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November 19, 2025 46 mins
Tonight’s guest, Steven Berrios, has had multiple Sasquatch sightings but his most recent one happened about a month ago. On tonight’s show, Steven is going to focus on sharing some of the things he’s learned about Sasquatch, over the many years he’s been investigating them, and he’s going to tell you about his first sighting. We hope you’ll tune in and listen to him do that. 

If you’ve had a Bigfoot sighting and would like to be a guest, on the show, please go to https://MyBigfootSighting.com and let us know. We’d love to hear from you. 

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Show's theme song, "Banjo Music," courtesy Nathan Brumley

I produce 4 other shows that are available on your favorite podcast app. If you haven't checked them out, here are links to all 4 channels on the Spreaker App...

Bigfoot Eyewitness Radio… https://www.spreaker.com/show/bigfoot-eyewitness-radio_1 

Dogman Encounters…  https://www.spreaker.com/show/dogman-encounters-radio_2 

Dogman Tales…  https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/dogman-tales--6640134

My Paranormal Experience…  https://www.spreaker.com/show/my-paranormal-experience 

Thanks for listening!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hey, you there, thanks for tuning in.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
You're ready for another episode of My big Foot Sighting.

Speaker 1 (00:08):
All right, then let's do this.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
Seen a bunch of run down, no horse towns where
the church is the backbone, lows and the bow and
the fasting melodies coove in with the bone man rose
with the roofs, run deep beyond the nose of the
busy streets with the songs of the South of s.

(00:32):
Then and I hear the prompt Poch picking down home
rhythm bringing out I Don't Run from Banjung music.

Speaker 4 (00:43):
Yeah, summon.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
If you'd like to be able to listen to the
show without ads and have full access to bonus content,
that's an option. To find out how, please go to
my Bigfoot Sighting dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
My most recent they've put sighting happened a month ago,
and this happened in California in an undisclosed area that
I can't mention right now. And before I talk about
this encounter that I had, I wanted to just go

(01:23):
back so you know a little bit about me, have
a little bit of background of where I'm coming from. First,
my name is Steven Barrios, also known as Knox Him,
which is my Native American name. And I was a teacher,
a science and naturalist teacher for thirty four years right
here in California. And I'm semi retired now. And I

(01:49):
say semi retired because I still go out in the
field and do hands on nature science and still track
and do a lot of a lot of a lot
of a lot of tracking of different animals in my bioregion.
And you know, as a thirty four year veteran naturalists,

(02:12):
you know, I've been around right here in northern California
most of the time. I got my start in Snol
Wilderness in Premont, California, and then from there I went
to the Hayward Shoreline as a naturalist doing doing marshland ecology,
and in that area is really interesting because there's a

(02:34):
lot of animals that are always walking around in the mudflats.
So as a tracker, learning my skill is because I
do a lot of flaster tracking of creatures and I
was also teaching tracking classes there, so you know, I
was able to develop my skill plaster casting, and it's

(02:54):
an art skill that I do to this day. And
it was like one of my main stays as a naturalist.
You know, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. I work with
groups of folks anywhere from sixth grade all the way
to college. And there's usually fifteen in my group with

(03:17):
two chaperons, and I'm out there teaching them about nature
and ecology, you know, Sierra Nevada Mountains. And one of
my main things on Thursdays is okay, you know, there's
like a leave no trace or don't take anything from nature.
As a science teacher, you know, I wanted people to

(03:38):
learn about nature. And one of the ways that I
could do it is that on that Thursday, I teach
them how to do animal tracks. So folks that came
with me all those times, they learned how to do
animal tracking. And you know, it's a wonderful thing hiking
around with fifteen kids and two chaperons all those years.

(04:02):
But now that I'm retired, you know, I'm thirty five,
I'm sixty five years old. Now I relish the opportunity
to go out on my own now in the Sierra
Nevada Mountains. You know, several years ago now, I did
come across the Sasquatch there, and I want to talk

(04:24):
about that another time actually, because we're talking about the
more recent time right now, And folks, I do this
for a living. You know, I go out in nature.
I don't watch too too much TV. I make sure
that I you know, if I'm watching TV, I'm giving

(04:46):
nature an equal time zone so that I balance what
I feel is my bi rhythms and equilibrium. So I
spend a lot of time outside and that's one of
the reasons why I became a naturalist in the first place.
And you know, I do have a master's degree in
science education that's for science and recreation and AA in art.

(05:12):
So my career I was able to blend all these
things together and be a feature of nature. But like
I said, now, nowadays I'm I'm more or less a
freelance naturalist and I enjoy going out in nature alone.
Now look at I'm a professional naturalist, so I don't

(05:32):
advise any people to go. You know, there's always safety
in numbers. However, you know, like I said, this is
something that I've been doing for many, many years. And
you know, thank the Creator I keep coming back and
allows me to come back. I've been able to go
out there and track a lot of you know, interesting

(05:54):
beautiful animals here in California, outlying black bear, packs of coyotes, wolves,
and and now just most recently attracted sasquatch. So this
is my recent Sasquatch encounter Bickford. You know, people call

(06:20):
you call I like the name Sasquatch. I just love
that name. And I have to tell you how this
came to be. It's it's an amazing story to me
even right now. And you know I've been I was
retired from my job up in the Sierra about the
mountains for you know, three or three years. So I

(06:43):
was living in Calaveras County, living with my uncle at
that time, and I was out there at Lake Comanche
at this particular time, and I was tracking a black
bet that was, you know, not too far away from
from where we were at, and you know, I wanted
to plaster casts a few of those beautiful black bear tracks.

(07:06):
So it's falling around this black bear, and I got
a phone call actually from one of my cousins who
was telling me that they were telling me that, you know,
my godson, who was a trucker, was driving through a
remote area here in California, and as he drove by,

(07:30):
he came across the Sasquatch and he's a trucker and
he had to stop. And you know, he was a
skeptic at that point in time. He even japped me
at how I was such a believer in it, because
you know when skeptical people that's that's just that's just

(07:50):
the way they are until they see it for themselves. Right. So, anyway,
he came across the Sasquatch and it was like at
three o'clock in the morning. And then the next day
he gave me a phone call and you know, I'm
his godfather. He said, Nino, Nino, we don't have any

(08:12):
twelve foot gorillas in California.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Do we?

Speaker 4 (08:17):
And you know I just now whoa. My eyes just
lit up like you just you know, I've been waiting
for this opportunity. Now, another time I'll come on the
show and I'll tell you about my experiences with the
Sasquatch in the Sierra Nevada Mountain. This happens to taking
place in another area. However, I was waiting for my

(08:38):
opportunity because I'm always on the lookout or incredible report.
You know. Uh, you know, my tracking bag is always
full as everything I need and it's always packed. It's
my plaster of Paris, my ho horiy, water containers, mixers,

(08:59):
you name it that I need in there. It's in
there first aid kit. So when my gutson told me
that he had seen this sasquatch, and you know, okay,
soon as you've seen one, you know, your whole world changes.
You're never going to be the same. I think you're
even better than you were before. And the reason why

(09:21):
I say that is because of the multitudes of human
beings that we have here, You're one of the few
people that have actually seen it. So you just actually
went from a skeptic, a non experiencer, to a believer
and an experience er. It has split second, so it's
a it's an amazing phenomenon. And I'm gonna let you

(09:45):
know I have a master's degree in science. I don't
want to point that out all the time. I mean,
I'm proud of what my achievement is, but I'm letting
you know, man, I'm an absolute one hundred percent believer
and the saw squatch. And I'm going to continue why
and then you'll you'll you'll know why I'm I'm not

(10:07):
believer in this way. So I said to my godson,
give me the coordinates right now where where where did
this take place?

Speaker 5 (10:18):
You know?

Speaker 4 (10:20):
And you know, he said, and you know with Google
and everything, you know, we the internet and connections are well.
I got that. I got that message from him, you know,
And like I said, my bags are always packed, and
I just threw all my gear in my truck and

(10:42):
the next day I went out. I went out to
this area. And now, look, folks, I'm sixty five years old, right,
Like I said, this is something that I do. So
I don't recommend you going out there like I do.
Let me do my thing and I'll come back with

(11:02):
information for you if I'm allowed to come back. So
I went over there and I got on you know,
this Syria has the rest stop close by to proximity
where the subsquatch sighting was like seven eight miles away.

(11:30):
But so I was able to get close to where
I could park my truck. And then I had to
go into that forest, you know, and got my gear
and I went hiking in there, and then sure enough
I caught onto the Sasquatch's trail. And I'm going to

(11:52):
let you know, folks, you know, everybody, everybody in the world,
you know, Bigfoot, you know this big foot.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
You know, the toes are all perfect and and you
know everything that you could think of, like perfect footprints,
you know those are rare. You know, you have to
be like in a sandbar, you have to be like
in mud where this you know, close shoreline. You know
these creatures they live in higher altitudes than than then

(12:25):
we we go up.

Speaker 4 (12:28):
You know, we don't every result. Well, how can you
got find this and that? You know they live in
higher altitudes. We don't know go up there got be
tough man, and it's a little difficult, very difficult. So
we don't normally go into their habitat. But on this
particular day, I cut onto that trail and you know

(12:53):
we're talking okay, we're talking one thousand, two hundred foot level.
We're talking in oak woodland. And you know, it had
rained heavily for like five six days there in this
in this territory, and the ground was heavily saturated. So

(13:16):
when I got onto this trail, I found these really
highly unusual tracks. And when the reason why I were
highly unusual is because this area is an oak woodland,
but it's associated with the grassland. So the environment has
a lot to do with the way the tracks are

(13:38):
because the Sasquatch he weighs a lot. He's you know,
he's eleven footer, he weighed, he laying a thousand pounds,
big boy, big, big Sasquatch, big Sasquatch. And his footprints
he's so big and the ground was so saturated right
there that when he steps on the ground, man, he

(14:00):
the digits. I mean the ground squirts out on both sides.
And you know, and because it's not even terrain, he's
going up hill and he's going they're they're they're small hills. However,
you know there's a great there's a grade to the
hillside right there. In his big weight, he's slipping and sliding.

(14:20):
So some of these tracks. I was looking at him.
I was, oh, you know what, you know, I look
for abnormaladies in nature. Right I went in there, I go,
you know what if he's still here, he left Marx. Now,
a lot of people will always look at the high marks,
always looking at it, you know, eight foot trees, branches

(14:41):
that are snapped in two or whatever. This I got
lucky actually because you know, once I got onto his
trail and I had to go in there, I actually
found his feeding, his feeding grounds. And with this sasquatch
was doing in this particular time, is that he was

(15:04):
reaching in Okay, this hillside was just full of boulders
and he could he could reach in with his left hand.
They could pull boulders out that are bigger than bowling balls,
like their marbles. For one thing, now, a bear, you
know black bears in California. You know they have they

(15:26):
have nails and when they dig into the earth, they
go backwards. They they get their claws in there and
then they pull, they pull that that boulder. They go back.
They don't throw rocks forward. Their their their their claws
are designed to go backwards. So anyway, the sasquatch not
only can he pull out boulders and push him behind him,

(15:48):
he could pick them up and throw them in front
of the only creature that could do such a thing
is human being. But we can't even get close to that.
This creature can do in an area, you know, it
needs a lot of food, and you know this area

(16:09):
I was in actually there has a lot of excellent
carrying capacity for it, you know, food space, water, shelter,
and and he could sustained him and the family of
sasquatch as a matter of fact, it's not just one sasquatch,

(16:30):
big pat as you if you like to call him.
But so I went in there and I was actually
utterly amazed, now as the science teacher all these years
that came in there, and here I am, I'm finding
I'm finding these tracks, and I mean to me, I

(16:50):
hit the jackpipe because I look for stuff like this.
You know, I can't go into full detail on a
lot of the stuff off on how I was able
to google up further and actually connect with the sasquatch,
you know, maybe later even maybe maybe not right now.

(17:14):
Let me let me just tell you, you know, my
thoughts on it right now is that this area where
the sasquatch is feeding, you know, a black bear, Like
I'll go back to the black bear. They'll do a
few rocks and they'll push it backwards and they'll leave
whatever is in there really quick, and you know, and

(17:34):
then they'll they'll move forward. There's there's grubs in there,
right There's there's small little invertebrates that that that a
bear will eat, and they're omnivores, so they'll build lead,
they'll need anything that's in there. Well, this sasquatch this
feeding grounds is over seventy five yards in a single line.

(18:00):
That means that this subsquatch was actively pursuing prey by
pulling out these boulders, flipping them on the back, throwing
them on front, sticking his hands in the mud, right right, hands,
left hands in the mud, and in his feet, and
they were you know, like I said, it was really

(18:21):
slippery right there, so on the grass looked right there.
He was slipping and sliding, pulling out rocks, grabbing prey.
Now this prey isn't just grubs right there, there's a
whole line. So that's unbelievable amount of energy that's that
was in pursuit of prey. So we're talking small rodents.

(18:43):
We're talking you know, reptiles that are sleeping in there
because it was it was cold, so there were snakes
in there. We're talking grubs of various kinds of beetle grubs,
whatever was in there, my shoes, bowls, anything that this
sasquatch can get, he was getting. And what you and

(19:08):
I if we were going to pull out a boulder
and we were going to scoop up a mouth mouse
to put it in our mouth to eat, you know,
we would cut our hands. Our thumbs will beat, you know,
right next to right next to our fingers, and we
cup it and pull it into us. That's how a sasquatch.
That's that's what I learned after this sasquatch that he

(19:32):
goes in there, cups his hands, pulls whatever, and he's eating.
You know, he's an omnivor about it. Right here, you know,
he's eating whatever's in there. And there's probably also you know,
there was brodea bulbs in there. Another while animal foods
is the horse that it could eat. But I was

(19:53):
totally impressed with this area. I just couldn't believe it actually,
and that was I thought I was gifted. You know,
it's the kitted me of my naturalist science career. Here
I am in this one area and I have just
come across a big foot beating grounds. Well, like I

(20:16):
told you, I'm going, wa, man, you know, I'm having
my mind blone in many ways because the presence of
the sasquatch. You could just feel it around you can. Yeah,
the tracks are absolutely fresh, And I was going, well, man,

(20:40):
it's here, it's here, like I'm here, and you know
I am, I know, I got my backpack right then,
and then I plaster casts of my first track of
eight teen tracks that I have so far. And I

(21:03):
say so far because I'm actually getting ready for my
next expedition, which is going to be happening in another
week or two, and I'm actually going to get out again.
And so anyway, I saw this one track, my very

(21:24):
first track that I plaster casted. It was actually a
hand track. You know, it was so unusual. I looked
at that, and I was looking at it and wow,
you know, that's just so weird. I would have to
plaster cast this track, and sure enough it's a beautiful track,
and lifted it out of ball. Theer went in there
any scoop something up and really beautiful and impression. And

(21:49):
the thing with these tracks that I have is that,
you know, okay, now interesting. You know, Like I said,
I carry a lot of plaster and I carry my backpacks,
and I'm pretty pretty much equipped to do the job.
So I had to go in there with this subsquatch

(22:12):
always really looking by me, actually was speaking peeking behind me,
speaking in me. He was like, I've seen him and
he's seen me, and will I believe he let me
alone to just do what I what I was doing.

(22:33):
He was very curious, very looking at me behind trees.
But uh, I just started at that one point plaster
cast tracks and that first one right there, okay, that
was my first day encounter. And then wow, you know

(22:54):
that one track took me a lot of plaster. That's
another thing. You know, these plaster casts and tracks I have,
they all of them took three to four times more
plaster than I would do a black bear easily, easily.
And like I said, I saw this, I found this
heating grounds and I actually plaster casted more handprints than

(23:18):
I have footprints. They only have like six footprints. The
rest are hand prints. And you know they we had
ton right because okay, so I had to do them
one at a time, and this is like over a
ten day period. In the first day, boy, I'll tell you, okay,

(23:40):
came across the Sasquatch right away in the forest and
plaster casted that one track, and it was getting late,
so I went back. I had my trick and I
went to the rest stop, which I told you earlier
was like seven miles away from where this took place.
And I'm I'm in my truck at this rest stop.

(24:07):
I call it my favorite rest stop. Now, you know,
some people might not think that this is the Some
people probably haven't even countered this. I'm sure they have. Anyway, Liz,
sasquatch hiked around that mountain at seven miles and he

(24:28):
came right to my truck. And I couldn't sleep anyway
that night. I was like totally just incapacitated. I was
watching TV on my phone right or my body is
situated where my head is at my my steering wheel,

(24:51):
you know, my passing the doors facing out into the
into the wilderness in the mountains. That sasquatch came down
that mountain and he came right to my truck and
he looked right at me right through my window, put

(25:14):
his left hand on my truck window right there. His
right hand was on my quarter panel, and he had
a lean down because he's so big, he says, old
head was looking right at me through my window, and
you know, he was checking me out and I was
checking him out. I couldn't move. You're not you're not

(25:37):
going to be able to move or I was unable
to move. I was like totally incapacitated and fascinated looking
at it and it looked at me, which what I
thought was a smile at first, and I could, like

(25:58):
I said, there was no moving, There was no moving.
I couldn't. I actually felt like my stomach was the
game and not. And I looked at that sasquatch and earlier,
you know, I had a bunch of granola bars and
peanut butter bars right here and the it was in

(26:21):
the back of my truck. I forgot to bring them in.
Now they were all going to be for him anyway,
him and I because I do like, you know, peanut
butter cups and you know, stuff like that. So but
he right then he found the bag full of granola
bars and everything right in the back of the truck.

(26:41):
He grabbed it and he took a big bite out
of it. Now that's plastic, that's paper, along with the
granola bar, you know, the chocolate bars. He found it,
thinking about three or four of those. But he chewed that.
Didn't really like it. I didn't understand it. You know,

(27:02):
we wouldn't like that either. We take a big bite
of a plastic bag full of paper granola what the heck?
You know, lean back down and it looked at me,
and they didn't like that and the next look that game,
because I don't think it was very pleasant. Then he
went and he took off back in the forest and

(27:29):
I was just there in my truck. And let's just
say I had to get out of my truck for
a little while, right. I didn't drive away, believe or not.
You know, the rest unfortunately had a bathroom in there,
and I spent the rest three hours in the bathroom,

(27:50):
I believe. And then you know, it kind of shipped
me up in a way. It surprised me like crazy
to come out to my truck like that.

Speaker 6 (28:00):
But.

Speaker 4 (28:02):
I felt that I don't know what. I don't know
how to tell you this, but I said, you know what,
he isn't going to chase me away, you know, like
I've been looking for you my whole life, sasquatch. I'm
not leaving right now just because it came my truck
try to scare me away. So this turned into a

(28:27):
ten day tracking experience for me where I was able
to plastercast as many tracks as I have, and like
I said, I have more hand tracks to put tracks,
and I don't have a death wish or anything like that.
Like I said, I'm a little tract or an actimistic.

(28:49):
These are things that I'd like to do. I'd like
to spend my time in nature, hands on nature, me
and nature. Like right now, you know, the wintertime in California,
this is this is one I love. I'll love to
go out. You know, the harshest weather is going to
show you the best stop. So well, that's one of

(29:10):
the reasons why I'm heading out again right now. I'm
not just going after Sasquatch tracks. I'm after both tracks
black Bear. Muh, it's just just something I do. I
love to give Christmas gifts black Bear tracks for Christmas
gifts for friends and family. So each day that I

(29:37):
went out, there was a struggle to do to track
because each track that I plaster casted, each one weighs
more than your average track. So when you're tracking this thing,
you've got to go in there with a backpack, pull
of plaster, water, mixing, uh, your your digging material instruments

(30:00):
and everything, and then you know that has to dry.
So I was plaster casting one track, leaving it overnight,
coming back, putting another plaster cast in another, taking that
one out, rotating and going back and forth, back and forth,
back and forth, one, two, you know, just one after

(30:23):
another and a little difficult, but you know, it really
exhilarating just the thought of it, and then just knowing
that there's a sasquatch thereby you. It's gonna it's going
to your your alert elevation or at least mine, you're

(30:48):
going you're skyrocketing. You have adrenaline in there. Right, It's
been unexplainable in ways. Then you know, I was fortunate
to be in that one area. And okay, I'll have
to give you a little bit of a secret of
mine and said, okay, I did gift this creature a

(31:10):
few things, and it accepted them. And every time I
gifted it something, it gave me something back. It left
me little pyramid rocks and left me broken branches where
they don't belong. And it just let me know that

(31:33):
it was around, and I let it know that I
was around, you know, And I believe it just allowed
me to do with iused to cast my tracks and
I have twenty five as a goal. I have eighteen

(31:54):
right now, and you know, I actually might hope we
even get more than that, but I haven't hit it back. Dude,
to go tracking, like I said, and It's always a
tricky thing because you know, there's more than just a
saucequatch there. I mean, there is even the elements of

(32:14):
the landscape itself, you know, you know all this rain, landslides,
it's it's tough to rain. But I'll be all right.
Like I said, I have a friend of mine and
I let know where I go in. I go in
at a certain time, when I come back at a

(32:36):
certain time, so I do I have to do a
good connection there. And like I said, I'm sixty five
year old naturals now, so I don't go out in
the bush and spend the night like I used to
go out and go out, go in early and come
in or nightfall. That's my tracking days.

Speaker 5 (33:01):
So you know the.

Speaker 4 (33:04):
Sasquatch, Yeah, they're they're They're definitely a real, a real
you know what. I call them a humanoid creature because
the tracks that I have, you know, their hands are
quite similar to primates. And not only that they have
dermal ridges. Dermal ridges are spotted on these tracks that

(33:25):
I have, both with prints and ham Prince and just
the enormity of the tracks themselves, you know. So and
what I'm getting at now with these tracks is okay, well,
you know, because they do get asked play in the world.
What you want to do is such a do this
in track and you know with the hook you're risking

(33:48):
your life and all these things. And you know, as
a science teacher, you know, I have to let you
know that we have to mix and match. So the
more samples that you have of something to examine, the
more evidence that you have to examine with. So if

(34:11):
we have all these tracks, and you know a lot
of them are totally bizarre or unexplainable, they're actually they
can be explained and science can explain them. So we
have these tracks now, and you know these so we're all.
What I'm looking for in these tracks right now is

(34:34):
to get them analyzed by other trained professionals in the field,
whatever they may be, cryptozoology, uh, mammology, of primatology. I'd
like to get these hands examined.

Speaker 3 (34:52):
It.

Speaker 4 (34:52):
I believe there's a pH d gentleman a step a
step on, uh sorry, eno, I believe a primate and specialists.
I would like to have him take a good look
at the tracks that I have. But I'm more than
open to anybody to look at them. And I'm looking

(35:14):
to get them x ray because you know, these hands
that are going into the earth, you know, they're they're
they're they're incredible, the bizarre looking, you know, and so
you know, we've got to take the tracks to the
next level. So we're talking X ray, We're talking getting
them laser scan. Uh, we're talking having them all together

(35:39):
as a unit so people could actually look at them
and examine them. And like I said, uh, you know,
and the deep ecological, long term goal I believe that
we're thinking about here. It's okay, look at I'm not
I'm not in it to pro fame all that stuff.

(35:59):
I just know what I know. So I'm gonna let
you know what I know. And at some point this
animal should be registered as a as a legitimate creature
of science. Who does not want to be known by science.
You know, they're they're really shy creatures. They don't they

(36:24):
don't really want to have a whole lot of human beings.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (36:30):
And they're curious, right, They're curious enough to come and
check me out what I'm doing. And you know, I'm
looking in I'm thoughtful enough to them to know that
I'm not a threat to them, because they know what
they know, what guns are, they know what a threat is.

(36:52):
That's why a lot of these a lot of big
butt researchers out there, they play peekaboo because of the subsquatch.
You know, they're being intruded on. It's not like we're
invited just into their habitat. They're done that. What is
going on here? There's a lot of people, you know, researchers,
and okay, a lot of that has come to light

(37:14):
and we've come to this point and with all of
our collective experiences and photographs and tracks and you know,
we all you know, there's a lot of people that
come they see them now, and they're being seen across

(37:36):
this country and elsewhere in the world. You know, our
world is expanding, so naturally we're going to come across
them time to time, and we as a human species
need to think of other creatures out there. The santam
is the top of the food chain. It needs a
lot of space. So who said we need to preserve

(38:03):
not you know, not conserved, but actually preserve certain areas
where these animals they live, and there's an entire food
chain that goes along with them. So not only do
we protect the sasquatch. We protect every single animal that's
in an ecosystem. So I don't know, I don't know

(38:24):
if that's the bottom line or all I know is
that we have these tracks. You know, we'll get them
X rayed and checked out, and like I said, hopefully
at some point in time, you know, I'll tell you something.
Even in Washington State right now, Oregon, there is legislation

(38:45):
and there's signs and parks and there's a lot of
things going on out there. Yeah, so bigfoot folks out there. Uh,
just wanted to interest to you. Also. You know, our
human time, our good time is to go into parks

(39:06):
and things during the day and go with a few friends,
you know, and enjoy nature hikes. Things like that. You
see a sasquatch, Yeah, that's a wonderful thing. You know,
they'll go over asking them and things like that. That's
where I'm at with this sasquatch endeavor, this lifelong endeavor

(39:31):
of mine. I want to thank you for listening in.
I can tell you also right now that over a
ten day period, this sasquatch was able to and I
don't know how to explain it, but it was able

(39:54):
to communicate with me and let me know what it
was thinking. And that's why I came out. That's why
I was telling you earlier. You know that it knows,
it knows what, it knows what a hunter is. It
knows what a gun is. And when I go out there,

(40:16):
I don't carry a gun. That's one of the things
that the subsquatch actually checked me out on it. So
you're not a killer, I said, no, I'm no killer.
I'm a teacher. You know, he was asking me what
I want. Its voice is just so strong. You better

(40:39):
be prepared, you don't, you know. Yeah, that's another thing.
We're not prepared to hear such things. But you know,
I put myself in there in the line to hear that.
So it's voice is so deep and so strong that
it will if you're not ready for worry, it'll it

(41:01):
don't it'll make you shake your shoes. You know, you'll
you'll run, You'll have to your your fear factor will
be maximized. So they're they're actually, you know, nothing, full
with nothing. You know, they're they're the biggest things in
the forest. But some some reason you know that they

(41:24):
know they know that better not mess with us. We're
we're looking nothing but bad news for them. So it's
communication skills are absolutely phenomenal, by the way, and when

(41:46):
I left the mountains, I was being communicated with through
miles and miles being away and actually even for a
week afterwards, and then they didn't get any messages or
received anything from it. It is a busy creature. It

(42:11):
has to move, it has to go, and that's to
go where all the food resources are. So it's not
going to wait around for me all the time there.
But you know, I'm gonna go see if I could
get on his trail again, and good Lord willing, I'll

(42:32):
be able to come back share more of my research
with you. So I swell thank you for having me.

Speaker 3 (42:44):
Well that's it for tonight show. If you've had a
big Foot siding and would like to be a guest,
please go to my Bigfoot Siding dot com and let
us know. Thanks for listening. Have a great night seeing
a bunch of run down new host towns where the
Church of the Backbone loos and in the fasting melodies
coove in, but the bomb Man rose with a roosse

(43:08):
run deep beyond the nose of the busy streets, with
the songs of the south of su Then I mean
I hear the promp porch picking down home rhythm, bring
a nut. I don't run from Banjong music. Yeah, the

(43:29):
sound of a memory brings me back to the bluegrass
playing the Madadi jack.

Speaker 7 (43:36):
It's become any been through it, getting through the day
on scrubs and skags, bucking name bears through this Tennessee jams.
There's no the way that I do it.

Speaker 3 (43:51):
When I hear the bump porch picking down home rhythm,
bring a nat Hodn'll run from ben Jong music.

Speaker 5 (44:00):
Yeah, sing going backwards Backwoods and double Tom getting in
the sword and the strumming look and tuck start.

Speaker 8 (44:09):
There's nothing in the strumming Now country boy living mom
and I hit the bron boats picking down rhythm, bringing
us po from from men, give.

Speaker 3 (44:32):
The city a trows being wild on the two miss
cars rushing by with.

Speaker 8 (44:38):
The beasts on the stoos to man.

Speaker 3 (44:42):
I hear the brown boat.

Speaker 8 (44:44):
Picking down on them, bringing nuts.

Speaker 3 (44:46):
How don't run from magal music.

Speaker 6 (44:51):
Yeah, summing going backwards Backwoods and double Tom getting in
the sword and the strumming locke to stars because the
strumming down count your born living.

Speaker 8 (45:05):
When I hear the bum boats picking da bring the
bringing us battle from the.

Speaker 5 (45:11):
Bedroom something callo Backwards Backwards.

Speaker 8 (45:36):
And double town in the soul and the strumming.

Speaker 5 (45:39):
Looking tuck start.

Speaker 8 (45:40):
There's the ads strumming down count your.

Speaker 5 (45:43):
Born living head. When I hear the bum boats picking
da bring the brad.

Speaker 7 (45:48):
Chicken botchmin Mona's very sweet tea kind.

Speaker 5 (45:51):
Of says that from bedroom music must fast as
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