thing exploded,
we fell into the dirt and then picked ourselves up and that was
it. But it, you know, according to
our watches, it was several hours that went by.
It was really, I've never experienced anything like that
before. It was very strange.
(12:44):
You know, we didn't really have the mental capacity to kind of
process what what had just happened.
So I just went to bed, as weird as that sounds like.
It's not like we left and just went hiking through the night to
get back to the the trail hit oranything.
It's just like I'm going to go to bed.
I'm not dealing with this crap. So I went to bed and and you
(13:08):
know nothing happened. I just had a really deep deep
sleep and woke up in the morningyou know, the sun and and Wayne
was already out fishing by the time I I'd woken up and you know
I kind of asked him like what doyou think happened last night?
He said, well it either didn't happen or we saw something we
probably shouldn't have, I don'tknow.
(13:30):
But maybe Marvin Martian was trying to kill us, you know, and
we just both kind of laughed about that and there there
wasn't any kind of like panic you know with us or any kind of
like urgency to get out of there.
So we we fished for a few more hours that morning and and you
know we we did decide against our you know, our judgment to
not camp there again that night.So we we packed up and we headed
(13:52):
back down before the sunset. But we we didn't stay another
night like we had planned on. Now that the years have.
(14:22):
Passed. Do you have any more guesses or
insight as to what you think it may have been?
I've tried to piece together what it possibly could have been
and the only kind of scientific explanation I could ever find
was like ball lightning, which seems to fit kind of exactly
(14:44):
what it was. But you know there were there
were no clouds in the sky. It was it was a nice summer day.
So you know I I it's hard to sayand I I do have a bit of a
background in geology and I knowthat there's inactive fault
lines and with mountains and stuff there there can be
releases of of energy as you know the rocks move around and
(15:07):
it could be something like that but I mean it could also be just
the fact that I don't know I I kind of lean towards ball
lightning but it doesn't explainthat missing time that we
experienced and ball lightning doesn't tend to continuously
explode and throughout the day it it's usually kind of a one
(15:31):
time deal. So I I don't know tell you the
truth it's it's that's, you knoweven it's been almost 20 years
now and I I still don't have a perfectly good explanation for
it. If you've never heard of ball
lightning, it's a rare and unexplained phenomenon.
Described as a bright orb of lightning ranging in diameter
(15:56):
that usually appears during thunderstorms, it's known to
levitate above the ground while moving, regardless of wind
intensity or direction. It's even been described as
entering buildings and exploding, lighting the area on
fire or even injuring people in its vicinity.
(16:21):
Dustin Bonk met with a family today who had a close encounter
with a rare phenomenon called ball lightning, which entered
their home. The event happened about 30
years ago, but the Vashon familysays they'll never forget it.
White bluish ball come floating out of that room.
Joe Vashon of Gwynn came up close and personal with Ball
Lightning. He and his wife, Rose, were
(16:41):
entertaining friends. On a hot August day in 1980, Joe
was making a drink when he turned around.
I could. See a light white blue ball.
Just and there it was. You're speechless when it
happens. You you don't experience
anything except what's going in your eyes.
I was just staring. I I was in awe.
The ball entered the room from the hallway, floated about a
foot off the ground, and touchedthe TV, disabling it.
(17:04):
The whole event took about 15 seconds.
When the ball came into contact with the TV, it imploded with a
deafening bang and it shook the house.
It was just a very loud bang andpoop.
It was gone and everybody's kindof just standing there staring
at each other, looking. They describe it as about the
size of a soccer ball floating silently in the air.
(17:25):
Joe says it was a bright blue and white and looked more like
liquid. According to the American
Meteorological Society, ball lightning is rare, so online
footage is scarce and often low quality.
The Vachons have no footage of their encounter, but Joe says
he'll never forget it. If I was the only one that seen
it, I probably wouldn't even talk about it.
Be like a UFO. On that August day, there were
(17:46):
no thunderstorms until after theball was gone.
Thankfully, no one was injured. Then it just imploded with a
loud, loud bang. If Ball Lightning wasn't what
Forrest and his friend experienced that night, then
(18:07):
what else could it be? You could easily classify this
as a UFO encounter and it does have similarities to a previous
story episode. If you want to hear that story,
look up the episode titled Chased by UFO.
Now there are many sightings described as UFOs showing a
(18:30):
bright light, so this isn't necessarily uncommon.
But what is uncommon in Forest story is the loud explosion
sounds at this object repeatedlymade UFO crafts are usually
observed to be completely silent.
(18:50):
The repeated explosions that this craft created were very
strange, but it's not the only time the sounds of explosions
were heard in that area. I I remember reading some
stories about when Lewis and Clark initially went, you know,
because Lewis and Clark went through kind of that area like a
(19:11):
little bit farther north up in the in the mountains.
But if you read some of Lewis and Clark's diary entries, they
talk about being in the mountains in that area and
hearing these mysterious cannon shots that they described him
as, and they couldn't find a source of what was causing it.
But it was, it was a clear, bright day, and they just kept
(19:34):
hearing cannon shots. And that that story always stuck
with me too, because it it kind of describes close to like what
we were experiencing, you know, these loud explosions that were
out of sight on a clear day. And it's kind of comforting
knowing that Lewis and Clark hadto deal with something kind of
similar. They would have been the only
ones that could have gunpowder and and firearms and things of
(19:56):
that nature correct, like duringthat time.
Yeah, at that point it was just,yeah, it was just those guys
that had that kind of stuff. The strange noises that Lewis
and Clark heard were reported intheir journals in July of 18 O
5, Lewis's entry says. Since our arrival at the falls
(20:20):
we have repeatedly witnessed a noise which proceeds from a
direction a little to the north of West, as loud as resembling
precisely the discharge of a piece of ordnance of 6 lbs at
the distance of three miles. I was informed of it by the men
(20:41):
several times before I paid any attention to it, thinking it was
Thunder most probably which theyhad mistaken.
I am at a loss to account for this phenomenon.
Clark also mentioned this event in his journal, saying a
rumbling like cannon at a great distance is heard to the West of
(21:04):
us. The 'cause we cannot account.
Now it's worth pointing out thatthe 6 LB Ordnance that Lewis is
referring to was a large cannon that had to be driven around on
wheels. These were usually used by field
artillery, and as you can imagine, these cannons were very
(21:27):
loud and likely the only sound they could compare it to at the
time. And in that area, there
certainly wasn't a big enough gun to make a noise like that.
In the end, Lewis and Clark had no explanation for that sound.
Another strange phenomenon that that explosion seemed to trigger
(21:51):
was the unexplained loss of timethat Forrest and his friend
experienced. According to their watches,
several hours had gone by in theblink of an eye and their dinner
was part of the evidence. Right before the explosion
happened, the main explosion. Had your friend just put the
(22:13):
fish on the pan at that point, like soon before the explosion
happened, I guess. Like what period of time before
the explosion? How long had the fish been
cooking? He couldn't have been cooking it
for more than, you know, 5-10 minutes before you know, before
we stopped and just started watching this, this craft.
It wasn't long, certainly not long enough to turn it into a
(22:34):
charcoal briquette. So from your point of view is
few minutes big explosion, few seconds go by and then it's just
completely charred, like it's been there for hours.
Right. Yep.
Exactly. Stories of others that find
themselves move forward in time are few, but that doesn't mean
(23:00):
it's not possible in Forrest's case.
Others theorize that the missingtime that he witnessed may be
the result of the UFO being capable of using
interdimensional or anti gravitytechnology.
The time either slips or warps around the craft, causing space
(23:23):
and time itself to go haywire. Whether this theory is true or
not, the question still remains what was the mysterious light
that Forrest and his friend experienced at Swagger Lake?
(24:07):
Thanks again for listening to Unnerved if you enjoyed this
episode. Please share.
It with your. Friends and Leave a review
wherever you get your podcasts. And if you guys want to see.
Photos related to each episode, be sure.
To follow our Instagram at Unnerved.
Podcast. And for AD free episodes and
bonus content, visit patreon.com.
(24:31):
Forward. Slash Unnerved podcast.
Special thanks to Yvonne Brykovich for mastering this
episode. Until next time, take care.