Bigfoot Society - A Retired Military Veteran Shares His Face-to-Face Sasquatch Encounter in Gifford Pinchot National Forest

Episode Date: March 20, 2026

In this episode, we delve into the remarkable experiences of Danny, a retired military veteran who spent years exploring the rugged backcountry surrounding Carson, Washington, deep within the forests ...of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest. Drawn to the wilderness for hiking, fishing, and searching for historic mining sites, Danny recounts a trip in the summer of 2004 that led to events he never expected to witness.While navigating remote logging roads and creeks in the mountains of Skamania County, Danny describes strange activity that unfolded over the course of a single trip into the forest. A quiet night in camp turned unsettling after something large made its presence known in the darkness. The following day brought another discovery along an abandoned road that suggested something massive had recently passed through the area.Later that afternoon, deep along a secluded forest road, Danny found himself standing only a short distance away from something he initially believed was part of the landscape itself. As the moment unfolded, he realized he was looking at something entirely different.Danny shares the details of that encounter, the environment where it happened, and what stood out most about the creature he observed. Join us as we explore Danny’s experience in the remote wilderness of Washington and the moment that left a lasting impression on how he views the forests of the Pacific Northwest.🗣️ Share Your StoryHad a Bigfoot encounter or strange experience?Send it to bigfootsociety@gmail.com – your story might be featured on the show!🎥 Watch & Subscribe on YouTube🔴 Subscribe here → Bigfoot Society YouTube💬 Leave a comment & let us know your thoughts!📞 Leave a voicemail with your story → Speakpipe (Use multiple voicemails if needed)👥 Share this episode → Watch & Share🎧 More episodes → Podcast Playlist🌲 Recommended: New Jersey Bigfoot Encounters💥 Support the Show & Get Perks✅ Join the community on Supercast – Become a Member✅ Listen ad-free & early on YouTube – Join Here📱 Let’s ConnectInstagram: @bigfootsocietyTwitter: @bigfoot_societyTikTok: @bigfoot.society🧰 Tools & Partners I Use (Affiliate Links)These help support the show at no extra cost to you:Beam (Better Sleep): Try BeamWildgrain (Better Bread): Join HereSeed (Probiotics): Get SeedMedi-Share (Healthcare): Learn MoreLMNT (Electrolytes) Free Sample Pack with your first purchase! : Get LMNTOrganic and non-GMO groceries delivered for lesshttp://thrv.me/uarEhS🎙️ Podcasting Tools:Repurpose.io: Try ItDescript: Sign UpStreamyard: Start RecordingRiverside.fm: Try Riverside🎧 My Audio Interface: View on Amazon☕ Buy Me a Coffee – Support Here🛍️ Grab Some Merch – Shop on Etsy📬 Mailing Address:Bigfoot Society125 E 1st St. #233Earlham, IA 50072

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Starting point is 00:01:29 in Los Angeles. You're listening to Bigfoot Society and I'm Jeremiah Byron. In this show, we go beyond the campfire stories to bring you first-hand encounters from people who say they've seen something impossible from backwoods trails and remote mountain haulers to quiet farms and crowded highways.
Starting point is 00:01:47 The stories come from everywhere and each one leaves us with more questions than answers. These are the voices of the people who've lived it. So settle in because today you'll hear another account that just might change the way you see the woods forever. So stay with us. All right, Bigfoot Society. You've got the privilege of talking to Danny today.
Starting point is 00:02:07 Danny's an individual. He's got a military background. So first off, Danny, thank you for your service and thank you for being here. How are you doing today, sir? I'm doing fantastic. Thanks for having me here. Awesome. And thank you.
Starting point is 00:02:23 I am really excited to hear what your encounters were. we will be going to the Skamania County area, I believe, Gifford Pinchot National Forest, which, you know, is whenever we're able to go there in the show, it is usually a much appreciated episode from listeners. But, you know, Danny, is there anything else that we would need to know about you besides that you are an individual with some military background? No, that about does it. Yeah, that sums it up, military. I did 21 years to be exact. I retired out last year on the 15th of September. And now I'm just living through the memories of serving my country and pushing forward right now. And I'm just here now to give my testimony on what happened to me in the Gifford Forest. Absolutely. And I know we've talked a little bit before. got started. This is a pretty intense one. There's a lot to this. So I want to make sure that
Starting point is 00:03:32 you have the time to share and I might be asking questions along the way, perhaps. But, you know, feel free to take us back. I know you have a starting point in mind and we will go from there, sir. Perfect. Okay. So I'll start it off as I was in Carson, Washington, living, that's right outside of Stevenson for context. This happened in the summer of 2004. If I recall correctly, it was July or August, but it was full, full swing in the summertime. And I had an affinity for this forest.
Starting point is 00:04:11 I went to this forest as often as I possibly could, hunting, hiking, fishing, you name it, because all of that is there. So on this particular time, I had a timeline of actually being out there for about three or four days. I would usually go out there with what's called a three-dap or a three-day assault pack or a rucksack. I'd fill it up with everything that I needed. And I would go out there and I would do what I would do. I would fish for trout.
Starting point is 00:04:42 I would hike and I would discover things. But on this particular time that I was going out there, I was actually going. out there to look for a mine, an old silver mine. And I knew it's approximate location. And the mine was called the Foxy Baker mine. It was from the late 1800s. And it was a big, big silver-producing mine that was in the Gifford Forest way up on at the end of a logging road called Road 42. Now, at this time, I went up to Trapper Creek and to get access to Trapper Creek here in the forest, you would have to go up a road, the Wind River Road. You'd go way out at the end of this Wind River Road to get access into the Gifford Forest.
Starting point is 00:05:35 And that would take you down through Trapper Creek. And if you kept going down, you eventually get to, a little bridge. And for people who've been out there, they know exactly what I'm talking about. You'll get to a bridge where it's called Canyon Creek. And at Canyon Creek, you can go left or you can go right. If you go left, you'll be on a road called 5310, which connects to 53. And it will go up to what's called the Canyon Creek Campground. And if you keep going up this way, eventually this road 53 turns into an old service road called 4210, which ends up being a road 42. And if you keep going up 53, it wraps all the way around the mountain and goes past a place
Starting point is 00:06:28 called Pelvey Creek and Jake's Creek. And if you look on the map in this area, you're in a place called the Tatush Hills. And the Tatush Hills have a lot of activity. that I didn't even know about until after this all happened, but we'll get into that. And so I was going up there and I took the route from past Canyon Creek, 53, all the way around until 53 basically turned into 42 because it connected at some point. And so what I did is I drove all the way up there. I finally parked in this big old, it was a rock quarry, an old, abandoned rock quarry that's way up there. And I backed my truck in to this little road,
Starting point is 00:07:17 which would have been the beginning of 4210. And so I knew this mine was around there. And I was looking for this mine. And I went down the road 42 where I had information that this mine was at. And I didn't actually end up finding the mine. But what I did find was I found an old plaque, a super, super old plaque that was, it was hammered to a tree. And it was still there by sheer luck. But what it was, it was a big piece of tin that said Foxy Baker on it. And it had like a map made on this tin. But I couldn't read the map because it was so old, you know, from the puncture marks on it. But it was clearly a map. And so I had searched around the area and I was looking. And I just could not find this mine.
Starting point is 00:08:13 And so at that point, I just said, well, you know, you can't win every time. So I'm just going to continue on doing what I'm doing. And I'm going to be out here for three days as planned. And I'm just going to go. And now I'm going to find a place where I'm going to camp. So what I ended up doing is on Road 42. I just, I kept walking down it. I got down it probably, oh, I would say maybe, maybe.
Starting point is 00:08:40 maybe three quarters of a mile. And when I got down to a certain point where it kind of turned off to the left, it was still the same road. There was an area that was, it had like a waterfall. It wasn't a big waterfall, but it was big enough where if I literally went and stood under it, I would be completely soaked. So I found myself a water source and I was like, okay, this is, this is where I'm going to camp. But I didn't want to be actually on the logging road itself where this waterfall was. So I said, okay, well, water's coming downhill. There's enough pressure where it's making this big waterfall. So there's probably a lot more water up above. So I'm going to climb up, which I did. It was maybe a 45 degree incline, maybe a little steeper, but not so hard where I couldn't, I couldn't
Starting point is 00:09:36 negotiate the incline. So I took myself and my rucksack in the gear that I had. And also, I was carrying a Remington 870 shot in as well, just because you never know what's going to happen out there. And I climbed all the way up and I got to a point where it leveled out. It plateaued out, but then it would keep going up. But where I was at was, it was about 15 or 20 feet away from this, which was now just a smaller creek that led into this waterfall, I was on a flat area right next to a bunch of old growth evergreens. And I said, okay, this is going to be the perfect place to just a set up camp. I'm at an elevated position. Anything that might happen would have to come from above or come from below. And coming from below, you've got to go uphill,
Starting point is 00:10:29 so it's going to be a lot more difficult. And if you're coming downhill, well, I'm going to hear you because you're going to be crashing down the side of a mountain. So I basically just set up a camp there in my sleeping bag, which wasn't even really like a winter bag. It was more or less a summer bivvy bag because it was a summertime. And keep in mind, it was like 85, 90 degrees out in the forest there, even inside. Because if I remember correctly, it was either the very end of July or early, early August. But anyways, it was really, really hot.
Starting point is 00:11:05 So I set up my sleeping bag. I set up all my gear. I made a fire ring with a bunch of rocks that I got out of the creek. And I had a fire, did my thing, did my life. And nightfall came. And then that's kind of when everything really started. And then everything changed dramatically. So what ended up happening is my fire, I kept it low.
Starting point is 00:11:30 I didn't keep it high. Because, you know, it was technically fire season, and there could have been a fire if my fire got out of control in any way, which it didn't. So I let my fire die down and darkness came probably around 10 o'clock or so. I remember just laying down in this flat spot. And it was really quiet, but you could hear the wind. You could hear, you know, birds and everything else. basically the forest winding down for the night. So darkness came. I fell asleep. And at some point in time, I don't even know what time. I just know it was in the middle of the night because I woke up.
Starting point is 00:12:15 And I woke up in the middle of the night. And when I did wake up, it was just silence. Like, complete, absolute silence. And usually, even at night in the four, You hear sounds. You do, whether it's insects or acoustic noises from the wind or something. You hear stuff. But I heard nothing at all. I heard absolutely nothing. And I was I was laying on my back, basically looking straight up at the sky. And I just had this sense of just a presence. And I didn't move at all. In my mind was, okay, I'm just, I'll just. just lay here and and I'll just see what happens or I'll fall asleep. But what what ended up happening is laying there for a few minutes. I like I had this impression that like something was
Starting point is 00:13:16 coming my way and it did. And it in the form of it was a it was a rock. And what I mean by a rock was as I was laying there, I sensed something coming. And I started hearing these noises like, and then thud, a big, big thud. And I was like, what was that? But this thud was literally within two feet of my head, big, big thud. And I didn't move. I didn't do anything at all. And after that happened, I replayed it in.
Starting point is 00:14:00 my mind of exactly what happened. And so what, what the sound was is it was a rock. There was a rock thrown is basically what I'm telling you. There was a rock thrown from probably above me. And the sounds of these like crashes were the rock coming through the tree canopy and like hitting tree branches and stuff and leaves before it impacted on the ground. And so, I deduced that that is what had happened. And I thought, I'm like, well, how did that happen? Did a rock come tumbling down? Like, that's just not possible.
Starting point is 00:14:40 That's not possible. Anyways, so what ended up happening? I eventually just fell back asleep. The very next morning, I wake up. The first thing I do is I look over to see exactly what it was that fell. Because I was pretty sure it was a rock, but I couldn't see anything. I didn't turn a flashlight on or nothing in the middle of the night. So I look over and sure enough, right on my left-hand side, I kid you not, there was a river rock.
Starting point is 00:15:13 A river rock probably the size of like a 14-inch frying pan in circumference. And for those of you who know what a river rock is, we all know they're really soft and they're flat because they've been in water or around water for so long that it's just completely flattened, like the rock and softened it up. And I told myself, like, how did a river rock come all the way to where I am? There's no rivers. There's creeks and large creeks around here, like Pelvey Creek, Jake's Creek, and Canyon Creek. but where I am, those water sources were miles away from where I actually was.
Starting point is 00:16:02 And so I just, I didn't brush it off. I just thought it was like really, really strange because there was no other rock like that in my close vicinity or even two or three miles in proximity. There was just none. So I just chalked it up to, well, you know, there's a rock and it fell through the canopy and it landed on the ground right next to my head. And that's what happened. I don't know how it happened, but that's what happened.
Starting point is 00:16:37 So this is the next day. I pack up all of my stuff and I continue. I get out of there is basically what I did. So I went back down the hill, back down where this waterfall was. on the road 42. And I started just walking the road. And it's like I said in the beginning, 42 and 53. They both connect into like a gigantic circle.
Starting point is 00:17:04 So I was going down 42 all the way until I got finally back down to where Road 53 was. This is Ashland Harris from Wide Open with Ashland Harris. All right, quick switch. Because I want to tell you about one of our favorite sponsors. vital proteins. But I can't really talk about vital proteins without talking about collagen first. So, did you know that collagen makes up one-third of all the protein in your body? That's a lot of collagen. But our natural collagen production starts to dip at the age of 30, give or take a few years. So adding collagen peptides daily feels like a really simple way to support what your
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Starting point is 00:19:25 This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. On this episode of plant killers, we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so bad? The ingredients. But fear not true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle Grow organic raised bed in garden soil.
Starting point is 00:19:47 It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same, looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on plant killers. At the age to the 50, I've learned some things, like the value of the
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Starting point is 00:20:10 the most of the virus that causes the Culebriya. Although not all the people in risk,
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Starting point is 00:20:32 at that point, like I was, I was at the where Pelvey Creek actually connected to Canyon Creek. If you look this up on Google Earth, you'll see exactly where I was and the exact location of where I was. So at this point, I take a break. I'm hanging out, you know, I didn't find the mind. I wasn't disappointed. I was just making do with my time and being out there. My plan was to be out there for three days and that's what I fully intended to do was to be out there for three days regardless of if I found a mine or if I didn't find the mine. So I'm at Canyon Creek now and I'm on Road 53 and I'm walking down in my goal now I told I told myself I was going to go down to the Canyon Creek campground. Now the Canyon Creek campground isn't probably a traditional
Starting point is 00:21:29 campground that you're thinking about where you go and you take it. your family. It's quite literally just a place that you can camp quite literally in the middle of nowhere and it just happens to be called Canyon Creek can't ground because it's on Canyon Creek and the people do a lot of trout fishing at this campground. So I just told myself that I'm going to go down to Canyon Creek and I'm just going to see what I can get myself into down there, hang out at Canyon Creek for the day and then see what happens. So what I did, like I, like I said, I started walking down road 53 and it went around the corner to the right and then it kind of started doing it like as gigantic snake. Like, that's how the road looked. But it was at, it was at a
Starting point is 00:22:16 decline. So it wasn't at such a decline where like you're literally like you're going on a straight pitch incline down. It was an incline where if you looked down the road, you saw that the road slowly sloped down and wind it around and did its thing. It was just such a gradual decline that you didn't really feel it at all walking. You still felt like you were walking straight, but you actually weren't. So I'm walking down 53 and I get around the first bend, which was from my right, going into the left. And then coming back out of that, it turned to the right and then went kind of straight down. Like it went straight for a while.
Starting point is 00:23:09 And I could see the bottom of the road. It would turn off left again. But it was one of these logging roads that I'm sure you've seen it. I'm sure everybody has where you have, if it's an old gravel logging road, and you see where the tire tread would have been. then, but in the middle, there's grass. I don't know if you've seen that or know what I'm talking about, but usually down the Yeah, yeah. So it was just like that.
Starting point is 00:23:37 There was a big, big strip of grass that was all down this road. And so when I came around the corner and I was looking, I noticed in the strip of this grass, there were these, there were footprints, like at least 10, 12 footprints. And it probably went for like maybe 15 or 20 yards, but there was only like 10 or 12 of them. So it was like a very big stride. And I stopped just for a minute and I'm looking on this grass strip. And I'm like, why are there footprints in the middle of this road in the middle of the day? Keep in mind, I think it was about 3.30 in the afternoon.
Starting point is 00:24:21 And so I'm looking and I walk up to these footprints. And I get right up to them. I get right on them. And these were clearly, you could see toe prints and an entire footprint, the circumference of it. I would say it was probably six, maybe seven inches wide and probably 15 inches, minimal, 15 inches long. But here's the really creepy, creepy part.
Starting point is 00:24:48 This was the part that, like, I understood that, like, this is definitively a Sasquatch and a big foot. So I bent down, Jeremiah, to look at these footprints that were made on this grass. And what was so creepy about this is when I looked at these footprints, Jeremiah, I could actually see the grass starting to come up again. Like, whatever was stepped on these made these tracks had just been there and the grass was beginning to retake its own form again. And so I was looking at this because I was watching this in real time. I saw the footprints and then I watched them all disappear after about 10 minutes. They were all gone because the grass had recomposed itself and it just went back to being grass.
Starting point is 00:25:43 And if I would have been any later or any earlier, I never even would have saw them at all. So once that happened, I was really spooked. I was really, really spooked at that point because I completely registered like what it was. Like I definitively knew that this is what it was. And there was there was no other doubts in my mind at all that this was 100% unequivocally a Sasquatch or Bigfoot or Skookum or whatever you want to call it. That's that's what it was. So at that point, like I said, I had a Remington, an 870 with me. I had every other shell.
Starting point is 00:26:25 It was double up buck and slugs. And so I put one in the pipe and I just kept going down the logging road, 53, and I was still on my way to Canyon Creek. I was still going to do that. I was still determined. I wasn't going to be deterred. And that's that. So at that point, you know, I'm going down Road 53, still walking along, probably 20 minutes passes by, you know, because there's a lot of ground to cover. Those, those wines out there in the mountains, they don't seem like a lot, but it takes a lot of effort to make a couple miles when these roads just wind and zigzag and wind.
Starting point is 00:27:09 So going down, I get to another straightaway, but basically this straightaway was like, it was like covered by the trees. Like the tree canopy actually shadowed the road. So you couldn't, you couldn't see the sunlight coming through the canopy. You could like see like rays of light and things coming through. But it was a real thick, thick area on this. road. And it was, it was a little, a little windy. And it, it wasn't gravel in grass anymore. It was, it was, uh, dirt. But it, you could tell that like each season that this part of the road
Starting point is 00:27:55 always got flooded and always turned to mush or mud, you know. And then as, as the spring and the summer would come, it would harden and it would reform until the, the, the, the rain came. And then as the, the, the, the, the came again and turned it into goo. And so that's what the road looked like. And you could see all these potholes and old, old truck treadmarks and all these things. But now they were dry and it was all hard and dry. And on the side of the of where this was,
Starting point is 00:28:31 you can actually see where the washout was. So all the rain or, you know, all the precipitation and everything that would flood this road, you could see where the irrigation was and the drainage from when it would dry up and when it would just by gravity take the water continually down the decline. And on the side of this, and this is the whole road, by the way, it was all washout. So the land, the topography of it was the sides were all washed out, but about six, Six feet is where like it would be reestablished as like maybe flat ground with trees and things because of the washout. So if you can just imagine that, you walk up to the side of it.
Starting point is 00:29:20 You look up and about six feet, you see a bunch of tree roots and all the stuff hanging out the side. And then all of a sudden it's just flat ground up above. That's exactly what it looked like. So I kept walking down and probably about 25, maybe. 30 feet. It couldn't have been further away. I was I was coming just at a quarter. I would have been slightly turning to my left. And in this drainage ditch, what I thought it was, what I saw, I saw this gigantic, like, I don't know, it seemed like every single color, like, like Auburn, like reds, blondes, light brown, dark brown, uh, with,
Starting point is 00:30:09 different flex of like blonde. I just saw this big giant mass. And my mind, what I registered at, just looking at it instantly, what I thought it was, I thought it was like a deadfall. I thought it was a tree that like had broken off at like 10 feet. And then the bottom of the base of the tree,
Starting point is 00:30:32 that was what was left. And I'm sure everybody has seen a deadfall. You know, the tree will get heart rot. or something will happen. He hit by lightning and it finally dies and then it rots from the inside out. And then it falls over and it's dead. And that's that.
Starting point is 00:30:49 That's what I thought I saw. I thought I saw a tree just like that. So I took like one or two more steps forward thinking I had the assurance of like, okay, yeah, that's what that is. And then all of a sudden, this form that I thought was a tree, it like, it made a swivel movement. Like, I, it was, it was facing, not facing towards me, or maybe it was, I don't know, because I didn't actually see a face in all of this mass.
Starting point is 00:31:24 But it made a swivel movement. So I presume that it turned to face me. But it was so camouflaged. It was so perfectly, in this perfect. color striation and formation that even when it turned, it was all one motion. It wasn't like the torso moved and arms moved and legs moved. It was like it just turned around. All in one solid fluid movement. And that's when I completely stopped. And it was absolutely a Sasquatch. And like I was telling you, it was all of these colors.
Starting point is 00:32:08 and the sun, these little specks of light that were coming through the canopy that you could see, it would like hit on it on the fur or the hair. It wasn't fur. When I think of fur, I just think of like really, really small amount of hair, like on a rabbit. It wasn't fur. It was definitively hair. But you could see on the areas of this, this Sasquo. that I was absolutely looking at,
Starting point is 00:32:41 that where the light hit it, it completely changed the color of the hair from the other hair. It was almost like the light gave it this prismatic effect where it absorbed the environment around it and it became that color. I don't know if that makes sense. Maybe it's hard to explain,
Starting point is 00:33:06 but that's what it was. was. And I was looking at it. At that point in time, like, I know I was like making like eye contact with it. Did I actually see facial features? No. No. And I did not. I didn't, I did not see cheek like skin or I didn't see a chin or anything. But I knew the, the area that I was looking at was, was its face because I did see its eyes. The eyes I did see. And I've heard a lot of of people say that the shape is this way or the color is that way. That might be so for those people, but for me, it was jet black, obsidian black, completely black, probably the size of a lemon, about that size, very, very, very, very, very large. And at that point, I could start deciphering
Starting point is 00:34:05 its actual true size because it was it was so naturally camouflage that you couldn't actually accent the the true size of what I was looking at but after you know standing there for it seemed like an eternity but it probably wasn't more than 20 seconds um I could completely see its figure. I saw its arms. I saw its legs. I saw where its head would have been. And I know some people say there's necks and all that. I saw absolutely no neck. There was no neck. It literally looked like its trapezius muscles in its back. It all, it's almost like its face would have just been planted on the front of its traps. And then that's where the head, head was. There was absolutely no neck. But if there was, I didn't see it under any, any hair at all. And so I was standing there
Starting point is 00:35:12 looking at that and I was thinking like, man, what am I going to do? And I don't know what it was thinking. But again, this only, this probably only really truly lasted about 20 seconds. It seemed like a lot longer. And I didn't count. I wasn't paying attention to that. I was. there was no cell phones. I think maybe there would have been a flip phone in 2004, but I can't even remember. I had no, no pictures, no none of that. And I wasn't even thinking about that. I wasn't thinking about shooting it. I wasn't thinking about raising the shotgun to it because I think, you know, when you're in that close of proximity of seeing something like this, you quickly rationalize to yourself that, okay, we understand that a Remington 870, 12-gate shotgun will kill most anything
Starting point is 00:36:10 in the forest. This is Ashlyn Harris from Wide Open with Ashland Harris. All right, quick switch, because I want to tell you about one of our favorite sponsors, vital proteins. But I can't really talk about vital proteins without talking about collagen first. So, did you know that collagen makes up one-third of all the protein in your brain? body. That's a lot of collagen. But our natural collagen production starts to dip at the age of 30, give or take a few years. So adding collagen peptides daily feels like a really simple way to support what your body already does. Now, I know you've seen vital proteins, collagen peptides, iconic blue tub around before. It's literally everywhere. I mean, it is one of the most recognized
Starting point is 00:36:58 collagen supplements out there. And there's a real, reason it's so popular. It supports healthy hair, skin, nails, bones, and joints. Vital Proteins has become a part of my daily routine. I mix it into my morning coffee or my smoothie. It's really easy. You can't even taste it. And it fits right into my day so I can feel my best. For me, it's about staying strong and showing up fully every single day. It just fits into my life. I'm betting it will fit into yours too. You can add a serving to your morning coffee, your tea, smoothies, or oatmeal into whatever you're already having. And it dissolves easily with the neutral taste and no extra steps. Like I said, it fits right into your life. People use it for different reasons,
Starting point is 00:37:49 some for beauty benefits, some for joint support. But for me, it's all about building a daily habit I can actually stick to. And that's the key with collagen peptides, consistency. One serving every day to support your hair, skin, nails, bones, and joints. And right now, you can get 20% off your next order by going to vitalproteins.com and using promo code wide open 20 at checkout. Huge thanks again to our sponsor, Vital Proteins. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. On this episode of plant killers, we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so bad? The answer? The ingredients. But fear not
Starting point is 00:38:39 true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same. Looks like bad dirt. Looks like bad its murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on Plant Killers. At the age of the 50, I've learned some things,
Starting point is 00:39:03 like the value of the family, the importance of the job, and that the 99% of the people of more of 50 have the virus that cause a Culebrilla. Although not all the persons in risk,
Starting point is 00:39:14 it will be suffered. The eruption dolorousa with ampollosos during that even the tasks more simple are all a retort. But it won't learn about the Culebrilla in a manner difficult.
Starting point is 00:39:25 Talked on your doctor or pharmaceutical, patrocinoed for GSK. But it won't probably do much to this at all. And if anything, it will just upset it. That's what I deduced. So I didn't do anything at all. So after this time elapses, which again, I think it was about 20 seconds,
Starting point is 00:39:46 what happened after that is since this Sasquatch was looking, at me and it was right next to this irrigation part where it was approximately six feet. But where this thing probably right above its, probably his hip area, that was in line with the top of where like the ground would have flattened out again. And so the rest of the top of the portion of this Sasquatch that I was looking at, It was easily three feet above. Easily.
Starting point is 00:40:27 And for me, I'm only five foot seven. So I can't even stand next to a place like this and even get near to see it being six feet. So what ended up happening then is this, it literally, and this is crazy too, because I didn't even see it bend its legs or anything at all. It literally was completely static, stationary. And it's like it jumped straight up in the air right on top of this flat area and was gone, just gone. I didn't see any kind of like a squatting motion to even do a squat jump. I didn't see anything.
Starting point is 00:41:16 Absolutely none of that. It was literally just there. and then all of a sudden it was up above there. And I'm not saying a teleport or any nonsense like that. It didn't do that. It jumped. But it did it in such a fluid way that it was just effortless. It was completely effortless.
Starting point is 00:41:37 That's what I would say. And then it took off. It ran straight. And I didn't see it when it was running. I saw it for like that split second. but as it was running, you could hear it crashing. Like there was things breaking all through the forest until you didn't hear that sound anymore at all.
Starting point is 00:42:01 And that's when I decided right then and there that my three-day trip was completely over with. And right then and there, I had completely turned around. I went back up 53, back to 42, and back to my truck the same day. And I left. And I actually, I have not been back there since,
Starting point is 00:42:28 but I've really, I've been dying to go back there to that particular spot. But I just haven't. The years have gone by and, you know, life happens. And I just haven't been back. But that's what happened out there. That's exactly how that went down. And since then, you know, I'm not like scared out of my mind or anything.
Starting point is 00:42:58 Like the big bad Sasquatch is going to get you if you go on the floor. Nothing like that at all. Was I afraid? Yeah. I definitively was afraid. I'd be, you know, a fool to say I wasn't. Was I terrified out of my mind that it ruined my love for the outdoors or going out there? No, it didn't. It didn't at all. It's circumstantial. That's just what happened. And I've heard so many people's encounters that were bad, some are good. For me personally, I didn't have, I don't consider this a negative encounter. I didn't feel like my life was in danger. I didn't feel like my life was threatened. And I didn't actually even feel.
Starting point is 00:43:48 unsafe. I just felt afraid for what maybe could have happened, but nothing did happen at all. The only thing that happened was I had a rock thrown at me, presumably at me or near me, and then I saw these footprints in the grass that I saw and then watched them disappear, not by magic, but just the environment retaking the grass. and then I saw a Sasquatch probably 25 feet away from me thinking it was a deadfall, broken tree. And I don't have any more like fancy details or anything like that. That's how it happened. That's what happened.
Starting point is 00:44:34 And yeah, if you have any questions or anything, feel free to ask. Danny, what an incredible account. I mean, 25 feet is so close. I mean, that's the length of like two smaller cars. It was really close. Yeah, it was really close. Some things I picked up while you were talking. So it's not like you saw this when you were in your truck.
Starting point is 00:45:01 I mean, you're just out there on a Forest Service Road. Yeah. You've got your gun with you. But I mean, this thing was so big. I mean, how tall, how wide across would you say it was again? easily, I mean, height wise, it couldn't have been less than nine feet. There's absolutely no way it was less than nine feet. That is 100%. Like I can, I can guarantee that that was, it was at least. That's the minimal. And the width wise on it, man, it could have been up to like five feet. It was enormous. It was enormous. It was. was big. And like I said, when I first saw it, you know, it didn't look as big because like I didn't focus. It didn't all come into focus because of just how how the hair was. It accented and highlighted
Starting point is 00:46:03 its anatomy so well that it actually hid the size until I was able to to really focus and then see the individual anatomical shape of this Sasquatch. My goodness. So I've been following along while you've been sharing and you've been really good
Starting point is 00:46:27 with location stuff and so I was able to really get the area for people that might be listening in their car that aren't able to. There's a few interesting things about that location.
Starting point is 00:46:40 So this is like the western side of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest, but if listeners know of the Silver Star Bigfoot photos that were taken in, and I had this individual on my show a while back, this was 726 episode, that was about 20 miles south of where Danny is.
Starting point is 00:47:06 And then you may have also heard of Cougar, Washington, which is a really active area. It's right out there. Yeah, exactly. Cougar. I mean, that's where Robert W. Morgan was for his documentary back in the 70s. That's about 10 or so miles northwest of where Danny is right now out in the woods. So he's far out there.
Starting point is 00:47:27 I mean, you're not getting out of there easy. No, no. I mean, the only time you see anybody out there is somebody who's got really good suspension and they're driving a manual five-speed truck and they know the air. because you get out there on those service roads, you take a wrong turn and it's quite literally, it's a wrong turn. And if you're out there in the fall, snow comes early out there as early as October. And I've been out there even in early, early November, and there's easily four, five feet of snow already out there. Oh, my goodness. So you've got the, you've got the 870
Starting point is 00:48:15 in hand. Yeah. When that, when the Bigfoot's in front of you at 25 feet, at that point, do you feel like, let's say, if you even had to use the 870, do you think it wouldn't even,
Starting point is 00:48:30 would it have even made a difference? Not a chance. Not a chance. I mean, all it would have done, yeah, it definitely, it would have penetrated for sure. It would have done its job
Starting point is 00:48:44 with double up, buck and slug, but penetrating, I don't think it would have done anything. It probably would have been considerably the same as if you shot a bear in the wintertime with probably double up buck. The absolute most it's going to do is it's going to just lodge those bea-bys, which are actually nine, nine-millimeter balls. It will just lodge them in the bear's fat. it won't even do anything. It won't penetrate. It won't kill.
Starting point is 00:49:19 So if it will do that to a bear with a double-a-buck, there's absolutely nothing it's going to do to a Sasquatch. It didn't even cross my mind. It just didn't. It would have been out of the question. That would just, yeah, it would be like, I don't know, like shooting a BB gun at like an F-15 fighter thinking you're going to shoot it down. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:49:50 I think it all comes down to, you know, having the right equipment and being prepared. And like, I know some people in this field are really good at that. You know, some people that come to mind right away got Jesse and Joe from Helbin Hall. Are they really good? I don't know. Have you ever seen their stuff, Danny? You know, honestly, there's so many things that are out there. I try to really listen to them all.
Starting point is 00:50:17 But it's just so hard to do. I know who they are. I've seen some of their stuff. But I get so lost in tracking whose channel is what and who's done this and who's done that. But there are five or six like channels that I consistently follow. So theirs isn't, I don't know it as well, but I definitively know about that channel, yeah. Absolutely. So you're saying that you actually want to come back to this area someday.
Starting point is 00:50:51 Oh, yeah, yeah. I do. And it's not, like I was saying, it's not to go searching for a Sasquatch. It's not to do that. It's not to go looking for Sasquatch. It's not to go bother a Sasquatch and create problems and disbalance in the forest. It's only to quite, quite honestly, I want to find this mine, this old silver mine that's out there because the information that I have on it is that there's still tracks and there's still
Starting point is 00:51:19 silver carts and all this, this really cool stuff in this mine. So, so that's really the reason why I want to go back, which I haven't for years. And the reason why I was actually out there in the first place was for that. But I do want to absolutely go back. and I do want to search for this mind, but also I'm definitely interested in like discovering something. I don't know what I'm looking for. I don't want to say I'm going to go out there looking for tracks or looking for Bigfoot, but I definitely want to go back out there, yeah, 100%. That's awesome. Being that close to Sasquash, which is just crazy to think about it's wild.
Starting point is 00:52:11 Did you notice, did you smell anything out of the ordinary or hear any, you know, like any noises it was making, things like that? No, no. And that, yeah, that's another component to this because I've heard countless stories of of pungent, horrible, terrible smells and odors and grunting and, and, and, and, and respirations and the sound of heavy breathing, I heard none of that, and I smelled absolutely nothing, nothing.
Starting point is 00:52:48 The day was really, really hot. It was in the afternoon, like I said, I think it was probably 3.30 in the afternoon, if my memory serves me right. And there was no wind, and it was about 85 or 90 degrees. Completely still, I smell absolutely not. nothing, nothing at all.
Starting point is 00:53:10 Wow. You alluded to earlier where you have found other things that have occurred in this area of the Gifford Pinchot show, but have you found other people having
Starting point is 00:53:29 experiences that are documented in this exact area that you were at? In this area, I personally don't know anybody that, like, had some experience or something in this particular area, but in other parts of the Gifford, they have had experience. I've had friends like that Elkhut that have had experiences like this out in Trapper Creek. This is Ashlyn Harris from wide open with Ashland Harris. And now,
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Starting point is 00:54:50 Morning coffee, afternoon tea, daily smoothie, weekly, whatever. Vital proteins is a part of my daily routine. I mix it into my morning coffee, smoothie, whatever is easy and fits my routine, because it helps me feel my best and I can show up fully every single day. But however you do it, consistency is key. It's crazy how something so effective is so easy. And right now, you can get 20% off your next order by going to vital proteins.com and using promo code wide open 20 at checkout.
Starting point is 00:55:25 These statements have not been evaluated by the food and drug administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. On this episode of Plant Killers, we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, Bad Dirt. What makes Bad Dirt so bad? The answer? The ingredients. But fear not, true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle Grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same, looks like Bad Dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on Plant Killers. At
Starting point is 00:56:04 the 50, I've learned some things, like the value of the family, the importance of the
Starting point is 00:56:09 time of the people of the people of the people who caused the Culebriya. Although not
Starting point is 00:56:17 all the people in risk, they're the I'm the up that's
Starting point is 00:56:21 aupion during the times, making that even the things are all the thing
Starting point is 00:56:28 the world the Culebrilla to the question of your doctor or pharmaceutical, patrocinated for GSC.
Starting point is 00:56:33 And I know you mentioned Silver Star out near Silver Star. And I have a friend, well, I haven't talked to him in years. Maybe he doesn't even live in town anymore. I don't even know. But he was elk hunting up by, if you look on your map there, if you're looking at it, if you look for a place called Zigzag Lake, he was up hunting up at ZigZag. and he got it he downed an elk he got a big elk and when he went up to get his elk his elk was gone it the body was taken by it not a bear not that for sure not a bear because the elk um it fell halfway
Starting point is 00:57:21 into zigzag lake it died there right there and and he saw it from from a probably 300 400 meters away once he downed this elk. And when he was going to it, he saw something come out of the forest, grab this elk, this bull elk at Zigzag Lake, and take it wherever it took it and gone. Took his elk, lost his tag, and that was it for his season. My goodness. So I can't remember how we haven't really gotten to specific.
Starting point is 00:57:57 So let's just say you're very familiar with this area earlier in life. Is it more common knowledge? Is everyone in this area know that there's something out there in the woods? And when you get out there, you just got to be ready. Yeah, 100%. I know it's silly for people to say that they speak for others. But in this case, definitely everybody in Carson knows. It's one of those things or everybody knows, but nobody talks too much about it.
Starting point is 00:58:28 And in Stevenson, the little town just right next door from Carson, I think it's like 12 miles away as the crow flies. In Stevenson, they have a Sasquatch cafe, a little Sasquatch museum, and they have gigantic carvings that people make out of trees of Sasquatch. And they have roads named after Sasquatch all over in Stevenson. It's very, very common knowledge. It's very common. People know you go out to the Gifford, especially in this area, nine out of ten times, something is going to happen, whether you're looking forward or not. And in this area also, when I was telling you earlier, between Pelvey Creek and Jake's Creek,
Starting point is 00:59:21 there's a big range called the Tatush Hills. Now, I didn't realize, I only realized after doing research, but in indigenous Native American, Tatush actually means like Sasquatch. So the Tatush Hills are named like the Sasquatch Hills. And I didn't even make that connection until I started researching the indigenous tribes that were in this area and why they named it that. That's wild. I mean, and crazily enough or oddly enough,
Starting point is 01:00:01 that is something that you find in these areas of the Pacific Northwest and like so much so that a gentleman, his name is Henry Franzoni. He wrote an entire book about this. You can get on Amazon about how all these different places in the Pacific Northwest and actually all over the U.S. have weird words like, you know, ape canyon or devil's mountain or devil's creek and just all these like or old old uh native american
Starting point is 01:00:28 words too that have meaning but we just have never learned them and we've never bothered to look them up unless you like you did yourself but have you heard of people having experiences in the tattoo shills as well yeah um i can i can uh for myself uh if you want to go into that for a little bit i will probably won't take too long. But myself, yeah, I saw some really some actually I saw a footprint up there in the Tatush Hills and I'll try to describe it. I know we're not on camera or anything, but hopefully you'll be able to visualize. So I went up on the Tatush Hills because I wanted to, I really wanted to see what was up there. And it's actually really, really cool landscape. And I discovered that like the elk herds, they'll go up on top of the backbone of the Tatush Hills. And it seemed like they would
Starting point is 01:01:26 use the Tatush Hills as like a highway system above everything else as like a defensible measure to keep themselves in the herd safe probably during the night from predators. So I went up and I found a bunch of elk hooves and I found all kinds of tracks and stuff to tell me that elk are definitely up here. And the reason I did this is because, yeah, I'm a hunter as well. And these are the kinds of things that you do. You always want to get a big buck. You always want to put meat on the table. And the only way you're going to do that is if you go out and you look for places like this. So I was actually doing that. And this is on an entirely separate time. This isn't even the same the same day or the same month, the year, the same week. So I was on the tattoo.
Starting point is 01:02:19 right on the backbone. And I got pretty far to the backbone's end, where it would then just come down the mountain. And if you look on your Google Earth, you'll see where that road 53, it turns all the way around and then starts going down. Well, that's where the end of the Tatush Hills is starting to happen at.
Starting point is 01:02:43 So oddly enough, I was getting towards the, the end of it on the on the backbone and nature called right i was taking the leak i was just i was standing on the backbone which was only maybe 20 30 feet wide and then it's like drop off like down to the canyon on both sides so i'm on the backbone of it i'm taking the leak and there's all these little bushes all over the place i can't i can't tell you what kind of plants they were they weren't trees but they were they were bushes that were they looked like small little trees with little leaves I don't even know what they were but they were very very thick and I was in the middle of them and I was standing there taking a leak and all these leaves and things are in front of my face
Starting point is 01:03:33 and I just happened to be I just focused in on this cluster of leaves in front of my face Now, if you can imagine there was, we all know, at the end of like a little branch, you'll have one, one little branch that will go off to the left and like have a leaf on it. And then one little branch will go out to the right and have a leaf on it. Well, I was looking straight ahead and I saw this, what I just described to you, but it was split completely down the middle, perfectly right down the middle. I don't know if you can envision that or imagine that, but it was split. And I'll try to explain better. It was as if somebody took their fingers and pinched really hard on one side and the other, and they pulled it apart and split it.
Starting point is 01:04:29 So I saw that. And then I just kind of was looking around and I noticed, Jeremiah, there was a line of them, like every five feet of these little teeny tiny branch. all split at the same level. And I was thinking, I was like, I was like the only way that these little branches could be split is if you literally, you would have to have the strength to pull them apart
Starting point is 01:04:56 and then leave them like that. And I thought it was the damnedest thing because it went all the way down to the end of the backbone. All these little tiny slits on this, on these little branches. When I got down to the bottom, almost the bottom, not the bottom, almost the bottom of the backbone, down to where Road 53 wraps around to Tatoosh Hills, I found a perfect footprint, a perfect footprint. And it was so perfect.
Starting point is 01:05:33 It was, I just couldn't even believe, like, how perfect it was. and it was in this where an old tree stump would have been and it was completely rotted so you get like I don't know just a bunch of rotted tree and you know how it becomes really really soft and if you just
Starting point is 01:05:55 you could grab a handful of it it will crumble in your hand that's what the material looked like where the tree stump was and the footprint was right in there and it made the footprint it's so perfect because that the wood and that tree stump had been so rotted and so decomposed that it literally made like a perfect cast of a footprint.
Starting point is 01:06:21 In this footprint, it wasn't, it was not as nearly as big as the one that I saw down on the road down towards Canyon Creek, but it was like 11 inches. And there's no way that any human being is walking around up there, barefoot. on the top of it to two shittles and made a footprint. It just, there's no way. So that, yeah, that's the extent of everything that I've got from, from this area myself. But a lot of stuff happens up there. That is, that is wild stuff.
Starting point is 01:06:57 And how exciting that in the future, you know, you are hopefully one day going to be able to go back to this area. Yeah, I mean, what a great conversation. I know you have other, maybe another story to share, but it sounds like it would probably be for another day just because of course. To make sure we have the right amount of time to share it, correct? Definitely. Yeah, yeah. I have another one like, yeah, like we were talking about earlier, that happened in Estigator.
Starting point is 01:07:30 And this one, yeah, this is a really, really, really crazy story. Yeah, we won't get into it. But like I said, if only I had the, if I only had the balls to just look out the window, I would have absolutely seen something I probably didn't want to see. That's for sure. Right. Absolutely. So, you know, maybe we'll even have to set up a second time for you to come on. But a conversation maybe would be good to have for a few minutes is, you know, based on what you experienced, you're 25 feet away. Yep. Did that give you any feelings or thoughts about, you know, what it is that we're dealing with with what Bigfoot is? Like, did you learn anything from being that close? What I learned, and I know this is only my individual experience. I can't speak for others, is the experience that I had, of course it will be mine in all.
Starting point is 01:08:33 only mine forever. But I, no matter what people think Sasquatch is or isn't, or what it truly is, or what it truly isn't, regardless of that, I think
Starting point is 01:08:50 that, well, I know that it's real, for sure. I know that there, no men in black can tell me it's not and nobody else can tell me it's not. I know it's real. And since I know that it is real, I know that it's flesh and blood.
Starting point is 01:09:11 And I don't think it's some extraterrestrial origin and it teleports and all that. I've heard some wild stuff. And to each their own, I don't judge anybody. Think what you want. That's not my problem. But anyways, I think that. As Sasquatch or its family or its clan or its tribe or whatever it is, I don't think it wants problems with anybody.
Starting point is 01:09:45 And I don't think it wants to be bothered by anybody. And I don't think it goes looking for problems either. But I do think that when you hear these horror stories of Sasquatch, in my personal opinion, I think all these stories that you hear about bad encounters and negative encounters, I think there's elements of information that are left out of these stories that led up to having a negative encounter with a Sasquatch. Whether people want to admit it or not, whether they even know or not,
Starting point is 01:10:25 but we all know if you provoke something, then you're going to get a reaction. but it only comes from provocation. And so I think, in my opinion, I think a Sasquatch in its whole existence is flesh and blood, very intelligent and doesn't want anything to do with anybody at all. Sasquatch isn't coming out of the forest, knocking on people's doors,
Starting point is 01:10:55 trying to have conversations. It's always us as in, or collectively going out and like I said, having positive encounters or having negative encounters. And I just think that the ones that are negative, I think there's a lot of missing information that's being withheld from the person telling the story that led up to having a bad experience. So that's what I think. But I could be wrong. I don't know. I'm no expert, you know. That's an extremely interesting way to think about it. Yeah. But Danny, Such a great conversation. I mean, wow, thank you for taking the time to really share what was going on and where you were. And, you know, let's definitely try to set up a time for you to come back on when you have the time to share about Estaceta, Oregon.
Starting point is 01:11:56 Definitely. I'd love to. Yeah. I haven't really talked about that with anybody besides my wife. And yeah, it's a pretty crazy, pretty crazy story. Yeah, I'd like to share. Have you ever heard all the accounts of Bigfoot activity around Oak Ridge, Oregon? And you think to yourself, man, I would love to get out in those woods and experience it for myself. Well, guess what? This year, you can. If this is interesting to you, stay tuned because it's pretty cool.
Starting point is 01:12:27 Sasquatch Summerfest is coming up July 10th through the 11th, 2020. It's going to be even better than the previous year's reason number one. I'll be one of the speakers. It's going to be wild. I'll probably, I'll say this. There may be stuff you haven't heard anywhere else because let's just say sometimes it's, uh, well, you just got to be there. We'll leave it that. More about looking for Bigfoot in the Oak Ridge Woods.
Starting point is 01:12:58 Now check this out. You may know Jason Kenzie. from his documentary series searching for Sasquatch. Well, this year, you can not only go to the festival, but you can also sign up for a trek deep in the wild forest outside of Oak Ridge with Jason Kenzie to the Bigfoot spots to look for Bigfoot. There's only eight spots to sign up for this. And yes, this will also be filmed for the next chapter in his document. series, which is searching for Sasquatch.
Starting point is 01:13:36 This is a once-in-lifetime deal. It's just, trust me, it's going to be a wild, wild experience. To get a ticket, head on over to Sasquatch Summerfest.com, and listeners can use the code BSP, like Bigfoot Society podcast, in order to get a two-day pass for the price of a one-day pass. So thanks to Priscilla for giving me that code. that you guys can get a little help with the cost there. Appreciate that, Priscilla.
Starting point is 01:14:12 I hope to see you at the booth in Oak Ridge this year. We can talk about your encounter. I was able to talk to so many people last year and the year before. It is an incredible time. You're not going to want to miss it. And I'll see you there. Before we wrap this episode, I want to say something directly to a very specific group of listeners.
Starting point is 01:14:35 If you're in the military, any branch, or forces, and if you've seen something that no one can explain, or if you're a national park ranger or forestry worker who's been told to stay quiet, if you're a pilot who's seen something strange down on the ground, or if you're with the FBI, a federal agency, or working intelligence, and you've stumbled upon something you're not allowed to talk about, and if you're a firefighter, paramedic, or search-and-rescue responder, who's heard screams or found tracks that didn't make sense, sense, if you're in the logging industry on a remote oil field or trucker with government contracts
Starting point is 01:15:12 and you've had something happen that you've never told a soul. And if you're a biologist, a wildlife specialist, or a field researcher under contract who has found evidence you're not allowed to report, if you're a pastor, a missionary, or someone on a spiritual retreat and you saw something that shook your faith, or if you work in the shadows, CIA, NSA, or anything with clearance, and you've seen what the public hasn't, then I want to talk to you. Even if it's anonymous, you can reach me at bigfoot society at gmail.com.
Starting point is 01:15:48 The world needs to hear what you've been forced to carry alone, and you're not alone. You've got the story. We've got the mic. See you in the woods. Thank you for listening to this episode of the Bigfoot Society podcast. Every encounter we share reminds us that the world is bigger and stranger than we think
Starting point is 01:16:07 and that the truth is often hiding just beyond the tree line. If you enjoyed this episode, please be sure to subscribe to the channel on YouTube, hit the bell so you don't miss the next episode, and share this with a friend who's into mysteries, monsters, or the unexplained. And if you're listening to us on Spotify or Apple Podcast, please follow the show there and leave us a five-star positive review because all that helps more people discover the show. And remember, if you or someone you know has had a Bigfoot siting, please I'd love to hear from you.
Starting point is 01:16:38 So email me at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com and let's start the conversation. If you haven't gotten a chance yet, check out our membership community over at www. www. bigfootsociety podcast.com. And that's where you can hear tomorrow's episode today, early and ad-free, and members-only episodes every week. Also, it's a place to connect with other people that are into the Bigfoot subject as much as you. you are, thanks again for following along with the Bigfoot Society. Until next time, keep your eyes open, trust your gut, and never stop asking what else might be out there and see you in the woods. This is Ashland Harris from Wide Open with Ashland Harris. All right, quick switch, because I want to
Starting point is 01:17:18 tell you about one of our favorite sponsors, vital proteins. But I can't really talk about vital proteins without talking about collagen first. So, did you know that collagen makes up one-third of all the protein in your body. That's a lot of collagen. But our natural collagen production starts to dip at the age of 30, give or take a few years. So adding collagen peptides daily feels like a really simple way to support what your body already does. Now, I know you've seen vital proteins, collagen peptides, iconic blue tub around before. It's literally everywhere. I mean, it is one of the most recognized collagen supplements out there. And there's a real reason it's so popular. It supports healthy hair, skin, nails, bones, and joints. Vital Proteins has become a part of my daily routine. I mix it into my morning coffee or my smoothie. It's really easy. You can't even taste it. And it fits right into my day so I can feel my best. For me, it's about staying strong and showing up fully, every single day. It just fits into my life. I'm betting it will fit into yours too. You can add a
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Starting point is 01:19:17 Huge thanks again to our sponsor, Vital Proteins. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. On this episode of Plant Killers, we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so bad? The answer? The ingredients. But fear not true crime enthusiasts.
Starting point is 01:19:42 This story has a happy ending. Miracle grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like, compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same, looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on plant killers.
Starting point is 01:20:00 At the age of the 50, I've learned some things, like the value of the family, the importance of the job, and that the 99% of the people of more of 50 have the virus that causes the Culebrilla. Although not all the people in risk
Starting point is 01:20:15 the will be developed. I do see. The eruption dolorouss with ampollos duros'amines, making that even the tasks more simple are all a
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Starting point is 01:20:27 to your doctor or pharmaceutical, patrocino for GSK. This is Ashlyn Harris from
Starting point is 01:20:32 Wide Open with Ashland Harris. All right, quick switch, because I want to tell you about one of
Starting point is 01:20:37 our favorite sponsors, Vital Proteins. But I can't really talk about vital proteins without talking
Starting point is 01:20:43 about collagen first. So, did you know that collagen makes up one-third of all the protein in your body. That's a lot of collagen. But our natural collagen production starts to dip at the age of 30, give or take a few years. So adding collagen peptides daily feels like a really
Starting point is 01:21:03 simple way to support what your body already does. Now I know you've seen vital proteins, collagen peptides, iconic blue tub around before. It's literally everywhere. I mean, it is one of the most recognized collagen supplements out there. And there's a real reason it's so popular. It supports healthy hair, skin, nails, bones, and joints. Vital Proteins has become a part of my daily routine. I mix it into my morning coffee or my smoothie. It's really easy. You can't even taste it. And it fits right into my day so I can feel my best. For me, it's about staying strong and showing up fully every single day. It just fits into my life. I'm betting it will fit into yours too. You can add a serving to your morning coffee, your tea, smoothies, or oatmeal into whatever you're already having. And it dissolves
Starting point is 01:21:59 easily with the neutral taste and no extra steps. Like I said, it fits right into your life. People use it for different reasons, some for beauty benefits, some for joint support. But for me, it's all about building a daily habit I can actually stick to. And that's the key with collagen peptides, consistency. One serving every day to support your hair, skin, nails, bones, and joints. And right now, you can get 20% off your next order by going to vital proteins.com and using promo code wide open 20 at checkout. Huge thanks again to our sponsor, Vital Proteins. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. On this episode of plant killers, we'll explore
Starting point is 01:22:51 one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so bad? The answer? The ingredients. But fear not true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same, looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on plant killers.
Starting point is 01:23:19 At the age of the 50, I've learned some of the family, the importance of the job, and that the 99% of the people of more of 50 have the virus that causes the Culebrilla. Although not all the people in risk the will be developed.
Starting point is 01:23:34 I see the eruption dolorousa with ampollosures durows' months, Evening that even the tasks more simple are all a retort. No, learn about the cul-debrilla of the way difficult. Talked today with your doctor or pharmaceutical. Patrocinole.
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Starting point is 01:24:38 and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so bad? The answer? The ingredients. But fear not, true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle Grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark.
Starting point is 01:24:56 Unlike the other guys who can't say the same, looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on Plant Killers.

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