Bigfoot Society - It Looked Down Into The Car At Me and I Was Trapped! | Yale, British Columbia
Episode Date: November 25, 2024Join us for an incredible interview as a woman, now 69, recounts her unforgettable encounter with a Sasquatch in the early 1960s in the Fraser Valley, just outside of Yale. As a child, she witnessed a... female Sasquatch up close, describing detailed features and movements. Her story delves into cultural beliefs and other sightings in the region, from fishing customs with Native friends to historical abductions and community legends. This fascinating recounting offers a unique glimpse into Sasquatch lore and personal experience in British Columbia and beyond.🔴 Subscribe to our Youtube channel and leave a comment here: https://www.youtube.com/@BigfootSociety?sub_confirmation=1Share your Bigfoot encounter with me here: bigfootsociety@gmail.comWant to call in and leave a voicemail of your encounters for the podcast - Check this out here - https://www.speakpipe.com/bigfootsociety(Use multiple voice mails if needed!)Share this video with a friend: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5v75Od-X38Watch more episodes of the Bigfoot Society podcast here – https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3t1vwtsKh-MGeHs0XglFJE5LwUHpmJm_&feature=sharedRecommended Playlist – New Jersey Bigfoot Encounters - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3t1vwtsKh-Mk4032IyZtWgP6LVPU8uat✅ Help me help others share their Bigfoot Encounter by joining the community on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/thebigfootsociety✅ Hear ad-free episodes early by joining the community on Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8Qq45W6iaTU8FE9kelxT7Q/joinLet’s connect:Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/bigfootsociety/Twitter – https://twitter.com/bigfoot_societyTiktok - https://www.tiktok.com/@bigfoot.societyAffiliate links mean I earn a commission from qualifying purchases. This helps support my channel at no additional cost to you.My Audio Interface: https://amzn.to/3L1q8XYPut some pep in my step by buying me a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/bigfootsocietyPick up some merch here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/bigfootsociety/?etsrc=sdtSend mail here:Bigfoot Society125 E 1st St. #233Earlham, IA 50072Send business inquiries to: bigfootsociety@gmail.com
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Hey, how's it going?
Going pretty good.
Feel free to share what you saw up there in the Fraser Valley.
Okay, it was quite a few years ago.
I'm 69 years old now.
My grandfather was a section foreman for the Canadian Pacific Railroad,
and I was living with my grandparents at the time.
Working for the railroad, one of our trestles was washed away in a flood.
And so he drove down a side road just outside of Yale about five miles to go to where this trestle had washed out.
And they left me sitting in the car because of...
of the danger of walking down through this washout to get down to the train wreck.
And while I was sitting in the car, I was five or six years old,
a Sasquatch had come down the trail that we had just driven over
and walked right past the car that I was sitting in and stood up at the front fender of the car
and looked in at me. I could see that it was a female. And she just looked at me and then continued on
down the bank. Wasn't anything too terribly dramatic or whatever, but they were seen quite often
there in the Fraser area. We had Native members that I grew up with that whenever they went
fishing, they would always leave a fish behind, especially if they were camping nearby, so that they'd
leave one for Sasquatch so it wouldn't come in and tear up the camp. Other times, they'd go to where the
natives would have fish hanging and drying, and they would take them, or if they had fish barrels in their
backsheds, Sasquatch would tear open the fish barrels. Wow. So this is,
Let me do some quick math. This is early 60s. Is that right?
Yeah, I was born in 56. Okay.
So this is 61, 62.
61, 62. Okay. Wow. So you had the one that was looking in the car at you from the front. Did you say right bumper or just front bumper?
Right front looking at me through the windshield.
You said that you thought it was a female.
Is that because you noticed certain features of it?
Right.
She had the large bust.
Okay, gotcha.
She may have been a nursing female.
Makes sense.
Did you notice anything interesting about how the creature was moving when you saw it walk?
Well, as a little kid, you know, it...
She had a lot of muscle for a female, and I don't know.
It wasn't gorilla-like.
It wasn't human.
It was a little bit of a lean, but she definitely had determination in her step.
Every step she took had a purpose to it.
When I try to picture that, I'm thinking of something like nothing's going to stop it.
It's going to barrel through whatever walls in front of it.
Is that kind of what we're saying?
A very strong walk, a strong.
pace and branches didn't get in her way, trees didn't get in her way. She walked
through the wild blackberries and the thorns and everything like it was an
absolute nothing. Gotcha. Now do you remember anything about the arms of the
creature? Long and strong. The girls looked to be just as tough as I would
imagine the males to be. There was nothing feminine.
about her other than she had the breast.
And I think when she looked in at me, I look back after all these years.
And it seems to me that she recognized I was a child too.
Ah, okay, that makes sense.
How far down the body did the hands go?
How far did they hang down?
Just above the knee.
Okay.
Interesting.
How tall would you approximate what you saw was?
Being little, I'm having to reflect back on 60 years with memory.
My own son is 6'9 tall.
And when I see him standing in front of the car, I've often thought of her.
She was up there.
Yeah.
Yeah, she was up there.
Growing up with the natives, as I did, and I have all my life,
that I'm Métis myself, she wasn't considered uncommon or unexpected.
Not necessarily somebody would like to keep company with,
but there's stories of when Sasquatch used to live with the people.
That is extremely interesting.
You had that childhood that you're growing up with.
A question that I have and other people have is,
do you remember what the color of the Sasquatch was?
Reddish brown.
reddish brown
did you
were you able to see what the length
of the hair
was for it
I would match it
with the length of the back
of a grizzly
okay
interesting
was it always on
on two feet
or did it ever go down to
all fours
no she was on two feet
the whole time
okay
now
I told my grandfather
that I had seen her. He said he could smell her when he came back to the car. But there was too much
fern and foliage and grasses where we were that he wasn't able to get any footprints.
But we did he did look through the branches for hair and stuff like that and he wasn't able to find any.
what he thought he had found some.
It seemed a little bit like deer hair,
but when he touched it, it evaporated.
It dissolved.
Oh, that's really interesting.
It dissolved.
Wow.
Okay.
Was the entire thing covered with hair,
or were there different parts of it that were not hair covered?
No hair around the eyes and the palm of the hands.
but and the tips of the ears.
Okay, so that's interesting.
So you actually did see ears on the creature.
But she's, I don't know, I wasn't afraid of her.
She was big and she was a surprise, but she seemed gentle.
Yeah.
Is what you saw, would you say?
But then again, too, I hadn't done anything to piss her off.
That's true.
I said,
Yeah, I didn't do anything to piss her up.
I was just a little kid sitting there watching her,
and she was surprised to see me.
There's stories in the Fraser Canyon,
like the one of Jocko.
That was in Yale when the railroad workers
found the young Sasquatch on the side of the railroad tracks.
And then the native woman from the Fraser Canyon area
that had been taken by Sasquatch way back
into the woods and they tried to keep her.
She was just starving to death herself and saying,
look, if you don't let me go back, I'm going to die.
Five years later.
Was that in Yale as well?
Yes.
A little wet hope and legacy.
Our hot areas for that.
I don't know if I've asked.
actually ever heard that one. So you're saying pretty much an individual is kidnapped. They tried
to keep it with them or keep her with them, but then she was able to escape. They let her go.
They let her go. She, I'm trying to think they were trying to impregnate her or something like
that. She couldn't stand the smell and they were keeping her trapped. And after they let her go,
She got back to her people.
They were a little concerned, too,
because she had changed so much five years,
and she was just a nervous wreck
and always scared of being taken again.
I don't think she survived too long after that.
Do you know what her name was?
No, but there is a book written about her.
Okay.
It's a small publication.
and you'll probably be able to find a copy of it
in some of the lore books that are in Hope or Yale
and, you know, in the different little stores and whatnot.
But the natives do believe in Squatch and Me Too.
It was a good hotbed for sightings.
We looked at each other straight.
My jaw was wide open.
Did she have any certain emotions in her face when you were looking at her?
Looked eye to eye.
She just looked calm and looked soft.
A little bit on the surprise at first.
The eyes open up.
Oh, there's something in that car.
And she just stood there and looked at me and her eyes got big and then they got soft.
And she just stared at me for a little while.
I know her eyes were brown.
and they were very dark. I didn't see any white around the pupil.
Everything about her was big, so yeah, her eyes were big, but I remember looking at her eyes.
And I don't know, I have the feeling that she was a nursing mother,
so she probably was just as happy to see a small people as I would have been to see a small
scratch.
Yeah, no, that makes perfect sense.
You're looking at me on your screen, right?
Yes.
Okay, so the area right here below the nose and to the top of the lip is called the philtrum.
That area from what you saw, did you notice anything out of the ordinary, or could you describe what you saw about that area right there?
It bulged out.
Okay.
Okay.
balged outwards. It was thick. Her lips were thin, like a monkey mouth, your tongue up underneath your upper
lip and rounded it out. The length from the top of the lip to the bottom of the nose,
was that longer than most humans, would you say? Everything on her was longer than most humans.
Yeah. Have you seen anything that looks similar to what you saw that day? A painting or a drawing or anything like that?
I've painted them myself a few times.
Oh, wow.
I never forgot her, eh?
No, I get it, yeah.
And being native, she's, I don't know, I think it's familial.
Yeah.
I totally get it.
Is there a way to see your paintings at all or those online at all or just in areas around the region?
I put them on drums and whatnot.
I don't know if I still have that.
I painted a couple on drums for my husband who's passed away.
He was full-blooded Osage.
They have Sasquatch and little people down in Oklahoma.
I painted a drum for him.
I will look through and see if I've kept any pictures of it.
A lot of my paintings and that I sold in a gallery in Thunder Bay, Ontario.
Okay.
Yeah.
Have you ever seen any photos that are public that are similar to what you saw that day?
Some are close, but others are just really exaggerated and things I did not see.
Like the big crown at the top of the head, I didn't see that.
She had a thicker brow, but she didn't have the heavy pointed skull or anything like that.
But then again, that may be a female trait.
She was more round-headed, like a chimpanzee and less like a gorilla.
What about the neck?
any neck at all? No neck.
Okay, so it just was like, bam.
Just bam, yeah.
Bam, straight to the shoulders.
I wouldn't want to try to put a necklace or my hands around it or anything like that.
How far across were the shoulders, would you say?
Four feet.
And she was straight up and down, too.
A bit of a round on the tummy, a bit flat in the butt.
muscle but flat they're straight up and down not like the Caucasian waistline sort of thing and the figure
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Do you feel like what you saw that day was more,
would you categorize it more as an ape type?
creature or maybe something more human-like?
More ape-like.
It walked up right like people, but it had the leg muscles of the gorilla,
the buttocks of the gorilla, the shoulders, the arms.
It was just all strength and all power, but it also had compassion.
When they used to live with the people, they would hunt with the people,
they would fish with the people, the people things.
and then they left.
There's a tribe, I can't remember if it's Northern British Columbia or South Alaska.
I think it's North British Columbia where they were hiding,
and they actually followed the Sasquatch up to the North Coast.
Sasquatch is on that tribe's totem.
Was that the one time that you've had a visual sighting,
or have there been other times where you've had experiences with them?
That was the one time that I had the visual sighting.
Most of the other things are things that I've heard from Native friends,
and I grew up with Native friends for 50 years
before I wound up coming down to the States,
where they'd gone to their cabins and whatnot
and through rocks at their homes
or raided the fish barrels that they had in the shed,
or walked across their yards and literally stepped over their bobbed wire fences.
And just lift the leg up and over they go and then down into the river to fish
or chasing down deer.
David, a friend of mine told me that her and her father had watched one run across the field in their property.
property there in Yale and they, it was Ruby Creek and they had about five acres.
And it ran across, it came up from the river, the Fraser River, crossed over some train tracks,
stepped up over their bobbed wire fence, took fish off their fish rack, and then ran across
their field and up into the trees there at Ruby Creek.
year was that? About 1977. And you said I was in Ruby Creek area? Yeah. That wasn't anyone
so there's the famous Ruby Creek incident back in the 40s. I don't know if you've heard
about that, that George and Jeannie Chapman. Yep. Is that in the same area then?
Yeah, same area. It is. So it's pretty close to that same cabin. Yeah.
Really?
There's a trailway there that they walk.
Bear have their path and deer have their path.
Squatch has his path.
That is wild.
So the same area where the Ruby Creek incident happened, then these people that had something
happened in the 70s as well.
That's pretty cool.
Wow.
Do you know any other details about that incident in the 70s that you remember?
I think they had another visit about a week later, but there was, I can't remember if it was three or four of them that came.
And they were just seen on the property.
One ran across the field and then two more followed and then another one followed in behind.
But apparently there is more than one kind of squash in that area.
Really?
Yeah.
Some have brown eyes, some have red eyes, and some have a yellow eye.
So you said brown eyes, red eyes, yellow eyes?
Yes.
And what are the difference?
So are the different eye color ones known for different things or one being, one being angry or more?
aggressive?
Yeah, but I can't remember if it's the red eye or the yellow eye.
Okay.
Gotcha.
Were there ever ones that were seen in the area that had four toes instead of five?
Not that I know of, but I do know the habit that natives have of holding up the hand.
It's not to say hi, how are you?
It's for a finger count.
Oh, really?
Oh, so they're looking for six fingers, right?
They're either looking for four or six.
Oh, wow.
And they do that down.
They did that down here in Nevada, too, because of the red hair giants.
A love lock cave stuff, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, my goodness, that's wild.
I want to go back to the Jocko real quick, the Jaco store.
So were you in that area when that was going?
No, wait, that was earlier.
That was 800s, right?
Yeah, it was right at the start of the 1900s. Yeah, 1800s, 1900s.
They found Jocko on the side of the tracks.
Poor guy that did find him, he just kept getting tormented by people who wanted Sasquatch stories.
Right, forever, probably for the rest of his days, I would guess.
That's how it works.
Do you think growing up in that area, listening to people hear about it, did it sound like it was true or that it was,
a hoax to you. I think it was true. I know that the root of it was true. What stories were
developed after it to keep the rumor going like we have with all the false stories on the
internet now when people ad-libbing and whatnot. But I do think they found something and did try to
keep it. And I'm glad it got away because it doesn't belong in a box or a zoo or a jail cell
or anything like that. It got separated from its family. Were there ever any stories up there
were any aggressive encounters, or was it pretty much like people wouldn't get hurt?
The aggression was the abduction. Ah, okay. Take.
taking the women and forcing them to try to reproduce or follow them as they go traips and through the mountains
and not eating properly and not being able to bathe.
And, of course, a female Sasquatch didn't like the female human in her camp.
It was a struggle.
One guy, it was some kind of trophy.
Ah.
Did this happen more than once from what you've heard?
Yes.
Really?
Yeah.
I would look into the story, too, of the Forbidden Plateau and Comox.
Let me write that down real quick.
So the Forbidden Plateau and Colmox?
It's in the Comox, BC.
Comox, Courtney area of BC.
It used to be a ski resort.
There was a time when tribes used to live up there.
And they were going for some kind of potlatcher, get together with the Comoxes.
The Comoxes went up and found their village completely abandoned, destroyed.
Food's still out, but the people all gone.
And destroyed, the natives do not go on to forbidden plateau anymore.
Interesting. And that's on Vancouver Island?
Yes.
Or it is okay.
35 miles or 35 minutes south of Campbell River.
What year approximately did that happen?
That would have been in the 1800s, but the story is still told by the natives, and the natives I know on the island would not go onto the forbidden plateau.
Do you know if that's been written about in any books, or is that just an oral tradition that's passed down?
Oh, I'm sure you'll find it written somewhere because it's been told so many times.
Lots of natives on Vancouver Island have had reports of up around how sound and whatnot,
reports of hearing the Sasquatch screaming and whatnot.
I know that Vancouver Island is just a wild place.
I've talked to multiple individuals from that island over the years.
And I appreciate you spending your time.
I grew up in Campbell River.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
I lived in Yale when I was younger than moved to Campbell River.
So, yeah, British Columbia is pretty much a hot spot.
Washington State is a hot spot.
And the areas around Harmony, Oklahoma,
let's see what other
we're trying to think
are you saying
ho-nubby Oklahoma
hominy H-O-M-I-N-Y
it's where the O-Sage people are
they've got stories of
the Sasquatch
little people
dear woman
got it
are there any Oklahoma is another
area that I am really
interested in I do a lot of research into
especially southeast
Are there any stories that you remember about that you've heard come out of the Oklahoma area when it comes to Sasquatch?
My brother-in-law and I had quite a talk about it, and he was wondering if maybe it was, what is that, Homo Pythicus or something like that?
Okay, sure.
He was wondering if it had something to do with that.
I know that he took me out to a park that had a river.
And he said that it was where he had seen Squatch and where his great-grandfather, his name was Chief Bacon Rind.
You can look up Chief Bacon Rind.
And he had seen the little people.
He had chased the little people.
When he was following them, and this is a family story, he was following the little people up over a hill.
And when he got to the top of the hill, he saw the conquistadors.
Oh, wow.
The start of the Spanish invasion.
And then, of course, there was war.
Right, yeah, exactly.
I wonder if they're trying to warn him about that.
Or who knows, right?
That's interesting.
Yeah, the little people are tricksters.
Sure.
If they do you any good, they're going to turn around and do you dirty right after.
Have you ever heard of any times when the Sasquatch would get into any fights with Native Americans in Oklahoma or?
any people that you've heard of?
No fights.
No fights.
They would hunt with natives going for a deer with his arrows or whatever,
and the squatch would run it down and grab it around the neck and pull it over.
Squatch could outrun the deer.
So you've heard stories of that?
Yeah.
Okay.
Right. And that was in Oklahoma?
Yeah, they would hunt with them.
That's extremely interesting.
Something I've heard over the years is that different Native American tribes would actually learn from the Sasquatch.
Is that something that you'd say, you've heard that as well?
Or could that be?
Yeah, I've heard they led them up into Northern British Columbia.
They followed them there, so it was a team.
and with my in-laws in Oklahoma, their ancestors deer hunting with them or seeing them in the rivers.
This has been a fascinating discussion.
That's a good opportunity for me to because, like I say, I'm 68, hidden 69 here.
This inn, I haven't told anybody other than a native.
what I've seen or what I've heard or what I've smelled, so it's been nice to let it out.
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No, absolutely.
Do you feel like there's maybe even other things that you've heard over the years
that should be shared as well regarding Sasquatch?
I know if you see them, it's only,
only because they let you.
Okay.
Or you've caught them by surprise, which isn't too very often.
And if you can't find them or hair of them and stuff like that,
you touch it, it melts like cotton candy in your mouth, just gone.
And they won't leave their bones for you.
Have you ever heard?
And if you come across one,
when you're walking. I know there's a little boy who was playing in the bushes and walked back
into the trees, got back a little further than he expected to. He was just enjoying his day doing
a little trail. Turn around, thought he was lost, and he turned around, and there was a big, tall
squash standing behind him. He turned around, and he faced him, and he looked up, and then he looked
down to the ground and he kept staring at the ground.
Don't stare him down.
Look down to the ground.
You'll walk away uninjured.
You stare them down, you're going to be in a challenge.
Whereabouts did that happen?
That was slave lake area of Alberta.
Okay.
Gotcha.
Have you heard anything that happened down in Washington State or Oregon that you could share?
No, it's nothing anything firsthand with me, but it was after the Mount St. Helens eruption.
Okay.
Of course, Squatch was affected by that, too.
People of a rescue party, I won't mention who or what entity,
but they did lead some rescuers with vehicles.
back up into the disaster area looking for survivors.
And they called into the woods.
They parked on the side of road, called into the woods.
And one squatch walked out.
And the group of volunteers on the search just looked up at him with a big wonder of jaw drop
and all the rest of that.
And the guy that he says, I obviously don't need to explain.
to you guys what this is, right? And they said, no, obviously. And they went with the swatch to the
different areas of the mountain that had caves, and he would cry out in that direction and wait
for a response. And if there was no response, there was no survivor.
Did you hear this directly from a person that was involved?
No, it's second.
Okay. That's very interesting. Wow.
Hmm. Have you heard anything about from the Mount Rainier area?
No, but from the Cascades, yeah, the Cascade area and around Mount St. Helens.
Gotcha. Man, absolutely fascinating stuff.
If you would say there was a person that was trying to have an interaction with a Sasquatch,
based on what you've heard over the years, what might be the best way for them to do that?
Don't.
Oh, okay, don't. Wow. Why would that be?
First of all, what would be your purpose in doing so?
To expose them out of their hiding?
What good would that do them?
You're dealing with a very natural, very spiritual, very powerful being that if they wanted to, could end all your worldly doings and a heartbeat.
But there are people who have been injured or lost and they've actually helped.
Why go and spoil something for something that's living a natural life?
foraging in a natural way.
What would you do?
Would you put it in a cage?
Would you shoot it so it could be taxidermied and you could prove that it exists?
What if we wanted to learn from it?
If it wanted to teach you, it would.
Yeah.
Now, if you happen to be out camping or fishing anyone,
if it's watching you, then just be still.
just be still
if it's scoping and checking you out too
it knows better than to trust you
but if you're
calm and not aggressive
and not trying to fake
communication with it
there's a chance you may
get a better look
be patient
give it a chance to come back and visit again
but let it do it on its terms
not yours
have you ever heard of any
interactions where there's been communication where the Sasquatch will try to talk to the person
either through using their mind or verbally?
Yes.
There's a tribal person I know that's in the Oregon area that says they have an agreement between them and Squatch that they,
they won't. It's kind of a protection. We will continue to guard your area and your secrets,
and the Sasquatch will continue to guard them while they're out hunting or whatnot.
Some of it's through telepathy, other is through sound, but I can't say it's words sound.
I got to go in and plug in my cell phone or I'm going to lose you. Hold on.
Gotcha. No problem.
but they do vocalize.
What kind of vocalizations have you heard them do?
A bark, a howl, not a moan, a hum.
Sorry, what was the last thing you had said?
Did you say a hum?
A hum, yeah.
On occasion, I've heard of a sing.
They sing.
I was just going to ask you if you've ever experienced that,
because I've heard that all over the place.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They sing.
And it's not too different than Native sing.
Do you know why they sing?
No.
Okay.
I've heard it's beautiful, though, almost angelic sometimes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Maybe they sing when it's something to celebrate a new child or a good catch, something like that, or sing in morning.
Have you ever heard where they can paralyze a person or stop them from moving?
Yeah.
They'll keep you from being aggressive.
They've frozen people in time warps.
That's why I say, don't go looking for trouble.
You're going to frickin' find it.
That's funny.
Okay, that's wise words.
You want to stand in the bush or stone steady stiff for two or three or three or
three days and come out of it and wonder where you are who you are and you can't find
your with both hands in a flashlight you've heard it where it happens for two to three days
yeah really yeah you get frozen in a time warp is that like a portal would that be similar
to a portal you think for me a portal is you go in one side you come out the other
Hokie and stories of Coco Paley.
You'll put you in a time warp.
You don't want to follow that flute player anywhere either.
You don't know what dimension you're going to come out on.
So why would you get put in a time warp, do you think?
Teach you a good lesson.
Don't follow me.
You're in the wrong territory.
Oh, dear.
That's really interesting.
I was in Oregon once, and we were in a certain area,
and I was unable to move for about five minutes.
it was very interesting.
I don't know, that makes me think of that
maybe a different way now.
Yeah, you get frozen.
Don't follow my footsteps.
Don't follow me.
I'm living my life.
I'm in my world.
I'm living it wild.
I'm living it natural.
I'm living it, as creator said,
when not to be racist or hateful here,
but when the native had the white,
man come into his world, look how it came out for them.
So what favors are you going to do,
Squatch tracking him down? The best honor you can have is
just be out there. And if he happens to come up to you,
just be calm. Don't show any aggression. You're going to be just
fine. But you go trying to take him and expose
him and show the world who and what he is and
take away all of his protections.
You may as well sew yourself up in a sleeping bag with an alligator and a dozen cats.
You're going to get the same outcome.
It's good.
End up like Albert Osman.
You're drinking away in a sleeping bag, yeah.
My goodness.
Do you feel like there are any other stories that you heard growing up in that situation
that maybe haven't been shared with the outside world?
yet. Well, there's lots that I've heard about them, swimming and fishing in the rivers and
pulling down moose or coming across children. They don't hurt the kids. They don't take the
kids, but they don't like to be challenged. Don't stare them in the eyes. Turn around and run either.
Be still. That's the whole trick here. Be still. Don't freak out. Yeah.
Are you saying that they would find kids or that they would take kids?
No, like I said with the little boy, he was playing in the bushes up by the reservation.
And he just wandered back into the trees further than he thought he should have.
And he thought he was lost when he turned around.
He was staring at the belly button to squatch, and he looked up and saw it was squatch.
and rather than scream or ran, he stood still, he put his eyes to the ground,
and Squatch just turned around, walked away on him.
He wasn't a threat.
And don't always look for them on the ground.
Look in the branches.
Look up.
Ah, I think that's great advice.
I don't think enough people think to look up in the trees.
You're saying that they could be up in the trees watching down at us.
Right.
Right.
Lots of natives have reported driving down old logging roads and whatnot
and seeing them sitting up in the branches of the trees.
Wow.
That is absolutely incredible.
And it's a thing that I, when I go out every once in a while,
and I never look up in the trees.
I need to start doing that.
I'm always looking down at the ground.
Yeah, that makes perfect sense.
But I've often thought of going back along the Fraser River there,
and down that road.
And I don't know if that same female would ever walk that way again.
But I've often would like to have seen her again and be able to sit and spend some time with her.
I'd have to take a clothes pig for my nose.
Oh, it smells like rotten fish.
Hamburger sitting in the sun with a good dose of B-O and bad mouth.
Oh, man.
A little halitosis, but there's something spiritual to all of that, something very natural, something deeper than we've been raised to believe with our Christianity in English ways.
I think it does go deeper than most of us are aware of or maybe willing to even to go, but it definitely does go deeper.
and I think we just need to continue learning.
From your advice, what areas of British Columbia,
if I was to focus on certain areas like towns in British Columbia
to try to find people to talk to from that town,
what would be different areas you might recommend?
That would have interactions with Sasquatch.
Harrison, Agassie, Yale, Hope,
chivalack
Liluette
Spusum
Boston Bar
Thank you
That's awesome
Vegas Mom
This has been
an incredible chat
You have no idea
how helpful this has been
The information you've shared
is priceless
And thank you so much
For staying almost an hour
up here to chat with me
I really appreciate it
You're welcome
And there's lots of good stories there.
Go up around Ruby Creek and when you do, talk to the natives.
Do you mind if, do you have a, could you send me an email just so I have contact with you in the future?
If you're interested in that, it's bigfoot society at gmail.com.
Just in case I have any other questions to ask you.
I'm a Canadian.
I was born in British Columbia.
you. My tribe is
Métis out of Slave Lake, Alberta,
ex-police officer in
Calgary, truck driver
in the oil sands.
Married American move south.
Here I am. Tadda.
There you go. It has been a pleasure
chatting with you. Thank you so much for coming
up and maybe we'll be able to chat again
in the future, but it was so great chatting
to you today.
You're welcome, and I hope somebody else
joins you.
Yes, ma'am. You have a great rest of your
afternoon. All right. Bye-bye, dear. Here at Bigfoot Society, our goal is to provide a platform for
those that have encountered Bigfoot to share their encounter in a safe and respected environment.
But we need to hear your story. If you've experienced something that you just can't explain,
please send me an email at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com. Then we can start the conversation.
and I know a lot of you have not shared your encounter at all.
It's been 20 years, and it's time that you get this off your chest,
and then you can get some well-deserved for rest,
because I know you haven't been sleeping.
I understand what you're going through,
and I appreciate every one of you listening.
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It's a safe, effective backup birth control option that helps prevent pregnancy before
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Plan B is the number one OBGYN-R recommended brand
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That's freedom to be.
Use as directed.
All right, quick quiz for the hiring managers out there.
What's worse?
Being understaffed or being poorly staffed?
Well, that's a trick question because both are recipes for chaos.
Either way, just say to yourself,
This is a job for Indeed's sponsored jobs.
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Or go a different way and get no traction.
Seriously, sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a higher than non-sponsored jobs.
It really is a no-brainer.
Spend less time searching and more time actually interviewing candidates who check all your boxes.
Less stress, less time, more results.
When you need the right person to cut through the chaos, this is a job for Indeed's sponsored jobs.
And listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to help your job get the premium status it deserves at Indeed.com slash podcast.
Just go to Indeed.com slash podcast right now.
Indeed.com slash podcast. Terms and conditions apply. Need to hire? This is a job for Indeed Sponsored Jobs.
Plan B made over-the-counter emergency contraception legal more than 20 years ago.
It's a safe, effective backup birth control option that helps prevent pregnancy before it starts by temporarily delaying ovulation.
Plan B is the number one OBGYN recommended brand and the only one that you can find at all major retailers in all 50 U.S. States.
There's no minimum age requirement and you don't need an ID to buy it.
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