Bigfoot Society - Bigfoot Encounters in North Georgia: Tamra & Gabe’s Chilling Stories from Chattahoochee National Forest and Etowah River
Episode Date: March 27, 2023Gabe and Tamra are back for Part 2!Join us on the latest episode of Bigfoot Society as we dive deep into the mysterious encounters of Tamra and Gabe from North Georgia. In this episode, Tamra shares h...er hair-raising experience of visiting a place in Chattahoochee National Forest that left her disoriented and convinced that Bigfoot was behind the bizarre happenings. With footprints, handprints, and primate-like vocalizations to back up her claims, Tamra's story is sure to send shivers down your spine.But that's not all! Tamra also recounts the time they were chased by a Sasquatch in the woods, an experience that left her and Gabe fleeing for their lives. Gabe also shares his own chilling encounter while kayaking in the Etowah River, where he saw a Sasquatch head just barely visible, watching them from afar.Join us as we explore these compelling stories and try to unravel the mystery of Bigfoot in Northern Georgia. Don't miss out on this gripping episode of Bigfoot Society!---If you want even more exclusive content, become a Patreon member and gain access to extra audio, a Patron-only Discord and much more over at https://www.patreon.com/posts/after-show-more-80185862Do you have a Bigfoot encounter that you've been dying to share? Look no further than Bigfoot Society! Simply email us at bigfootsociety@gmail.com to learn more.Join our private Facebook group "Bigfoot Sasquatch Encounters" for a chance to connect with others who have had similar experiences. Follow the directions to ensure your entry is accepted.https://www.facebook.com/groups/5762233820540793/?ref=share_group_linkTune in to our YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8Qq45W6iaTU8FE9kelxT7Q) for new episodes of Bigfoot Society, and visit our website (www.bigfootsocietypodcast.com) for all the links mentioned above and more.Don't miss out on the Bigfoot action!
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it didn't sound
human
it didn't sound like a bear
it almost
sounded like
um
Almost like a primate.
It's just, it's so hard to describe because it's not like anything I'd ever heard before.
And it didn't sound like, it sounded like it was definitely a language.
Welcome back to Bigfoot Society.
In this episode, we welcome back Gabe and his girlfriend Tamara,
who share about Bigfoot encounters they've had in northern Georgia.
What was the language that Tamara heard that one day?
And what was watching Gabe and Tamara in their country?
kayaks from the side of the Etowah River. Find out this and more on Bigfoot Society.
Well, all right. Let's get her on then. All right. Here she is.
Hi, Tamara. My name is Tamara. Hi, Tamara. And hi there. So I've been, I actually gave
and I grew up together in Indiana, but I moved to Georgia in 2001. He didn't move down to Georgia.
until 2021.
So I've been here for quite a long time.
I started hiking in 2019,
so I'm just hitting that five-year anniversary of being a hiker.
I always hike alone.
I hike by myself.
I really enjoy just being in nature, being out by myself,
being alone.
A lot of people, this,
I really don't care what people think.
there's different opinions on it, but I do practice grounding.
Other people call it earthing, where you physically just take your shoes and your socks off
and you actually connect with the earth.
I do that on every hike.
I do this in water.
If there's water, I'm getting in the water.
But I've been doing this alone up until Gabe came down here.
I've been hiking alone.
So I've taken him back to trails that I've been on before.
And it's funny because I've never really, I mean, I've heard just being in the North Georgia area,
I mean, there's a big foot museum up here.
And I've heard like, oh, there are sightings.
There's this or that.
I just kind of thought, well, you know, I haven't actually seen it with my own eyes.
So I don't believe and I don't not believe, but I just, I didn't really have an opinion of it.
there was one particular trail that that I was on and this is like he said I'll use the
all trails app I'd like to go where there's no other people I had made it all the way into
this trail it was about a maybe four and a half five miles in it was during the summer
made it to the waterfall I was I was coming on my way back and I knew
needed to just pretty much get off the trail and I had to pee.
So I looked and I'm like, okay, there's a boulder right there.
I'm going to get off this trail.
Which is summertime of the grass is almost knee high.
Got off the trail, maybe 10 feet behind this boulder and went to get back up.
And all of a sudden, I was just afraid.
I consider myself pretty fearless and brave.
Nothing scares me.
I'm not afraid to be in the woods at night.
I'm not afraid to be alone.
I grew up in the country in Indiana.
I used to sleep outside.
I'm really not a paranoid or fearful person.
So this particular day, and it was funny,
it wasn't until a few years.
later talking to him about it. But I was just all of a sudden just very disoriented. I couldn't think
straight. I was, I was terrified. I was paranoid. I felt like, I didn't feel like I was lost, but I felt like
something was trying to get me, which it's not my character. I'm very clear-headed. I'm a,
I'm a rational thinker. I could not find the trail. And I knew that there was this boulder and it was
10 feet this way. And it probably took me 20 minutes to get back on this trail. And my ears were
ringing and I was just very confused and my my thoughts were foggy and I couldn't think straight.
And I and I almost felt like I was drugged. It was just really a hard feeling to describe.
And just between being confused and being panicked at the same time,
it just took me a very long time to get back on the trail and I just what got me there was like
go go back to where you hear water because I had followed I had followed a river going in
and I finally got back on it and just started running and running and running and I ran
for a good mile and I finally started getting more of a clear head.
on my way out and I was like
you just got lost you got paranoid you went
into kind of fight or flight mode
well fast forward a couple
years later I take him back to the same trail
and I'm like this is the trail that messed
me up
and is
you remember that one
it looked like a war zone yeah
I will say this is I can say
this is pretty much a lot of this
takes place up in the Chattahoochia
of Coney National Forest which
I don't know if you know this area, but it spans a big part of the North Georgia.
The Appalachian Trail is part of it.
So there's so many areas I hike.
It's just a vast forest system.
I take him on this trail, and as soon as we get in there, he's like, okay, look at this.
And I remember seeing these things, but not thinking anything of it.
when we say tree breaks and tree bends, we're talking, you know, trees that are broken,
you've got one side of the mountain going up and you think, okay, if a storm came through
and the wind blows, you would think that a tree is going to fall, you know, towards down,
like towards gravity, but they're broken in the other way.
And some of them are twisted.
They're young trees, but they're bigger around than my arm or my arm or my,
calf and they're really, really high up and they're bent and twisted almost strategically.
And some of them are bent down where they're kind of twisted together and form of structure.
And you're thinking, okay, my mind automatically goes to how could this have naturally
happened? Like, did this tree have fallen and knocking this tree over? And so I always try to just
kind of ration it out and think, how could this have naturally happened? And honestly, we've
got so many pictures and video stuff if it weren't for him coming down and explaining all this
to me and showing me this now this is what I'm looking for and I'm seeing a lot of stuff that
makes me question you know just question everything and um I've I've found um one of the footprints
I've found one of the handprints I've I've heard the noises um the
story he was telling you about when we were um we had stopped in a creek and he was smoking his cigar
i actually was in the water practicing grounding it's kind of um you just i submerge myself in water
it's almost a form of meditation and i could hear those voices too and i heard i heard though i do
remember him hearing what he said I heard the one and it just sounded kind of this low rumbling growl it didn't sound like words it didn't sound like um I know what bears sound like I've seen bears I know what feral hogs sound like I haven't seen them I don't want to see them I've seen their tracks and then I'll turn around and go the other way but I know what all the animals of these forests look like and it sound like um it didn't sound like any any any animal
I've ever heard.
Tamara, do you feel that there were two individuals talking to each other, or did it sound
just like just one individual?
No, there were two.
I, yeah, there were multiple ones.
And it was crazy because I'm sitting in the water.
And looking back, you think that that would make me just really freak out.
I'm hearing this.
And I was, I remember because I was kind of on a.
small waterfall and I was kind of, I think I was kind of laying on my stomach. I was just letting
the water flow over me. And I stopped and I just looked at him and he's looking at me and I could,
I could hear them. And at first I thought, I can only hear this in my head. And I wonder if you can
hear this too. And he could. And I could hear from kind of from one side, kind of, um,
a chatter and I would hear a voice from way on the other side. It was a different voice. It sounded
like the same form of communication. It seemed like the same, I don't want to use the word animal,
but the same being. But it wasn't words that were making out. It was just, it was just kind of
an indistinct kind of chatter, but the feeling that I got, when I say I could kind of feel
him in my head, which sounds really, really weird. I know I sound strange, but I'm just going
to just come out and say it. I just, I felt like they were just, I didn't feel like we were in
danger, and I told him that, I told Gabe that. I said, I said, they're curious about me and
what I'm doing.
Because I was, I was meditating, I was doing grounding.
And I said they were just, they're just curious.
And they seemed kind of surprised to me.
That's, I just, I felt that feeling.
Like, I could almost, like, pick up an emotion.
Like they could feel you feeling it.
I don't know.
It was just a really weird experience.
It's nothing I'd ever experienced before.
But it wasn't negative, like, where,
I was afraid and disoriented and confused.
And it wasn't like that at all.
I felt like I wasn't in any harm that it wasn't going to be harmed.
I felt like it was okay.
I just felt like I kind of caught whoever it was off guard and they were just very curious.
But still, I'm like, you know what, I'm going to get out of this water and get dried off and just keep on hiking.
must go on ahead and get on out of here.
So that was one experience.
And it was really interesting.
It wasn't a negative one, but.
That was last fall.
Yeah, that was last fall.
Tamara, when you've been out hiking,
have you experienced or heard any other type of vocalizations?
Or is that the main time that you actually
heard something when you were out there?
This was the first
vocalization that I had heard.
And I try to be very quiet
when I'm out and about. I don't hike with groups
or any of the touristy, crowded areas,
but I had never heard of vocalization before.
So it was actually really cool to hear it.
And it almost
it didn't sound human.
It didn't sound like a bear.
it almost sounded like
almost like a primate.
It's just,
it's so hard to describe
because it's not like anything
I'd ever heard before.
And it didn't sound like,
it sounded like it was definitely a language
and not just a noise.
You know,
it sounded like a foreign language,
but it was just so hard to describe.
It sounded almost kind of,
If a primate, like a great ape or a gorilla were talking, that's the most similar I could get.
It sounded a little more advanced, like their voice would sound like if they were talking.
But they were lower in tone and it projected farther away.
But it was harder because it was hard because we've got the water,
rushing and then you've got the mountain up and everything kind of bounces off. There's a lot of rocks
up in the mountain. So it's hard to tell what direction it's coming from and how far away it is.
But it was very distinct. That's the only time I'd actually heard anything.
They tend to, several times if they recall they get in my head. And so now that when we
hike. I'm like, I'm like the, the, the, the big foot barometer like it. So everyone's looking at you.
Is, do you, are you hearing anything? Yeah. I actually don't like it because it's not cool knowing what.
I don't know. It's when you have a good experience like that, when you're getting a calming feeling like, it's okay, they're just curious.
And then the one where we got chased. And that was, um, weird.
because I had actually kind of got off the trail and I was just chattered on about some kind of flower that was blooming.
I think I was like, look at it.
And then all of a sudden, I just felt like I was just drugged again and I felt disoriented and I felt sick.
And all of a sudden, I'm like low blood sugar or something.
I was like, I don't feel good.
I almost, I was starting to kind of sway a little bit and lose.
my balance and I couldn't talk right and I'm like I don't I don't feel so good and and then he
you know kind of got a bad feeling he's like we got out of here now on this episode of
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The distributor, by him, that is final of June 26.
We got out of there, and he had to kind of drag me,
and it's crazy because something kind of takes over
and you just kind of lose your sense of direction,
and you lose your sense of control of logic, like you're afraid,
but you're disoriented and you're kind of stunned.
It's not a good feeling.
I don't like being the, I don't like being the canary.
I don't know if it's because of all the grounding that I practice.
Stay tuned for more Bigfoot Society.
We'll be right back after these messages.
and trying to be as connected to the earth as possible.
I'm kind of the environmental hippie girl.
So I'm, I tried to stay very connected to Mother Earth.
So.
Nothing wrong with that for sure.
Yeah.
Well, that's who I am.
But there was another, there was a third time, wasn't there?
I don't know.
We've been on so many hikes.
It's kayaking on the kayak trip.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, I forgot about that one.
Do you want to hear about the kayak?
I would love to hear whatever you guys have to share, so go right ahead.
Yeah, this one, this one was last summer.
Okay.
We were kayaking, and we come up to this beach, and she decided she wanted to get out,
and she wanted to swim a little bit in the river.
Now, this is in the creek, it's the river.
So she's on the other side of the river.
She's the Ettawa River.
Yeah, the Edewa.
And she's swimming, just chilling, just, you know, just swimming,
thinking around, whatever.
And I'm sitting on the other side of the bank on the beach,
just chilling and watching her.
And she starts getting this weird feeling,
and I look up, and I see one pull its head back.
Not in the other way, it was just like,
You see a tree and then you see a lump move.
That was it.
Like a peekaboo type thing.
And then that's when she started feeling her feeling that she gets.
And needless to say, after that, she shot back across the river and we kept on going.
So like I said, I kayak a lot too.
I do a lot of river cleanups where I'm pulling tires out of the rivers.
I'm jumping in and out.
I am not afraid to be in these rivers up in the mountains.
I'm always in them.
And in this particular river,
I was like walking up the edge of the banks as far as I could.
And then I kind of jump in and just kind of float down and swim
and let the current kind of take me.
And I'd go swim and pass him.
And I'd be like, hey, come on, come in and swim.
And he just wasn't in the water to swim.
And I'm not afraid to be in the water at all.
So I got I was getting close to the banks and all of a sudden I was just afraid to be in the water and I'm like, I got to get the hell out of here.
And kind of simultaneously, he's looking at me like, we got to go. Come on. And he's waving at me. He's like, get out of there. Come on. And I'm like, yeah, I'm on it. And I start swimming, you know, against the current as fast as I can. And I just all.
all of a sudden felt like something was wrong,
that same feeling that I got when I was on that hike by myself,
that just something was wrong and I was disoriented again.
And I shouldn't have been there.
And I just, I was afraid.
And that's, that's not like me.
And I think in that case, we, you just got too close.
I did because it didn't happen
until I got too close
to that part of the banks
I don't know and
you know it's
the Edwell River goes through a lot
of parks of them there's some pretty dense
forests that
no there's not hiking trails in there
no one hikes in
we were on that part is
Dawson Forest right
there's not a lot of hiking in Dawson for us right?
And like we were on that portion of the edwa where you can be on the edwa, but you really can't be on the Dossom Forest side.
There's no hiking.
They don't allow you to bank your kayak there.
They don't want you to be on to explore there on that side.
So yeah, it was interesting that I just, I was fine, just having a good all time floating around, messing around, swimming.
and then all of a sudden I'm just terrified for no reason whatsoever.
Have there been reported sightings in that area as well?
Absolutely.
Okay.
What's great.
And I can say this just by if you go to, have you been to the, I don't know,
you're out, you're in a different state.
There's a Bigfoot Museum.
And, you know, when he moved down here, I took him here, and I had been to Blue Ridge, Georgia.
a million times. And I've always passed the Big Fit Museum and I thought it was just some
touristy little gift shop with knickknacks and t-shirts and hats. But I took them there because
he really wanted to go when he first moved down here. And I was blown away with all of the
the scientific evidence and the documentation, but they have a map of the state of Georgia
and they have a little pin marked of all of the sightings and all of,
they've got this really great library of where everyone has actually had actual sightings or experiences.
And I'm looking at this and I'm like, holy cow, this is where I hike.
This is where I'm at all the time.
Like all of the heavy sightings like around the Appalachian Trail and the Chattahoochia,
Coney area and this whole part of North Georgia that I am that is my turf, you know.
And there's all these sightings there.
And I'm like, oh, my gosh, this whole time I've been going here all the time by myself alone,
right here all the time.
Yes, it's a very heavily active area for sightings.
we went on this one trail and the way I took it
they were the when we say like the tree breaks or almost like warnings like
don't come past this you know you'll see them it's odd you'll see them on
one side of the trail prominently and not the other and I'm not sure you're
If you're a hiker, are you a hiker?
I used to be a lot more.
I've hiked the Appalachian Trail all of Massachusetts and Connecticut.
I grew up in New England.
But so I have a history back in the day.
Okay.
So you know how there's one side and there's the other.
Sure.
So when we get on these trails, some of them just right off of that.
As soon as you get on these trails, one side, which tends to be the side,
side of the side of where the elevation is going up,
there's going to be all of the structures
and the tree breaks and the tree bends.
And that's where we see that.
And some of them, as soon as you get on that trail,
and it's funny because these trails aren't,
I love all trails because people will complain,
they'll say, I never got to the waterfall.
I couldn't find it.
The trail's not marked.
parking lot it's not marked the forest system is not keeping up with this trail those are the ones
we go to those are the ones we go to and um i used to before i met him i used to blaze the trails i used
to bring blazing equipment i would i would make sure i got it marked and now i would go back and
i would blaze it so other hikers wouldn't get lost and now seeing what i'm seeing i'm like now i'm
going to leave this trail alone and i'm not going to blaze it and make it easy for other people to find
There's a reason the forestry doesn't keep up with it.
There's a reason.
Yeah.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah.
Wow.
So now I'm respecting that and I've stopped blazing the trails and I'll find it and just do the best I can to find these trails and enjoy them.
Yeah.
Like for instance, the one that she was talking about where she had her first infrasound.
when I went on this trail
we got to this one section
and it looked like
it had just been ravaged
there were trees
probably six to eight inches around
pulled up out of the ground
laid across the trail
all the way 50 yards
for 50 yards
and you couldn't find where these trees
just fell over
there were no stumps
there was no root balls
there was no holes where they
came from they were picked up and put here there's there was yeah it did it didn't matter and
there there was there was tree bends there was twisted brakes i mean it looked like it it looked
like a tornado or a hurricane went through there and here's a thing it was in a valley
so and these trees were no order there there
was no order to it. Like I said, you couldn't see where they fell over because that's the first
thing I started doing it is I started looking to see if these trees just fell over. If they were
broken from up top and they, you know, they just fell down from a dead tree or whatever. These
weren't. These were, these were placed here in this area. And it went, like I said, it went on for
50 yards. And it took us 30 minutes to walk through this 50 yards because we had to walk over all these
trees to get through this area.
It was insane.
Several years ago when I had one on that trail, I took pictures and I had posted it on
Facebook and I said, oh, I've got an obstacle course for a trail today.
I remember.
I took him back to it and they were still there.
And he's like, that's no.
Yeah, it was pretty intense.
I had no idea back then.
I think it had been done there.
it had been done a long time ago.
It wasn't anything fresh, but nonetheless, it was there.
I mean, it was pretty obvious to me.
Well, you guys have some fascinating stories.
You're definitely in an area where things are going on.
Tamara, I want to just verify with you.
You haven't had a sighting yourself yet, correct?
I have not.
Okay.
I have a feeling one day you will, though.
Yeah, I think it's inevitable.
Yeah.
Wow.
For as much as we've, that I've noticed down here, just, just evidence and signs.
It, yeah, it's inevitable.
You know, we were one of the, when I found my first track down here, it was, it was, it was odd.
It was almost like, it almost looked like if you, there's deer tracks mixed in with tracks on the trail.
And to me, it looked like they were hurting deer to a valley because the trail kind of went around and there was a like a bowl down to the left or to the, if you're, if you're, anyways, it looked like.
like they were running down the trail,
hurting deer to one massive area.
Because then all of a sudden,
the tracks, the footprint stopped,
and then the deer tracks went right down into this bowl,
and then that was it.
And you could see where the leaves were tore up.
You could see dirt torn up.
It just, it looked pretty, pretty torn up.
I mean, you can see on the side of the trail
where it looked like a foot was sliding down the side of the trail about every 10 feet.
Well, not to be too descriptive, but in that area, did you find any bones or, you know, or anything like that?
Here's the thing.
When we see signs and tree breaks and bins and stuff like that, we will venture off the trail.
I got you.
Yeah.
I'm not going to push my luck.
Yeah.
You know, we're, because the trails that we're on, you know, we're five,
five miles away from the road, the paved road at some point.
Okay, so you're in very remote areas, too.
I don't want to get stuck out there.
Yeah.
You know, you put your phone up and it's, there's nothing.
Wow.
So, you know, when we see stuff like that, we just stick to the trail.
And we'll observe and look.
but as far as getting off the trail,
no, I ain't happening.
I was born at night, but it wasn't last night.
I like that.
Gabe and Tamara, this has been a super fun chat.
I know it's getting late where you guys are at
because you're ahead of me.
But man, I feel like I might be talking to you.
I feel like you guys are going to have some more situations
come up in the future.
So I think we need to definitely keep in touch with me,
if anything else happens let me know Gabe
absolutely yeah
I got plenty more from
from Indiana
oh you do oh my goodness
oh absolutely
you're killing me Gabe
oh yeah
we're gonna have to do
we're gonna have to do a part two
someday man
absolutely
yeah this has been fun
yeah this has been a good time
I have a feeling
people are going to be saying
when are you going to get
when are you going to get Gabe and Tamara back on
but this has been super fun
thank you for chatting
and I appreciate you guys
chatting with me tonight
yeah absolutely
I appreciate the
the opportunity
the way I see it like I texted you earlier
the way I see it is
if I can her and I can get on here
and we can tell our stories
maybe there's somebody else out there listening
and it's too afraid to tell their story.
Maybe this will give them the courage to come out.
And now it feels so bad about it.
You know, who cares what anybody thinks?
I know what I saw.
I know what's out there.
That's all I care about.
Become a supporting member of the Bigfoot Society podcast
by going to www.pateriot.com
forward slash the Bigfoot Society
and receive extra episodes
and early ad-free episodes as well.
If you've got a personal Bigfoot encounter to share,
please contact me at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com.
And thanks for listening.
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. The next three years, L.A. will welcome
the world with major events unmatched by any destination. This moment is bigger than sports. It's about the impact on our
communities, businesses, and people. With the help of the Los Angeles Sports and Entertainment Commission
foundational partners, Amgen, Archer Aviation, Kaiser Permanente, L.A. Tourism and Metro. We're
investing in the LA community in inspiring civic pride. Together, let's show the world why we love
LA. To learn more about the FIFA World Cup coming this June, visit Los Angeles FWC26.com.
Conducese to form more intelligent with the new Kia's Fordish Hybrid, Elx 2026,
the Garden Grove Kia, elegant, efficient, and replete of technology. Intelligent is the
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of the remittance of 30% of 20%
for me to pay.
1925 dollars addubts in the moment
of the firm as impuptu,
and the deposit of security.
The next three years,
L.A. will welcome the world
with major events
unmatched by any destination.
This moment is bigger than sports.
It's about the impact
on our communities, businesses, and people.
with the help of the Los Angeles Sports and Entertainment Commission
Foundation, Amgen, Archer Aviation, Kaiser Permanente, L.A. Tourism and Metro.
We're investing in the L.A. community in inspiring civic pride.
Together, let's show the world why we love L.A.
To learn more about the FIFA World Cup coming this June,
visit Los Angeles FWC26.com.
Conducese to form more intelligent with new Kia is Forish Hybrid,
the X-2026 of Garden Grove Kia,
elegant, efficient, and replet of technology.
Intelligent is the UVBridor designed for the
Conduction diargia.
Now,
right same during the event
of the
capital of
money of the
mortgage hybrid
LX 2026
for only 249
al-mase
Pupporting here
or visit a garden
gruff Kia hoy.
A.26
Hibbert LX
is available for
409
more impuettos
for credit
robos 10 million
20 cents
from me at a
1995 dollars
adeptas in the
moment of
impuptuptu
and the deposit
of security.
The distributor
on this
distributor.
On this episode of
Plant Killers
will 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.
