Bigfoot Society - I Watched Bigfoot for 8 Minutes | Mt. Hood
Episode Date: January 22, 2026Deep in the forests of Oregon, there’s a stretch of land that keeps drawing people back — Lolo Pass, the ridges around Mount Hood, and remote horse camps tucked far off dead-end roads.In this epis...ode of Bigfoot Society, I’m joined by Gary Allen of the Bigfoot Research Project, a longtime outdoorsman and field researcher who has experienced multiple Bigfoot encounters in the same Oregon backcountry locations over the course of several years. What begins as isolated moments slowly connects into something larger as he returns again and again.Meadows, ridgelines, river crossings, and campsites near Mount Hood don’t stand alone. Patterns form. Certain locations respond. Certain routes feel watched. And some areas seem to wake up the longer you stay.Resources: Gary's Youtube channel referenced in the interviewhttps://www.youtube.com/@bigfootresearchproject8081🗣️ 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're a QuickBooks customer looking to grow your business without the growing pains,
you need the Intuit ERP.
Upgrade to Intuit Enterprise Suite in a matter of hours.
It's the AI Native ERP from the makers of QuickBooks.
Learn more at Intuit.com slash ERP.
When energy dips, your reviving routine deserves more than a quick fix.
Reach for vital proteins, collagen, and protein shaking chocolate.
With 30 grams of protein and 10 grams of collagen peptides,
it helps support healthy hair, skin, nails, and joints, and a smooth, ready-to-drink, shake.
so your afternoon reset actually sets you up for success.
Vital Proteins. Stay vital.
Visit VitalProtene's.com and get started.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
During Memorial Day at Lowe's, shop household must-haves for less.
Save $80 on a charbroil performance series for Burner Grill to chef up something special.
Plus, get up to 45% off select major appliances to keep things fresh.
Our best lineup is here at Lowe's.
Lowe's.
We help you save
Valid through 527
While supplies last
Selection varies by location
See loaves.com for details
Visit your nearby lows
on West Pico Boulevard 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
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.
Welcome back to this show.
We've got the privilege of talking to Mr. Gary Allen today.
Gary is a field researcher from the northern coast of Oregon
and also some of the cascades as well.
You may remember he's got a Bigfoot themed YouTube channel that had some really interesting stuff on it and it's called Bigfoot Research Project.
But Gary has had some incredible things happen over the years.
We were just talking about it and really excited to see where this conversation will go today.
So welcome to the show, Gary.
How are you doing, sir?
Doing pretty well.
Pretty well.
Thank you.
Awesome.
Oh, my goodness.
I'm going to have the show, the link to your show channel in,
the description and there's some fascinating, fascinating stuff in there. I want to make sure all my
listeners check it out and make sure they're subscribed to it. But Gary, yeah, we've got some
interesting conversations to have. So let's get right into it. You know, you were saying it's probably
best to start chronologically. So, you know, how did this all start out for you, man?
I have notes. So if I look down, I'm not trying to be rude or anything. I'm just a lot. There's just a lot.
to cover here. So basically, when I was a child, I'm 63 years old. When I was a child,
the Patterson Gimlin film came out. It was on local TV. And my mom, who's part Native American,
told me that, you know, she's been around them and had activity when she was growing up.
She grew up in a logging camp in northern California.
And on her way to school, she'd see these oil drums that were full of oil thrown across a river and just crumpled.
You know, I mean, some forklifts could barely lift those.
And here's, you know, five or ten of them across a creek.
She said there'd be tracks all over.
And her father told her never go into the woods alone, never go out at night.
ever alone and, you know, to be safe because the,
the forest giants will get you. And so,
so she was always told, you know, beware of the forest giants.
They're not, they're, they're not friendly.
So I think, I think that's what, you know,
parents tell kids just to keep them safe, but not a bad idea with all the bears
and cougars and stuff running around out there.
So anyways, it progressed from there to, my first siding was in,
I want to say the mid-80s.
I was riding a bike home from a buddy of mine's house on the road between Forest Grove and Gaston.
And there's a big field there.
And back in the day, there were virtually no houses.
But my friend had a farm out there.
So I was riding my bike home about 1 o'clock in the morning in July and on a moonlit night.
And I noticed some movement out of the side of my eye in this field I'm riding next to.
and there's a creature the size of a horse running across the field,
but horse legs narrow down towards their feet,
and this thing didn't narrow down at all.
It looked like tree trunks it was running on.
And the moon was pretty bright that night,
and the road was like no cars whatsoever.
It's kind of a back road.
And the more I looked at it, the more I could kind of make out,
a little bit better. It was a black figure, but I could, I could see the silhouette really pretty well.
And I could see it didn't have any ears. I could see it was looking right at me while it ran.
And it was effortless. It was like galloping effortlessly at, you know, 20 miles an hour or so.
I was on a 10 speed pedaling. Once I saw it, I booked, man. I was moving. And it's it,
it paralleled me for about about three quarters of a mile. And then at the end,
of the field there's trees across and it comes right up to the highway and kind of a ditch and then the
highway and as i approached the end of the field i was afraid that uh it was going to come right at me
because it had nowhere to go but into these trees or towards me and it had been paralleling me the
whole time and i kept looking over and it's it's looking at me and uh i'd say it's about a on a 200 feet away
maybe maybe 250 and just moving right along effortlessly and the more I looked at I noticed it didn't
didn't have ears like a bear didn't have ears like a horse didn't have a snout like a horse
but it was about about the size of a thousand pound horse maybe a little bit maybe a little
bigger it was it was just huge and I didn't know what I was looking at I just knew I had to get
out of there and kept booking I got to the end end of that
trees and I waited for it to cross over to the road and it went straight into the trees.
And the trees are only like on a hundred feet thick right there.
And then you pop out into another field on the other side.
And it didn't pop out the other side.
Thank God.
And then not far about another half mile up the road is the turn off to the town I was going to.
So that was my first encounter.
And that one, that one kind of terrified me.
but it kind of, I don't know, I kind of forgot about it over time, kind of in a way.
I was interested in it because my mom talked about Bigfoot and as a kid and I saw that thing
and didn't know exactly what it was, but saw on a funny Bigfoot show that they run on all fours.
And I was like that, and they showed a picture like a, you know, cartoon a one or whatever,
they, you know, however they make those.
And it looked pretty much just like what I saw.
And I was like, that, that's it.
That's what I saw.
And at that point, I started to be kind of driven to want to learn more about,
about what I saw, what there was and, you know, how to investigate these things,
how to how to get to it.
I grew up in a family of people that hunt and fish.
My uncle's a guide.
My brothers are guides.
They bow hunt bear.
I grew up trapping and, you know, hunting and stuff.
So I'm really pretty adept in the woods.
And so when I saw that thing, I knew it wasn't a bear.
I knew it wasn't a horse.
I was trying to put it in a box and I just couldn't do it.
But finding Bigfoot put it in a box for me.
So then it's, okay, let's look at this box.
In 2015, I bought a motorcycle.
I hadn't ridden in years.
I bought a street bike, bought a Harley.
And my girlfriend's like, yeah, yeah, that's great.
Nice.
This will be really fun.
you got a bike, that's good for you.
And I thought she would tell me,
oh, I don't want you on a dangerous bike.
So next day, she got, bought a horse.
Yeah.
So I didn't even know she was shopping for a horse.
I guess she didn't know I shopping for a bike,
but she bought an endurance horse.
She grew up around horses,
had participated in dressage and a bunch of other things,
trained horses.
She's owned like 10 or 15 of them.
And anyway, so she bought it.
endurance horse you wanted to try out this new hobby.
In endurance racing, you train your horse to run 25, 50, 75, and 100-mile races.
The races that you compete in are up in the mountains.
They're not like in a city or on a track.
There is no track.
It's trails.
It's mountain trails.
A lot of time deer trails, elk trails, whatever the host who's running the event maps out.
They put little ribbons on the right side of the trail.
and you run along to the colored ribbon for the trail you're supposed to be on,
and you go out and come back,
and they have vets.
It's a pretty big deal.
There's thousands of people nationwide compete.
In 2019, my girlfriend got first place in her class out of 400 and some riders.
So she did really well, and her horse was just a beast.
I used to call them Beast mode because that guy, he was fearless.
He'd see bears, cougars,
herds of elk right in the path and just go right at him.
And those things just scatter.
He was just, he was fearless.
And another thing about the horses before I move on,
one thing people don't really know about horses is their hearing is just amazing.
Better than a dog.
So they can hear a tree branch break like two or three miles off.
I mean, they're, you know, they can hear footsteps of another horse two to three miles off.
I mean, they're just amazing.
hearing, just amazing. And their eyesight is like three times better than ours. They can see in the
dark pretty well, almost like a black and white TV would be to us is what they see at night.
So being on a horse up in the woods, if there's a predator, they'll look right at it. And so as you
move by, it'll be staring at the predator until it's not there anymore or it passes it. So,
you know,
one of the ultimate predator finding machines,
you know,
that we're just running up trails,
trying to get them fit to begin with.
So anyways,
I say all that because I've had,
since we've gotten the horse,
I've had,
gosh,
eight more sightings.
And we think it's the horse that brings it in.
And a lot of people agree,
you know,
Patterson Gilman,
we're on horses.
Gosh, what's this name that got the Sierra sounds?
They're on horses.
Ron Moorhead.
Ron Moorhead, yeah.
Sorry, Ron didn't.
Anyways, but all these people are on horses.
They're having all this activity.
And I'm kind of getting why.
There's something about, you know, the pounding that the horse makes going up the trail or something.
then they don't seem to be afraid of it.
And I don't know if they just equate, you know,
people on horseback to be harmless.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure how that equates to them.
But they're extremely curious about the horses.
They come right into camp to see them.
In 2015, we got the horse in 2016 or 17.
We went to a horse camp.
It's called Rears Horse Camp.
It's just outside of Timber, Oregon.
It's really close.
It's a, what it was was a, uh, when the tolamek burn happened, uh, right after the feds sent,
sent in, uh, replant crews. And so they, they set up this big campground. I mean, there's a hundred
plus people living there that would go out each day and, and plant trees to reforest, uh, the
telemock forest. And this is the main campground. They spearheaded out. And it's like, I don't know,
five miles out of timber, is my guess. But it is on a dead end road. Um, um, there, there might be some
logging roads that come off of it, but they kind of dead end out there.
There's nothing that really loops around.
So anyways, out off of this creek next to the telemook to Banks Railway, there's a campground
called Rears Horse Camp.
And so we go out to all different horse camps and all different horse trails to train the
horse.
We try to get it someplace new all the time so that it doesn't get.
fixed in a certain, you know, state of mind. It needs to be able to jump stumps, just, you know,
boogie right along in about 12 miles an hour everywhere it goes. So anyways, we brought the horse
up to train there and we got there on a Friday. And by then I was pretty into, you know,
finding Bigfoot, you know, Cliff and and everybody, you know, they're all heroes to me. I was like,
wow, these guys are so cool, you know, what they're doing. You know, wouldn't that be great to,
you know, to see another one.
And wow, this would be, yeah, you think that until it happens.
But anyway, and maybe you do after, I don't know.
But so anyways, we go into this campground and it's down in some ridges.
And if you follow the ridge at the campground's on further down, there's a creek in this bottom.
And the railroad tracks are right above it.
The road's up here and heads out to timber.
Um, above the road is this really tall ridge.
I mean, it's, it's a couple thousand feet tall.
Heavily old forest.
I mean, trees are, you know, four or five feet around.
They're, they're big.
Um, ton of old growth, ton of ferns.
I mean, it's just green lush, beautiful, beautiful place.
Um, the trail there, it's about a, I want to say, it's about a six mile loop.
And the horse just loves it.
There's a couple of creek crossings and it's just really cool.
So we went there to go train the horse.
We get there on Friday and we get the horse.
They have big wooden corrals to keep horses in.
We put the horse in the corral and we start making dinner.
Well, into the camp next to us, another rider comes in.
Another pickup truck with a camper and a horse trailer rolls in.
And after a while, we walk over because my girl's riding by herself on her horse.
And she would like to ride with someone else.
So we go introduce ourselves.
We invite them over for.
dinner or a glass of wine after dinner or whatever.
So they take us up on our invitation and they brought some some like cake or something over
a carrot cake, I think.
So anyways, we're sitting at the table and it's twilight.
It's starting to get a little bit dark.
And I'm just all into, you know, finding out as much information as I can from anybody I can.
And I ask them, hey, have you ever seen anything strange while you're writing?
And they're gone, no, never.
No, nope, nope.
I go, oh, so you ever watch Finding Bigfoot?
You haven't heard any noises anything like off of that show or anything?
No, nope, never.
I go, you wouldn't mind if I did a few trenox, would you?
And they're going, yeah, shoot, they're laughing.
Go ahead.
That sounds fun.
Great.
So I have a baseball bat, Louisville Slugger with me, and I walk over to a maple
because you want to hit a hard surface, a soft surface.
It's just not going to carry.
So I walk over to this maple and I just crack it.
I broke my bat right in half.
and just a big loud pop
and they're just laughing at me
just dying and about five seconds later
pop from way up on that ridge above the road
this is Matt Rogers from Los Culture East us with Matt Rogers and Boen Yang
this is Boen Yang from Los Culture Reesters with Matt Rogers and Boen Yang
spend your balance instantly with the Venmo debit card in an end up to 5% cashbacks
on your favorite bundle of brands when you join Venmo's stash
your rewards come from bundles of brands you can keep or switch every 30 days
so you can choose the ones that match your everyday spending.
The more you do with Venmo, the more you get.
Earn 2% cash back when you set up auto reloads.
Earn 5% cashback with direct deposit.
Great for anyone who doesn't want to transfer funds or wait days.
No monthly fee, no minimum balance.
Cashback is earned automatically.
Just use your Venmo debit card and the rewards show up without extra steps.
It's a simple way to get rewarded on things you're already buying,
whether that's groceries, coffee, or your go-to online shops.
Everything lives right inside the Venmo app so you can track your spending,
check your balance, and see your rewards all in one place.
The Venmo debit card works just like the app you already use, fast, flexible, and built around your day-to-day life.
It's a great option if you want a debit card that fits seamlessly into your routine and gives you a little extra back on the things you're already doing.
The Venmo MasterCard is issued by the BankCorp Bank N.A.
pursuant to license by MasterCard International Incorporated.
Venmo Stash Bundle Terms and Exclusion supply.
Max $100 cash back per month.
Requires $500 plus in direct deposits.
See terms at Venmo.com.
forward slash stash terms.
It may just be
the world's greatest eraser.
Mabeline Instant Eraser Concealer
is your secret weapon for erasing signs
of a sleepless night.
Instantly cover dark circles and under-eye bags
in a tap, swipe, blend,
leaving a bright, refreshed look
without feeling heavy.
Instant eraser does more than cover and conceal.
With 24 shades, you can correct,
highlight, or sculpt.
From a subtle brow lift to defining your pout.
This is the most of the most.
multitasker that keeps up with you.
The best part, the formula delivers
flawless results for up to 16 hours
with crease-resistant, lightweight wear.
Instant Eraser won't settle into fine lines
and stays smooth, breathable, and hydrating.
No cakey vibes here.
Just a natural skin-like finish
that looks fresh from morning coffees
to late-night RSVPs.
Mabeline Instant Eraser.
Find your shade of Instant Eraser concealer
at your local retailer.
Mabelene, New York.
When I got to the 50,
I've learned
some things,
like the value of the
family, the
importance of the
work,
and that the 99%
of the people
of the most of
the virus
that causes the
Culebrilla.
Although not
all the
people in risk
they're
I do not
the eruption
dolorousa
with ampollos
during
that even
the time
even the
things are
a lot
a lot
not learn
about the
question.
Talked over
the doctor
or
And that ridge is probably at least 1,500 feet above us, probably closer to 2,000 feet, but near the top.
And we're like, is there a road up there?
Yeah, what's going on here?
So we're kind of laughing about a little bit.
And I look around and I find somebody had been cutting firewood and they de-limbed this tree.
And I found a nice, big, thick branch about four feet long that I could swing and hit it again.
So I said, well, I'm going to do it.
triple knock. So I do a triple knock and then a triple knock off the hill answers back.
Anyways, I'll speed through this. That kept happening. We did it like five times. And,
and then all of a sudden, a tree got pushed over and it was like halfway down. It was coming down
the hill towards us. A tree got pushed over about halfway down the hill. And I mean, it was,
it sounded old growth when it hit. I mean, it was, it was a bang when it hit. And you could
hear it pop and stuff splitting when it, when it started to get shoved over. And I mean, it, it was,
We all just went to silence.
We're like, okay, well, and they're going, you know what?
It's getting late.
We've got to go feed our horse, and we're going to go to bed, and we'll ride with you in the morning.
Great.
Looking forward to it.
That's going to be fun.
And my girl goes, well, I'm going to go feed our horse.
And, you know, I ask you, need any help?
You want me to go with you?
She's like, no, you know, I'm all good.
So she goes back.
I mean, she's fearless, dude.
I have the most fearless girlfriend in the world.
Anyway, she walks back there and is getting water and stuff for the horse.
I told her, I'll make dessert, and I went in the camper, and I took the carrot cake.
We had ice cream, and I made up a couple plates.
And about 10 minutes later, she comes in, and she goes, they're, that whooping, it's, it's coming down.
It's coming close.
It sounds like it's up on the road now.
So it's 100 feet away, not, you know, not 1,500 feet up this hill anymore.
It had come down the hill.
And she goes, I'm, I'm just going to stay inside, you know, and we'll just call it a night.
And I was like, great, let's eat.
And, you know, and I have the windows open because it's, you know, summer.
But I'm listening and I can hear owls hooting.
You know, the boroughs owls, you know, often at distance.
But they don't sound right.
They're number one, they're too loud.
And then they're dragging out the go, goo, go.
go go like they're just dragging it out you're normally way faster so not that fast but you know what i
mean so anyways i'm this is strange this is strange strange times but you know hey you know maybe i'll
get it get some audio with my phone you know i didn't have any recording devices or anything at the
time so so anyways we go to sleep um i wake up about two in the morning and uh to the boroughsals
now there's two of them and
they're out in front of our truck.
It sounds like a couple hundred feet away
coming through the campground, and you can
tell one's on one side of the campground,
one's on the other, and
they're coming towards our
truck, and they pass down both
sides of our truck, you know,
making that drawn out
go, go, go, go.
You know, and
I didn't hear any footsteps or anything,
but owls normally fly up
higher than our truck.
They're not like,
ear level. So anyways, they went by back to where a horse was and I was like, oh, crap,
I better, you know, so I'm peeking the window open. I'm shining a flashlight on the horse just
to make sure that, you know, he's going to be okay. But beast mode, he's like, yeah, whatever,
you know, he's stomping around a little bit, but he's not, he's not just that distressed.
When they get distressed, you know they're distressed. They start kicking and jumping and,
I mean, they're, they don't, they won't have it. You know, they're just fed up and they're done
with it. So that actually happened to my neighbor's horse a couple hours later. So,
um, so in the morning, I wake up and, uh, I look over and it's like first light and I make,
I'm, I start a coffee. I pop open our door and I see the neighbors are almost completely packed up
and they're leaving. And I'm like, what, what, what's going on? You were supposed to ride,
you know, with my, my, my girlfriend. And they're going, we're getting out of here. You called him in last
night. And I was like, what? They're going, yeah, you know, big foot finder. You brought one in.
And we woke up at three o'clock in the morning and the thing was reaching over the top of the
crowd trying to touch our horse. They said it was about eight feet tall, probably about four foot
wide in the shoulder, solid black. They said that he stepped out with his 45 because he thought
it was a mountain lion because his horse was just not having it kicking, screaming.
and dancing around.
And so he walked out with his 45 and a flashlight.
And the thing was reaching over the top,
trying to touch the horse.
And then it looked up at him,
turned and just walked off right through the trees.
And it kept the horse between it and him when it left,
almost like it knew what a gun was or knew you better,
you know,
I don't know,
I just knew Linus keep the horse between line of sight.
So anyways,
it stomped off.
He said it stomped off and he could hear it go across the road and stomp up the hill.
And he said they started packing.
They're like, screw this place.
You know, yeah, come to find out they do exist.
So, so anyways, and he's really mad at me because I brought that thing in.
You know, he's like, yeah.
So anyways, they left and we stayed and went and rode that day.
We were going home that night anyways.
We just stayed the one night.
We own a farm, so we have to take care of stuff.
So anyways, so fast forward to one year later, we were at Northrop Creek horse camp.
Beautiful.
Both Rears and Northrop are like brand new.
They're just beautiful, really nice, well-made campgrounds.
We're at Northrop in about 1 o'clock in the morning.
I wake up to a scream.
And it sounds like a woman getting stabbed to death.
And it didn't really change octaves.
It was just a, but it lasted for about 45 seconds.
And I know it lasted for 45 seconds because it woke me up.
I had time to pull on my sweats, grab my 45, and jump out the back door.
and with a flashlight.
I thought that a cougar was probably attacking our horses,
and I was just going to decaffinate it.
So I pop out, I got the flashlight, the 45,
and there's nothing there.
But the screen came from right, right,
just it sounded like about 50 feet away from the horses
across this real narrow campground road that we parked on.
And it's the force is so thick there.
I mean, if you threw a rock, you'd go like 10 feet in and hit a tree because there's so many.
And it's all old growth.
It's all, you know, four or five foot round trunks.
I mean, they're, you know, two, 250 foot tall trees.
I mean, they're freaking huge.
And I just couldn't see anything.
Well, the horses were staring right over at that area, ears up, staring right at it.
And whatever a horse's ears are on, look at that spot because you'll, you will, you'll, you'll see what.
they're seeing. They're like parabolic dishes. They just hone in on anything. So they're staring at
those trees for, I just sat out there with them and, and, um, calmed them down. They were,
they were moving around quite a bit, but they, um, they weren't screaming or anything. You know,
they weren't kicking and screaming. They were, they were upset though, you could tell. So they
stirred over towards those trees for about 10 minutes. And, uh, to the point where I just walked
over at the flashlight and the trees, I was just going to, I was going to put an end to this.
and nothing there, nothing.
After a while, the horses just went back to eating, ignored,
it just ignored that spot.
So I knew whatever event that was, it's over.
And, you know, it's 3 o'clock in the morning.
I'm dead tired, so I just went back to bed.
Next day, walked over to where the trees were.
I mean, this spot walked around a little bit.
And no tracks, no sign, no nothing.
And whatever it was was gone.
but the scream was so loud, I could, I could almost feel it in my chest through the camper.
It was, I mean, I don't know, sound like a freaking air raid siren loud.
I mean, it was just loud, loud, loud, loud, loud, loud.
And I've heard Cougar scream and, you know, they go, ha, for like five seconds.
So I've never really heard one go past that.
This one was like big winded, you know, 35, 45 seconds scream.
It was still screaming until the point my door came completely open and the light shined towards those trees.
So anyway, so that happened.
So at that point, I'm still, you're thinking, you know, it'd be kind of cool to see one of these things again.
You know, I saw the one run across a field.
You know, it didn't attack me.
I'm probably, you know, nothing so far has really come at us.
So we'll probably be just fine.
I just really had to drive to see one.
So that all changed in 2019.
So I've had multiple sightings in the coast range,
and mainly around Mount Hood.
We found a spot, I call it Skookham Ridge,
but there's multiple trails all the way around Mount Hood,
and they're on these ridges, just first ridges around the mountain.
and we go to a place.
It's by Lolo Pass.
There's like multiple campgrounds in there.
And we had trained in there before.
We like mountains because it really puts muscle on a horse.
It really makes them strong.
And in race season, the more muscle you can get on them, the better.
You know, the more wind they can move through efficiently, the better.
and that's just, it's almost like cheating, running them up hills.
It's, you know, compared to people that just train on flats.
So we took them up there the year before and just didn't, wasn't really paying attention
to anything, didn't, didn't really have any activity, wasn't, wasn't trying to.
You know, I, I don't try to go have activity.
It just kind of happens because we're out in the forest every other weekend all summer
long all over the northwest.
So, you know, I've been up by Mount Rainier, I've been, you know, all over coast range,
all over, you know, to Prineville, bend, you know, just everywhere, just all over the place.
And we get invited to go to races all the time.
We get invited to go stay at Friends House that have ranches like we do.
And we do.
You know, so we train all over the place.
So anyways, we go up to Lolo Pass and we're training on these ridges.
We have corrals that are portable so we can set up our corrals anywhere.
So we're set up, and I think it's like on a Friday.
I got off work early.
We went up and still light out.
We got set up fairly early.
And so there's about five hours of daylight left.
And this one, this is going to take a bit to describe the siding because we saw multiple
big foot.
So I hope your listeners, you know, buckle up.
So basically, I carry a four.
45, everywhere I go in my camper in case somebody tries to break in and hurt my girlfriend or hurt the horses or take our stuff or whatever.
And to protect us from mountain lions and that sort of thing.
I don't carry it, though, when I'm riding my e-bike that I built and I can show you pictures of the bike.
I built a fat tire bike, put a one-horse motor on it and heavy capacity battery.
So I train with the horses.
I ride with them at 12 miles an hour, and I can go uphill, downhill.
I do river crossings, all kinds of stuff with it.
So I ride with the horse.
I'm like its best friend.
We're a herd.
And when our mare gets scared, she wants me out front.
When our, when Marcus, our big male runs up a trail, he doesn't get scared.
He's just a beast.
I've seen elk run from him.
I've seen bears run from him.
Mountain lions, nothing scares this guy.
But, you know, he's 11, 1,200 pounds of solid muscle and will river dance on anything that makes him mad.
You know, elk are what, 700, 800 pounds?
I mean, so he's bigger than most anything he'll come up against.
So I think that takes the fear out of him.
I don't know.
He's kind of crazy anyways.
He's amazing.
But anyways, so we, so we.
roll in, it's, uh, it's like, I'd say five hours before dark or so. My girlfriend says, well,
hey, let's do a quick ride. We're going to go up the trail and just do do this. It's like a
seven miles up this hill, seven miles back, you know, it, you know, five miles an hour up and,
you know, 12 back. We'll, we'll be back in no time. And she's been up this trail before,
um, has terrible sense of direction. Like,
I don't know anybody that has worse sense of direction than she does,
which is bad when you endurance race.
But they, again, have ribbons on the trail, so she's safe.
But so anyways, she says, let's just do a quick ride up the trail.
So I carry a machete on my bike in case there's like Black Varieter or something
crossing the path.
On one side it has a saw on the other side, it's a machete.
It's, you know, three feet long.
And I usually carry a 380.
with hollow points for cougars.
A lady got killed up there like two years prior.
She got mauled to death by a cougar.
And people, I'm telling you,
you're a fool if you don't at least carry some kind of spray with you
because those things pounce,
especially women when you're alone.
A bad idea.
And I've heard of them pouncing on women riding horses.
For some reason,
they leave men alone for the most part,
but I'm not chancing it.
I just carry.
It's just safer.
You know, in my driveway, I have bears.
that live just down below our house.
So I see wildlife a lot.
So, and there's cougars just mulled five goats like a mile from my house,
our neighbor's house.
Unfortunately, they lost five.
We have guardian, our livestock guardian dog, so the cougars leave us alone.
But anyways, so she said, yeah, let's do this quick spin up the trail.
And I'm sorry, I'm dragging this thing out.
But so we take off.
It's about, it's about, I'd say, four o'clock.
And it's in July, right around my birthday, I'm, I have.
a mid-July birthday. And so it stays light till, you know, visible light probably till about
930 or so, I guess. This is Matt Rogers from Los Culture Eistas with Matt Rogers and Boen Yang.
This is Bowen Yang from Los Culture Reesters with Matt Rogers and Boan Yang. Spend your balance
instantly with the Venmo debit card in an herb to 5% cashbacks on your favorite bundle of brands
when you join Venmo's stash. Your rewards come from bundles of brands you can keep or
switch every 30 days so you can choose the ones that match your everyday spending. The more you do
with Venmo, the more you get. Earned two.
percent cashback when you set up auto reloads.
Earn 5% cashback with direct
deposit. Great for anyone who doesn't want to transfer
funds or wait days. No monthly fee,
no minimum balance. Cashback is earned
automatically. Just use your Venmo debit card and the
rewards show up without extra steps. It's a simple
way to get rewarded on things you're already
buying, whether that's groceries, coffee, or
your go-to-on-line shops. Everything lives
right inside the Venmo app so you can track your spending,
check your balance, and see your rewards all in
one place. The Venmo debit card works just like
the app you already use. Fast, flexible,
and built around your day-to-day life.
great option if you want a debit card that fits seamlessly into your routine and gives you a little
extra back on the things you're already doing. The Venmo MasterCard is issued by the BankCorp
Bank, N.A, pursuant to licensed by MasterCard International Incorporated. Venmo stash bundle terms and
exclusion supply. Max $100 cash back per month. Requires $500 plus in direct deposits. See terms
at Venmo.com.me.4 slash stash terms. It may just be the world's greatest eraser.
Mabeline Instant Eraser Concealer
is your secret weapon
for erasing signs of a sleepless night.
Instantly cover dark circles and under-eye bags
in a tap, swipe, blend,
leaving a bright, refreshed look
without feeling heavy.
Instant Eraser does more than cover and conceal.
With 24 shades, you can correct, highlight, or sculpt.
From a subtle brow lift to defining your pout.
This is the multitasker that keeps up with you.
The best part, the formula delivers flawless result.
up to 16 hours with crease resistant lightweight wear.
Instant Eraser won't settle into fine lines and stays smooth, breathable, and hydrating.
No cakey vibes here.
Just a natural skin-like finish that looks fresh from morning coffees to late-night RSVPs.
Mabelene Instant Eraser.
Find your shade of Instant Eraser concealer at your local retailer.
Mabelene, New York.
When I got to the 50,
I've learned
some things,
like the value of the
family, the
importance of the
work,
and that the 99%
of the people
of more of 50
you have
the virus
that causes the
Culebriya.
Although not
all the
people in
risk,
they're doing
the
lot of
the opiors
during
the endpoli
that even the
more
simple
are all
a lot
not learn
about the
who lebrilla
in a
way
difficult.
Abla
with your
doctor or
pharmaceutical.
Patrocino
for GSK.
So anyways,
we take off
about four
and I'm
thinking, you know,
we're going to be
at the top of this
ridge.
She says at seven
miles, you know,
at five miles an
hour, we should
be up there
like an hour
or half, right?
It took three
hours to
get up there.
The trail is
like this and it
just has
switchback after
switchback.
I mean,
I lost track
of how many
switchbacks
there are.
A hundred more,
I don't know.
And then you're
crossing over different ridges. It's not one ridge that you go up. It's multiple
ridges and you're switching back and finally you pop over this, this ridge and there's a lake up
there and it's this just sapphire blue little lake. It's maybe all of, oh, no, six, seven hundred
feet across. And we can see it from the ledge that we're on. And on the other side is Mount
Hood right there. I mean, it's just right there. And just gorgeous.
Sandy Rivers down in the valley way down below us.
I think it's about a 5,000 foot climb, maybe six from the floor up to where we're at.
The horse is just not a problem.
He's such a beast.
Me on the other hand, I've been on a bike dodging boulders and trying, you know,
getting bounced around and, you know, my shocks are okay, but they're not awesome.
And, you know, four-inch tires do pretty good, but it's not a cushy ride.
So I'm kind of beat up.
But we get up there and get the view of Mount Hood and take pictures.
And, you know, we have our phones, so we're taking pictures and stuff.
And so anyways, there's a crossing there.
And one heads to rhododendron.
And the other one loops back supposedly down to where our campground is.
That my girlfriend thinks that that's the trail she took before and she did.
So if we go that way, it's faster than if we go back the way we came.
because now we're about, you know, three hours have passed.
And so now it's like seven or eight.
I don't know, something like that, probably closer to eight.
Anyways, I'm telling her, well, you know, I want to get off this mountain before dark
because I've never been here before.
I'd like to get out of here and back at camp and, you know, eating those steaks we brought.
So anyways, she goes, well, let's go up.
We've got to go about another thousand feet up this ridge up this trail.
And then it drops off and goes down.
the backside and then it's just switchbacks all the way back down kind of like what we came up but
it's a lot more of them and there's it's steeper and the narrow and the trail is way more narrow
up the front side the trail started out about eight or ten feet wide and it narrowed down to about
four feet on the back side it's about a foot wide and if you step off you're you're going to go
probably if the horse fell it'd probably fall about four or five hundred feet before it stopped rolling
and it hit a lot of trees to stop to um so you know people you're you're going you're
He could grab onto stuff, but you're going to go at least 100 feet.
So anyways, so we head up to the top of this peak.
And this part's kind of critical to the rest of the story.
But we're going up and she has this trail and it looks like a washed out creek bed.
And it's boulders that are like, I don't know, three and four foot tall.
So I can't ride my bike across.
I got to lift my bike up.
So it's wearing me out, man.
I go on a thousand feet over boulder sucked.
And as I'm dragging it, I keep hitting my brakes and my pants.
and my pedals and stuff against the rocks.
So I smashed my brakes.
By the time I hit the top of this peak, I had no brakes.
And I got to go downhill seven miles with no brakes in Bigfoot country.
So anyways, we get up to the top of the hill.
And all the way up that last thousand feet,
I was not a gentleman at all in my speech.
I swore.
I'm surprised that dark clouds didn't come in.
and lightning hit me because I was I was a cussing. Oh man, because I kept falling over trying to
lift the bike and I get all cut up in my legs. I was wearing shorts. They're all cut up and I'm bleeding
out and smashed and bruised and not happy. I was not a happy camper and I was letting the
world know. But she was riding far enough ahead of me. I didn't think she heard me. So I thought,
well, I can, you know, I heard somewhere that yelling helps relieve pain. So I was, I was yelling.
So I get to the top of the peak and she's like, yeah, I heard you come. And
did you?
I have no idea why.
And, oh, before we got to the top of the peak, one last thing.
It narrowed down so narrow as like six inches wide in one spot.
And my freaking bike hit a rock and the whole bike went off the cliff.
And I had to choose whether to push the bike away.
And I just built this thing.
I spent like two grand on it to just push the bike away and watch it go off a cliff
or hang on to it and try and grab.
some brush. So I tried to grab some brush next to me, and the bike went off anyways. And so it
kind of drugged me down with it. And I went off the trail, started sliding down the hillside,
but I grabbed some brush on the way down. And I went down about 10 feet before I finally was able
to stop, holding onto roots of something. I got the bike in one hand and that and the other. And by God,
I wasn't going to lose that bike. And I drug it. You grab foot hold with my feet and push and drug. And
I got it back up on the trail and I did not stop cursing for a while.
And, uh, but my girlfriend has a picture of me with the bike upside down on the trail and
the horse is looking at me like it looks, they're both laughing at me and she's got her camera
out.
I got a picture of that and it's, it's on, uh, one of my videos on a Bigfoot research project.
Um, so, so anyways, that finished off my brakes right there.
They're, they're toast at that point.
So we get to the top of the peak and we start going down.
we get to the peak and amazing view.
And there's no trees up there.
It's alpine.
So like the last probably 200 feet of cliff that went up is just all alpine.
So we drop over the front and you can see the sandy down below and you can see probably the tree area where a campground is.
We're like, sweet.
There's downhill.
There's camp.
We're going to be, everything's great.
So we drop off the peak and go down about on a one or 200 feet.
and it's kind of windy at that point is a sunny day, slightly cloudy, but a little bit windy up there.
So we're like, well, let's drop down a couple hundred feet and eat lunch real quick.
So we drop off the hill and we brought sandwiches so we're like eating a candy bar or sandwich or something.
And the horse all of a sudden cocks its head and is looking downhill behind us.
And it's not unusual for a horse to look around, but it was fixated.
And I mean, like I've never seen it lock on to something and be that.
fixated prior to that and it wouldn't stop staring. It was like something was coming up behind us up
this ridge but more in the trees and I told her it's got to be a bear or a cougar or something's
in there. It's probably a bear because it's making enough noise that you know because cougars are
soft-footed but it's probably a bear and the horses here and it roll rocks as it's coming up and it's
got to be right in those trees just you know two 300 feet below us up behind us and I got a picture
of the horse staring at it.
And I took pictures of,
with my phone camera,
I took pictures of what it was staring at,
just in case I could blow it up
and see a bear in there later.
You know, I knew something was up
because it stared at while we were eating our sandwiches
for about 10 minutes and it didn't take its eyes off it.
So that was the beginning of it.
And beginning of the encounter.
So she says, well, due to your foul language,
I'm going to go ahead.
and roll ahead of you. And I'll stay about one to two thousand feet in front of you. So,
you know, you don't run my horse over with your no break situation. And I told her, well, I'm going to,
I'm going to try and take the bike and because it's, it's so steep uphill off the trail and such a drop
off it. What I'm going to do is I'm going to take the front tire and scrub it into the hill.
So I'm taking speed off by rubbing my tire against the bank. And I mean, brush and rocks and shit or
flight all over me, but at least it's,
slows the bike down because otherwise I'd be doing, you know, 200 miles an hour and like a couple hundred feet.
So, so she takes off and gets out ahead of me. I start to come down the hill and I didn't get two minutes down the hill, you know, maybe maybe a thousand feet.
And all of a sudden, I hear a family talking. And it was crystal clear. It was a mother. It was a mother.
a father and it sounded like two kids.
And the kids sounded excited.
But I couldn't understand the language.
It sounded like the parents, like they're going to
freaking Disneyland.
I mean, the kids were,
and another one,
you know,
just I could hear two different pitches of voices talking.
So I knew there were two young ones.
And then the parents, you know,
the father had a really deep voice,
you know, and the mother was,
you know,
but they were all talking.
And they were behind me on the hillside where the horse was looking.
So they might have still been coming up out of that valley,
I mean, you know, several thousand feet up the hill.
Well, at the time the horse was listening to them.
But they came around the ridge below me.
And I'm going, I'm going down the ridge camps way down below, seven miles down below.
I'm going off this ridge and about to hit all these switchbacks.
and my girlfriend's out in front of me,
and they're circling on the hillside below me through this old growth.
And they're close, man.
I mean, they're, I could hear the voices clearly, and they weren't screaming.
You know, it was nothing like Ron Moorhead's thing, not even, not even close.
I would say Moorhead to me, after hearing these,
moreheads, they were screaming up a valley at them like they were pissed off.
These weren't pissed.
They were happy.
They were chilling.
I mean, it sounded like a family, like I said, talking about we're going to Disneyland, you know.
And I guess, you know, Disneyland is me and my girlfriend.
So anyways, so, so I hear moving along the hillside.
And so I speed up because they're catching me and they're catching me no freaking problem.
And I'm thinking, well, there must be a trail, you know, 100 feet below me.
But the trees are so freaking thick.
You know, old growth.
I can't see anything.
So I speed up to where I see this.
rock slide. So the rock slide is like a thousand feet. It's probably 300 feet wide. And I'm thinking
at a trail that's 100 feet down, I'm going to see it at the rock slide. I mean,
there's no way I can't see it. And I get, I get there and they had already crossed it. But I
looked down and there ain't no freaking trail. There's, there's nothing there. And that's when I
knew, okay, this is, uh, this is not people. Plus at the speed they were moving,
I couldn't move my bike that fast without brakes.
And I was scrubbing off speed.
I was probably doing, I don't know, 10 miles an hour.
I was pretty much hauling ass,
like wrecking pretty much every time I scrub up speed off.
And they still went right around me like I was chained to a tree.
And they kept going down the hill towards my girlfriend,
who's down slightly to my right.
They were on my left and they were on an intersect course.
I could hear them coming around the hill.
They were still talking.
They went around me.
and that's when the fear kind of hit me,
because I realized that that's not people talking.
That's not people.
Nobody can move that fast, not possible.
And I started getting a little bit scared,
and I just told myself, well, you know,
you got a machete.
You got a bike you can throw at them, you know.
It is what it is, but I better catch my girl
because I don't want her in Dan.
So I tried to get down that hill as fast as I could.
And like I said, there's about a hundred switchbacks.
So I get at that point, it's probably 10% down the seven miles.
So the path is really narrow.
I mean, in some spots, it's like, it's like eight inches wide.
And then it's just drop.
And the hillside up, my elbow's hitting the hill on the upside.
And it's old growth, really deep, dense forest.
and the trails just the trails like at a 45.
I mean, it's steep as hell.
And it's loose gravel.
So my tires are kind of slid around a little bit.
And I'm just thinking, oh, crap, better I go off this cliff.
I'm screwed.
So I get, is it about, I was about 10% down the hill at the point where the rock slide was.
So I go a few more minutes down the trail.
And then I start hitting these switchbacks.
and they put switchbacks in because it's too steep just to go straight down the hill.
So you got switchback after switchback.
And it's not an old cat road.
It's definitely like an elk trail that got improved for horses.
And in some spots, it's, you know, three feet wide.
But for the most, it was about a foot wide.
And they'll have trees that fell over the path.
They cut out about a foot wide of it or two feet wide of it so the horse could pass through.
You know, so it doesn't have to step over it.
And then sometimes they leave them.
for a while and have the horse step over them.
Those ones I have to lift the bike over.
But anyways, I'm going down the hill and about five minutes after I left the slide,
I've gone through maybe six switchbacks, and all of a sudden I hear a horse behind me,
you know, stomping, stomped, stom, stomped, stomp, stomp, stomp.
And I'm thinking, crap, there's a rider on this narrow trail.
And I have to move out of its way.
because horses have the right-away.
So I drag my bike up on the bank and the stomping stops.
And it's just around the turn that I just came around.
And I'm like, okay, you screw with me.
Okay, I'm going to go.
So I put my bike back on the trail.
I start going down.
Again, go around one or two corners and stomp, stom, stom, stom, stomp, stomp.
And I'm thinking it's a horse.
I mean, it's like a thousand pounds if it's an ounce.
This is Matt Rogers from Las Culture Eastus with Matt.
Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yang.
This is Bowen-Yang from Los Culture Research with Matt Rogers and Bowen-Jang.
Spend your balance instantly with the Venmo debit card and earn up to 5% cashbacks on your
favorite bundle of brands when you join Venmo's stash.
Your rewards come from bundles of brands you can keep or switch every 30 days,
so you can choose the ones that match your everyday spending.
The more you do with Venmo, the more you get.
Earn 2% cash back when you set up auto reloads.
Earn 5% cash back with direct deposit.
Great for anyone who doesn't want to transfer funds or wait days.
No monthly fee, no minimum balance.
And now you can earn up to 5% cash back.
It's a select brands in your bundle every time you check out online with the Venmo button.
Cashback is earned automatically. Just use your Venmo debit card and the rewards show up without extra
steps. It's a simple way to get rewarded on things you're already buying, whether that's groceries,
coffee, or your go-to-on-line shops. Everything lives right inside the Venmo app so you can track your
spending, check your balance, and see your rewards all in one place. The Venmo debit card works
just like the app you already use, fast, flexible, and built around your day-to-day life.
It's a great option if you want a debit card that fits seamlessly into your routine and gives
you a little extra back on the things you're already.
doing. The Venmo MasterCard is issued by the BankCorp Bank N.A. Pursuant to license by MasterCard
International Incorporated. Venmo Stash Bundle Terms and Exclusion Supply. Max, $100 cash back per month.
Requires $500 plus in direct deposits. See Terms at Venmo.comme. Forward slash stash terms.
Venmo checkout not available at all merchants.
It may just be the world's greatest eraser.
Mabeline Instant Eraser Concealer is your secret weapon for erasing signs of a sleepless night.
Cover dark circles and under-eye bags in a tap, swipe, blend,
leaving a bright, refreshed look without feeling heavy.
Instant Eraser does more than cover and conceal.
With 24 shades, you can correct, highlight, or sculpt.
From a subtle brow lift to defining your pout.
This is the multitasker that keeps up with you.
The best part?
The formula delivers flawless results for up to 16 hours
with crease-resistant, lightweight wear.
Instant eraser won't settle into fine lines
and stays smooth, breathable, and hydrating.
No cakey vibes here.
Just a natural skin-like finish
that looks fresh from morning coffees
to late-night RSVPs.
Mabeline Inston Eraser.
Find your shade of Instant Eraser concealer
at your local retailer.
Maybelline, New York.
When you're getting to 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
you have the virus that causes the Culebrilla.
Although not all the people in risk
will be developed.
I do not even
with ampollosy with ampollosos
making that even the tasks
more simple
are all a lot of a retort.
No,
learn about the Culebrilla
of the way difficult.
Talked on your doctor
or pharmaceutical,
patrocinoed for GSC.
And I'm around horses all the time.
I know what they sound like.
Sounded like a horse coming up.
And drank my bike up.
You know, I've been kicked at
and bed at and stuff for not having my bike out of the way before, so it ain't happening again.
So, so I do that a couple times.
It happens a couple times up, up on the top, like 50% of the hill.
So I get, I get to about the halfway point and the stomping stops.
And I see my girlfriend.
And I ask, have, have you been hearing anything in the trees at all, anything?
And she says, I've heard some, some, some.
oops, both up above me and down below me.
And she says, they're close.
I mean, they're within 100 feet of me behind logs or behind trees or something,
but they're really close.
And I said, well, let's stay closer together.
I'd like to keep you in eyesight.
And she goes, no, you keep wrecking.
And I can hear you.
She goes, I'm going to stay a little further out.
I mean, she's fearless.
So she's not afraid of these things.
But I said, fine.
You know, I mean, what choice do I have?
she's on a horse that works and my bike has no brake.
So it is what it is.
So she takes off.
We're at about the 50% down the hill mark or 75% down the hill mark.
She takes off and then I get not 100 feet from where we just talked.
And I up just right above me, I hear whoop and just below me, I hear,
whoop.
And then get further down and then I hear whoop and then whoop, like different tones.
So it's either different, you know, different force people or, or it's, you know, the same one doing different tones.
I didn't see anything, though.
I just heard them and they were close.
And I'm, I'm just thinking, oh, crap, it's almost dark.
I mean, it's, I mean, we're, we're half hour away from twilight, an hour away from pitch black.
And I don't know where I'm at because I hadn't been on this trail before.
we're still at that point probably three miles away from camp and and the bottom is about two
miles down and and then you got across multiple rivers which I didn't know which sucks out
of e-bike so anyways we we as we go down I'm I'm hearing brush cracking and stuff off to
both sides of me as I come down the ridge. And I finally get down to the bottom of that last,
that last bit. And honestly, I don't, I don't remember looking around for, you know, sign or anything.
I was more like, get out of here. So, you know, get back to the camper and make sure that she's safe and
the horse is safe. So anyways, we get to the bottom. There's a river there. I got to cross it. It's all on video.
So I have several years of me crossing those,
there's three.
Two of them are pretty tiny, but one's pretty good size.
So I had to do the crossing.
I was so beat up.
I could barely walk, man.
I'm fairly athletic.
I buck hay and do all kinds of stuff on the farm.
But that just tore me up.
I crashed probably 30 times.
So anyways, I can't,
I'm worried about getting through the water because it's about three and a half
feet deep and it's about 50 feet wide.
and it's moving pretty fast.
And I told my girlfriend, I'm going to drop the bike.
And if I do, it's probably going to burn the whole thing up.
You know, can you give me a hand here?
So she's like, yeah, yeah, no problem.
So she ties the horse off on the other side of the river,
walks back through and helps me walk my bike across.
So she gets back on the horse and we start to head up this trail.
And she still doesn't know where she's at.
You know, I don't know how far camp is.
Can't remember the trail.
And she's like, what?
You know, am I supposed to remember this?
I'm like, yes, you took us out here.
So, so anyways, uh, we, we go through this kind of swampy area with skunk cabbage
and stuff.
And then just on the other side of it, it's this meadow.
And it was a fresh burnout meadow that, um, I have, I have tons of video of this area,
but, um, it's a burnout area.
The, the burn must have been fairly recently.
There was no undergrowth in there to speak of.
I mean, it had to been recent.
Um, there's just a little bit of ferns and stuff.
is only like two feet tall at the time. Now it's like, you know, eight feet tall. So, so anyways,
and a lot of trees have filled in. But, um, so anyways, we get, we get to this, uh, this opening in
the meadow. It's about, I want to say a quarter mile from the rivers. And, um, and she goes,
oh, crap, I left my riding crop at the river. I got to go back and get it. And I said, well, um, leave it.
I'll, I'll buy a new one. And she goes, no, this crop was given to me by a friend that entrusted me
with it and I'm not going to take the tone lashing.
And I go, well, you know, you heard the whoops.
And so it's, you know what's going on.
You know, she's like, I'm, you know, I'm going to go get that crop.
So I was like, fine.
She goes, well, and she should have rode the horse, but she had me hold on to the horse.
And she walked it because she thought it was closer than what it was.
So she takes off walking and the horses, you know, watching her walk off.
And I'm holding my bike up.
So I put it on the kickstand and I'm holding the horse.
And I see some grass off to one side of the trail, and there's this kind of open meadow there from where the trees burned out.
And I'm trying to get the horse to eat this grass right there because, you know, it's good for him to have something on their stomach when they run.
He just had a bunch of water at the river, so some food would be good.
So he starts eating, and then he just looks up and he's just fixated across this field.
His ears are like pointed right at it and, you know, pointed right at it.
And so I'm looking down the, you know, what's he looking at, you know?
And all I see is these, these burned out snags, you know, 200, 250 feet away.
I don't see nothing.
So I'm trying to pull his head down to eat.
And he, he had looked up, saw that, and then he turned and was looking for his writer,
you know, my girlfriend, he's looking for her.
And he wants her.
I mean, he wants that out of there.
And he spins around.
real fast, almost came out of my hands and is staring back at that field. And I'm thinking, well,
you know, there must be a deer or something. You know, I don't know. So I tried to pull his head
down to eat and he won't eat. And this horse loves food. He lives for food. If he's not running,
drinking, he's eating. So anyways, he won't eat. So I know something's up and he keeps staring
it across this field. So I finally see what he's looking at. And,
at first, I thought it was a burn mark on a tree because it was way too big to be anything else.
Way too big is, you know, nine, ten foot.
But what it looked like is a man in a hoodie with, I'd say probably nine foot tall, at least.
And about half as wide as he was tall at the shoulders.
not not like a solid block down kind of like ved in a little bit at his waist um but his legs
were the size of telephone poles and his arms were near that big and i'm thinking is that a
person in a hoodie and a black all wearing all black in a hoodie and at this at this time
the sun was coming down right right behind the trees he's standing in front of so i'm
looking into a sunset, the sun had already gone over the ridge, but it was still,
it was still fairly bright. So I could, I could, I could clearly see the black figure,
but I couldn't see any features on it. But then I'm, I'm just thinking, well, that, that,
what is that? Is that a human? Is that, is that a burn mark? And then all of a sudden it started
rocking. I'm all busted up. My bike has no brakes. It won't run. The battery's dead on it by then.
So I have to push it anywhere it goes or leave it. And I'm holding on to a horse. And my girlfriend
is gone the opposite direction that we need to go to go get a riding crop. So I'm holding
on to the horse and it's anxious. And it's, it's, it's fighting me. It wants to go back to
heard, I'm holding it back, and because I don't want it to just run off down a trail.
So I'm standing there and I'm watching this thing and it's moving towards me.
And it's moving really slow though.
It's taken like a step and then it rocks back and forth.
And then it takes a step and then it rocks back and forth.
And it, the more I look at it, the more I started feeling terrified.
and like I said, I got bare in my driveway.
I throw rocks at them.
You know, I'm not really not afraid of much, but seeing this thing, it terrified me.
And I was just kind of stunned.
And I felt like I couldn't move.
I'm holding on to the horse and I just like, and I caught myself going, you know,
breathe, move, you know.
And I, you know, think, what, you know, what do you do?
well, my woman is down that trail, and I ain't leaving her, and she expects me to be right here,
so I'm going to be right here because if I'm right here and it's staring at me, it's not staring
at her.
So I'll be the bait.
I'm just going to stand here until she comes, and I guess if it comes in close, I'll do what I can,
you know, try and, you know, pull my machete or whatever, but I'm pretty screwed, actually.
So, you know, not trying to be a tough guy or anything, but.
I just had limited options.
So there I am standing there petrified.
I can see the horse is pretty upset.
And the closer this thing gets,
the more upset the horse is getting.
It's starting to dance around a little bit.
And it's getting harder to hold because it's pulling me around with it,
which kind of shook me out of my,
out of my,
you know,
being petrified with terror,
you know,
that I felt at the time.
Now,
remember,
I'd been taking pictures all day.
I had my cell phone.
It was actually in,
she had put it in one of,
of her saddlebags.
She has like these bags that go across the neck of the horse.
But I don't know which pockets in.
And I'm not going to take my eyes off of this thing to find the phone.
And honestly,
I wasn't even thinking photographs,
you know,
just like I wasn't thinking,
you know,
about shampooing it up or something.
I wanted to,
I wanted,
or combing its hair.
I,
I'm just like,
uh,
what,
you know,
what is this thing?
And I know what it is.
But my brain's telling me,
this,
this can't be.
This,
this,
And I'd already seen two of them by then.
So I saw one looking over a log at Rears Horse Camp,
but it was uphill.
All I saw was the shoulders and head staring at me for about five minutes,
and then it moved away.
But when they're moving towards you, it's different.
And this thing kept rocking.
And about every third rock.
rocket would take a step.
Its hands came down almost to its knees, had long arms.
They were, they were massive, massive, bigger than my legs.
Its legs were, like I said, telephone poles.
You know, it's, it's chest shoulder to shoulder, I don't know, four, four and
a half feet across easy.
No neck, cone head.
I can't see the facial features because the sun's behind it, not in front of it.
And it's getting dark.
And it's walking towards me.
And I see it's getting ground.
So it had moved from about, and I'm guessing here distance, but about 250 feet to about 200 feet, maybe, maybe under that.
And then here comes my girlfriend up the trail.
So she comes up the trail and she's got a riding crop and she's all happy as a clam.
She got her riding crop.
cop and I'm kind of I'm looking over at her and I go, honey, look out in that field.
Do you see anything out there?
Because at this point, I'm, you know, am I seeing something?
You know, what's going on?
So she looks out there.
She goes, there's a big foot standing out there rocking back and forth.
Yes, there is.
Let's go.
She goes, well, don't you want to stand here and watch it for a bit?
Nope.
I'm good. I am good. I've been watching it for eight minutes. Yeah, I'm, I'm all caught up on wanting to see one. I'm, I've seen one now. So let's go. So she's so kindhearted. She said, well, I'll push the bike. You, you take the horse because the bike was much harder to move. And we start going away from it. And I keep looking back and it stayed in one place, thank God.
it stayed in one place.
So we get about 50 feet away.
And she goes, by the way, when we're hearing whoops up the trail,
she said, I saw two above the trail and two below the trail.
They were standing behind trees and they had their arm around it and they were looking around the tree at me from about 50 feet away.
And one of them was down below a log and it was looking over the top of the log at me.
But yeah, they were looking from around trees and watching me go by.
and the horse stared right at them.
That's how she knew they were there to begin with.
The horse looked right at them.
And, you know, you look right between those ears on a horse and you see what it's looking at.
And she says, yeah, all of a sudden they just popped right out.
They're jet black.
And, you know, by now it's twilight.
It's not bright out.
So, and by the time we got down to that meadow, I mean, it was, it was starting to get,
starting to get to where it's hard to see.
This is Matt Rogers from Los Culture Eastus with Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yang.
This is Bowen-Yang from Los Culturisters with Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yang.
Spend your balance instantly with the Venmo debit card and earn up to 5% cashbacks on your favorite bundle of brands when you join Venmo's stash.
Your rewards come from bundles of brands you can keep or switch every 30 days, so you can choose the ones that match your everyday spending.
The more you do with Venmo, the more you get.
Earn 2% cash back when you set up auto reloads.
Earn 5% cash back with direct deposit.
Great for anyone who doesn't want to transfer funds or wait days.
No monthly fee, no minimum balance.
And now you can earn up to 5% cashback at select brands in your bundle
every time you check out online with the Venmo button.
Cashback is earned automatically.
Just use your Venmo debit card and the rewards show up without extra steps.
It's a simple way to get rewarded on things you're already buying,
whether that's groceries, coffee, or your go-to-online shops.
Everything lives right inside the Venmo app so you can track your spending,
check your balance, and see your rewards all in one place.
The Venmo debit card works just like the app you already use,
fast, flexible, and built around your day-to-day life.
It's a great option if you want a debit card that fits.
it seamlessly into your routine and gives you a little extra back on the things you're already doing.
The Venmo MasterCard is issued by the BankCorp Bank N.A.
Pursuant to license by MasterCard International Incorporated.
Venmo Stash Bundle Terms in Exclusion Supply.
Max $100 cash back per month.
Requires $500 plus in direct deposits.
See terms at Venmo.com.
Firmow. Checkout not available at all merchants.
It may just be the world's greatest eraser.
Maybelline Instant Eraser Concealer is your Cerems.
for erasing signs of a sleepless night.
Instantly cover dark circles and undereye bags in a tap, swipe, blend,
leaving a bright, refreshed look without feeling heavy.
Instant Eraser does more than cover and conceal.
With 24 shades, you can correct, highlight, or sculpt.
From a subtle brow lift to defining your pout.
This is the multitasker that keeps up with you.
The best part?
The formula delivers flawless results for up to 16 hours
with crease-resistant lightweight wear.
Instant Eraser won't settle into fine lines
and stays smooth, breathable, and hydrating.
No cakey vibes here.
Just a natural skin-like finish
that looks fresh from morning coffees
to late-night RSBPs.
Mabeline Instant Eraser.
Find your shade of Instant Eraser concealer
at your local retailer.
Mabelene, New York.
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 cause
the Culebrilla.
Although not all the persons in risk
the cause will be.
I do not sure.
The eruption dolorousa
with ampollosos during
that even the tasks
more simple
be a whole thing.
Not learn about the
Culebrilla of the
way difficult.
Talked on your doctor
or pharmaceutical.
Patrocinoed for G.
You know, I can see
across this meadow and stuff
because it was kind of open,
but it wasn't real bright.
So we're going up this trail.
We know it's camps that way because we can see it from the peak up above,
but we don't know how many miles we are out.
And we don't know how many more water crossings that we had to cross the sandy river.
You know, who knows?
We never been there before.
Well, she had, but, you know, no sense of direction.
So we're going up the trail and there's a few cross trails,
but I'm seeing horse tracks at this one.
and multiple tracks going in one direction.
I said that's got to be the main trail going back to camp.
So we take that trail and it gets,
it's pretty much almost pitch black by the time we get to the end of this trail,
which is only like another half mile,
three quarters of a mile from where we had our siding.
And it pops out onto the road.
And I recognize the road because of a sign that's right there
and it's right by our campground.
I'm like, oh, thank God, because it's dark now.
And I didn't hear anything, you know,
on either side of the trail or anything coming in,
but had seen quite enough and sure, it was a day.
So we walk into camp, and earlier that day,
I had gathered, we're the only people in this campground.
There's nobody else.
I'd gathered wood from all these other campsites
and had it stacked about five foot tall,
so I carried it all over to the bonfire
area and just lit it all at once. And I had the biggest fire. It was huge. And I'm like, okay, I feel a little
safer now. And I got my 45 with hollow points out of my camper and I'm carrying it in my pocket. And I'm
cooking dinner just as fast as I can outside on our cook stove. And we're like, you know, getting late.
We should probably go to bed. So we have the camper, you know, with, you know, thin middle walls
make you feel safer, you know, that and, you know, the 45. But, but before we finished dinner,
We're sitting there just about done.
And off to the left, about, oh, no, 200 feet away.
You're here, a whoop.
And then off to the right, about the same distance.
Whoop.
And then straight out in front of us down the hill, big tree gets pushed over.
Crash.
I mean, really big tree.
I mean, you know, I don't know if they've been waiting for somebody to come in to push that one over.
But it's like.
They saved it up for us.
We're like, oh, yeah, bedtime, let's go.
So we had taken our dogs out.
They were, we had them in kennels in our truck.
We took about, we have this small outside kennel that they could run around in.
And we swooped them up out of that through their butts in the camper and called it a night.
Nothing else happened that night, you know, they probably, I mean, that we know of,
they probably came in and, you know, got a close look at our rig and everything.
but the horse wasn't distressed,
didn't hear any weird noises,
nothing woke me up.
And, you know,
I slept with the curtains pulled.
And,
and our top vent open,
which creates kind of a parabolic dish.
So you pick up sound pretty well.
And it was kind of pointed towards our horse corral.
So if the horse got upset,
I could jump out with the 45 or whatever,
you know,
cougars, bears, or whatever.
So anyways,
that was the end of that odyssey.
see. I had something even worse
happen later on
and some other sightings in that same area
that we could touch on another time. But what
I want to get to on this one, though, is that
I was so scared,
I was terrified that I didn't
want to go in the woods anymore.
I was done. And it took about a week
or two of my girlfriend coaxing me to go
a little bit in the woods with the horse
and then further, further, and then I was back in it.
But in that two weeks that I was terrified
and wouldn't go, I contacted Cliff Berrickman
at his museum, and it's on the way to Mount Hood.
They're emboring.
And I told them what happened.
And, you know, for people to be aware up there,
don't watch out, they're in there and be careful.
And I just wanted, you know, for people's safety,
I was just thinking, people need to know.
These things are doing this.
And he said, oh, yeah, you know, the Lolo Pass is full of them.
He goes, whereabouts were you?
And I told him, you know, whereabouts we were.
and he went up that trail and casted about three or four casts of he thinks they're juveniles,
the ones that he caught.
I went there two weeks later, and I didn't cast anything.
I didn't know how to or what that even barely knew what it was.
But I took a photograph and I laid my sunglasses down across the toes,
and they're about nine inches wide.
So as a gift for doing a solid for Cliff,
I did a TV interview when he was first opening his museum.
They wanted somebody that had an eyewitness siding that was recent.
And mine was like two weeks before that.
But so I did an interview.
It's on YouTube for KGW, 6, channel 6, I think.
But for doing that, he gave me a Laird Meadowcast.
Like, I'm not sure.
I think third generation.
So it's a copy of a copy.
Really nice one.
It's beautiful.
It's 17 inches long.
And it's about about six and a half
or seven inches at the toes.
Well, the track that I found is about two inches wider on each side and the big toes like,
like, I don't know, three quarters bigger.
And I got a photograph of it with my glasses sitting in front of it.
So they put that on the news channel.
And I showed them, you know, here's the toes and my glasses are across to show the width.
And they took the picture and inverted it the wrong way and said, yeah, here's a cast.
And they're trying to show the length of the cast as a whole foot.
And it's just the toast.
So anyways, the only impression that was in the soil was I found a track down by the river we had crossed.
It was not on anywhere near the trail.
I found it in some brush next to the trail, paralleling it on some soft dirt that was going up this ridge.
Not where you'd normally think to even look for something.
But I just want to proof.
So anyways, I got a picture of that.
And so that, that, uh, one more thing came of that is, um, I had previously talked to,
uh, Joe B. Lart. I bought his book, Bigfoot, uh, Oregon Bigfoot highway and an amazing book.
That guy's probably the best writer of any Bigfoot book I've ever read. It's funny. He's great.
I mean, if you want a funny outlook on, on this, and he's not making fun of this of people. Uh,
it's just fun stuff he says about the situation. You know,
he's just real.
So anyways, I had talked back and forth with them a little bit in emails because he signed
my book for me.
I was like, hey, man, I had a siding.
You want to see it?
And he's like, yes.
So I brought him out to where I had my siding.
We walked out there.
And he and I have been going back to that area every year since.
So I hang out with Joe every summer.
It's pretty cool.
He knows a lot.
He also has some friends that.
Tom Powell and some other people that I've camped with,
and I invite them.
I go up to this place every summer,
and we take our horse trailer in the horses.
But it all started with that Odyssey in 2019.
We found that area,
and I've seen them in other places,
but in the summer, they're around Mount Hood,
pretty heavy.
So we know, you know, pretty much guaranteed
you're going to have some activity.
But that was 2019.
Like I said, we've been going back every year, ever since.
I've made GoPro videos.
I finally got a camera that runs.
So when I'm scared half to death, I don't have to remember.
And I have video of one standing in the meadow the next year.
I got video of one pushing a tree over on a ledge up above us that had been spookiness all the way up the trail.
I have video of rocks thrown tree structures you wouldn't believe.
And I can get into all that.
but chronologically, 2019 kind of set off the first terrified to now.
We're going to be out there anyways, riding.
I'm going to look into these things really deep.
And I started to take a deep dive.
Any questions for me?
Gary, it's one of the most intense encounter stories I've heard in my five years of doing the show.
Honestly, and I know this area is crazy because I've talked.
to people that have also had things happen in Lolo Pass.
And I mean, the area it's in is, wow.
I mean, it's right next to Bull Run, right?
Yeah, it's a few miles down the road.
Exactly.
Am I going to thank you for walking us through that.
But, man, it sounds like this is just the beginning of the story, really.
And I would love to have you back on if you'd be willing to, you know,
if there's any other things you could share since that time or,
You know, just, yeah, it's, it's an incredible, incredible account.
When you were watching it for eight minutes, what was the sound like in that area?
No sound.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's how you know they're there.
Right.
And if you, if all of a sudden it goes silent, you have a chance of an encounter.
If it's noisy, unless it's brush breaking, if they're not around.
But, but everything, every time I've seen one, and I've now.
seen, I've had nine sightings now on, you know, with the horse around.
But I've also heard them talk on four different occasions.
I've heard them talking.
I've heard one screaming like a deaf mute, really close to camp walking around.
And these are all, you know, stuff I can, I could talk on another show.
But I've seen tree structures where they take limbs this big around and they shove it through
tree trunks.
I have photos.
You know, no man can do that.
They've shoved them in straight in up and down up this trail.
And then the U.S. Forest Service goes in and cuts those trunks off.
Well, they're already trunks.
What do you need to cut them again for?
Well, they have these branches shoved in it that you can't pull out.
I have signs that are all twisted up and put in wrong places, all kinds of tree structures.
I have video.
I have photographs.
I have terabytes of video of me and the horse going up the trails, just us, and going way out and back.
And I have a lot of fun video of just us and the horse in places where.
they're not at because I tried to video all of our rides just for fun.
But I have so much, so much data.
And then I have friends that have had conversations with them while they're walking by.
One had a conversation with my friend.
Didn't understand what it was saying, but he tried to talk to it.
And it was a female.
He said it was the most beautiful voice he's ever heard, most beautiful female voice.
And it had walked up a trail by him and Joe Beelart.
and was within 10 feet of them.
He said it was about an eight-foot-tall female,
and he was lit by moonlight.
But it was talking to him as it came up the trail,
just a real quiet voice.
And he said it was just real pretty voice.
And he said, hi, how are you doing?
How are you tonight?
How's everything going?
He tried to carry a conversation.
And he would pause and it would talk.
And then it would pause and he would talk.
And it talked to him for about a minute or two
as it walked by.
And Joe and his wife were asleep in a tent.
just across the path and it walked between them.
And Joe was so pissed when he woke up, he missed that, you know.
But I hang out with John.
John's the guy that heard that.
John's a really good friend.
We hang out a lot and we have good times.
There's trails I won't go up anymore.
It's too dangerous only because they shoved trees down towards us.
And I got that on video.
But yeah, a lot has gone.
I would like to come back and and it feels good to get everything out in one place.
I haven't talked about this stuff in a couple years.
And I've just been going up and field researching.
It's what we do.
We just go out and ride and it's just part of what we do.
Your encounters are incredible, Gary.
Thank you so much for coming on.
I mean, I definitely would love to have more future conversations with you.
Thank you so much for coming on the show today.
And again, listeners, go check out Gary's channel.
I'll have it linked in the show notes and subscribe to it.
There's so much to watch there.
That is really fascinating, Bigfoot Research Project.
Yeah.
Yeah, I bought the name from one of the four horsemen used to be up at Mount Hood.
That's why it sounds familiar.
Yeah, I got that symbol on the side of his truck.
I bought the brand.
Yeah, Peter.
Yeah, I bought the brand.
So I own the business name.
So that's got to be a story in itself.
But man, we will be in touch, Gary.
Thank you so much to be continued.
What a conversation.
All right.
Well, pleasure talking with you and look forward to hearing from you again.
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.
Sasquatch Summerfest is coming up July 10th through the 11th, 2026.
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, well, you just got to be there.
We'll leave it that.
More about looking for Bigfoot in the Oak Ridge Woods.
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 documentary series,
which is searching for Sasquatch.
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 so that you guys can get a little help with the cost there.
Appreciate that, Priscilla.
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.
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 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,
if you're in the logging industry on a remote oil field or trucker with government contracts,
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.
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
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 sighting,
please, I'd love to hear from you.
So email me at Bigfoot Society at gmail.
and let's start the conversation.
If you haven't gotten a chance yet,
check out our membership community
over at www.gitfoyssocietypodcast.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 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.
see you in the woods. This is Matt Rogers from Los Culture Eastas with Matt Rogers and
Bowen-Yang. This is Bowen-Yang from Los Culture Easters with Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yang. Spend your
balance instantly with the Venmo debit card and earn up to 5% cashbacks on your favorite bundle of
brands when you join Venmo's stash. Your rewards come from bundles of brands you can keep
or switch every 30 days so you can choose the ones that match your everyday spending.
The more you do with Venmo, the more you get. Earn 2% cash back when you set up auto reloads.
Earn 5% cash back with direct deposit. Great for anyone who doesn't want to transfer funds or wait days.
monthly fee, no minimum balance. And now you can earn up to 5% cashback at select brands in your bundle every time you check out online with the Venmo button.
Cashback is earned automatically. Just use your Venmo debit card and the rewards show up without extra steps.
It's a simple way to get rewarded on things you're already buying, whether that's groceries, coffee, or your go-to-online shops.
Everything lives right inside the Venmo app so you can track your spending, check your balance, and see your rewards all in one place.
The Venmo debit card works just like the app you already use, fast, flexible, and built around your day-to-day life.
It's a great option if you want a debit card that fits seamlessly into your routine and gives you a little extra back on the things you're already doing.
The Venmo MasterCard is issued by the Bank Bank, N.A., pursuant to licensed by MasterCard International Incorporated.
Venmo stash bundle terms and exclusion supply.
Max $100 cash back per month.
Requires $500 plus in direct deposits.
See terms at Venmo.com.
Me forward slash stash terms.
Venmo checkout not available at all merchants.
It may just be the world's greatest eraser.
Mabelian Instant Eraser Concealer is your secret weapon
for erasing signs of a sleepless night.
Instantly cover dark circles and under-eye bags
in a tap, swipe, blend,
leaving a bright, refreshed look without feeling heavy.
Instant Eraser does more than cover and conceal.
With 24 shades, you can correct, highlight, or sculpt.
From a subtle brow lift to defining your pout.
This is the multitasker that keeps up with you.
The best part, the formula delivers flawless results.
up to 16 hours with crease resistant lightweight wear.
Instant eraser won't settle into fine lines and stays smooth, breathable, and hydrating.
No cakey vibes here.
Just a natural skin-like finish that looks fresh from morning coffees to late-night RSBPs.
Mabelene Instant Eraser.
Find your shade of instant eraser concealer at your local retailer.
Mabelene, New York.
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
the most of
the virus
that causes the
Culebrilla.
Although not
all the
people in
risk,
I do you
do you
the eruption
dolorosa
with ampollows
during
that even
the tasks
more simple
are all
a real
not a
problem
to the
question.
I'm
today.
Talked
to your
doctor or
pharmaceutical,
Patrocina
for GSK.
This is
Matt Rogers
from Los Culture Reistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yang.
This is Bowen-Yang from Las Culturisers with Matt Rogers and Bowen-Yang.
Spend your balance instantly with the Venmo debit card and earn up to 5% cashbacks on your
favorite bundle of brands when you join Venmo's stash.
Your rewards come from bundles of brands you can keep or switch every 30 days,
so you can choose the ones that match your everyday spending.
The more you do with Venmo, the more you get.
Earn 2% cash back when you set up auto reloads.
Earn 5% cash back with direct deposit.
Great for anyone who doesn't want to transfer funds or wait days.
No monthly fee, no minimum balance.
Cashback is earned automatically.
Just use your Venmo debit card and the rewards show up without extra steps.
It's a simple way to get rewarded on things you're already buying,
whether that's groceries, coffee, or your go-to-on-line shops.
Everything lives right inside the Venmo app so you can track your spending,
check your balance, and see your rewards all in one place.
The Venmo debit card works just like the app you already use,
fast, flexible, and built around your day-to-day life.
It's a great option if you want a debit card that fits seamlessly into your routine
and gives you a little extra back on the things you're already doing.
The Venmo MasterCard is issued by the BankCorp Bank N.A.
pursuant to license by MasterCard International Incorporated.
Venmo Stash Bundle Terms and Exclusion Supply.
Max $100 cash back per month.
Requires $500 plus in direct deposits.
See terms at Venmo.me.
forward slash stash terms.
It may just be the world's greatest eraser.
Mabeline Instant Eraser Concealer is your secret weapon
for erasing signs of a sleepless night.
Instantly covered dark circles and undereye bags
in a tap, swipe, blend,
leaving a bright, refreshed look without feeling heavy.
Instant Eraser does more than cover and conceal.
With 24 shades, you can correct, highlight, or sculpt.
From a subtle brow lift to defining your pout.
This is the multitasker that keeps up with you.
The best part, the formula delivers flawless results for up to 16 hours
with crease-resistant, lightweight wear.
Instant Eraser won't settle into fine lines
and stays smooth, breathable, and hydrating.
No cakey vibes here.
Just a natural skin-like finish that looks fresh from morning coffees to late-night RSVPs.
Mabelene InstinEracer. Find your shade of Instant Eraser Concealer at your local retailer.
Mabelene, New York.
At the getting to 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 cause the Culebrilla.
Although not all the people in risk, they'll be they'll developer.
I did
I doofy.
The eruption
dolorosa
with ampollows
duros
times
making that
even the
tasks
more simple
are all
a lot of
not know
about the
question.
Talked over
your doctor or
pharmaceutical
patrocinoed
by GSK.
At the
50,
I've learned
some things
like the
value of the
family,
the importance
of the
time,
and that the
99% of
the people
of more
the 50
you have
the virus
that cause
the
Culebrilla.
Although
not
all
the
people
in risk
the
result of the
eruption
dolorous
with ampollies
durous
semans,
making that
even the
things
more simple
are all
a
problem.
Not
learn about
the
Culebrilla
to the
way
difficult.
Talked
a
pharmaceutical,
patrocinating
for GSK.
Hear that?
That's the
spam brand
singing
you a
love song.
Spam
Sizzle,
pork and
Mmm.
Struggling to see up close, make it visible with Viz.
Viz is a once daily prescription eye drop to treat blurry near vision for up to 10 hours.
The most common side effects that may be experienced while using Viz include eye irritation, temporary dimmer dark vision, headaches and eye redness.
Talk to an eye doctor to learn if Viz is right for you.
Learn more at Viz.com.
