Bigfoot Society - Sasquatch on the Prowl at Cultus Lake, Oregon!
Episode Date: November 12, 2024Join us for an in-depth discussion with Randy Silvey, a seasoned Bigfoot researcher from Bend, Oregon. Randy shares his compelling encounters at Cultist Lake, where he experienced eerie howls, tree kn...ocks, and even nighttime visitors walking around his camp. He recounts multiple Class B reports from campers and hunters near the lake, including mysterious gravel being dropped on tents and unseen entities moving through campsites. Randy also discusses his expeditions in the Deschutes National Forest and other notable areas in Central Oregon, providing a comprehensive look into his Bigfoot research and the evidence he's gathered.Resources:https://bendbigfootresearch.comBend Bigfoot Research Grouphttps://www.facebook.com/groups/2067991076767839🔴 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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if you have bigfoot activity to report from the same areas discussed in this episode please reach out to
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society and now let's get on with the show all right pickfoot society you've got the privilege
of talking to randy sylvie today he's an individual that i've been
having some correspondence about he had reached out to me about Coltis Lake and listeners of the show
have definitely heard that mentioned at least once in a prior episode.
Randy's also with the Bend Bigfoot Research Group.
So it's exciting to have him on the show today.
How are you doing, Randy?
Oh, I'm doing excellent.
Thank you for having me.
Oh, man.
I am excited to have you on this whole area that we're looking at right now.
And you're over by the Shoots National Forest, you know, over there by Bexhampton.
Band and Sun River and Lapine. And I got familiar with Oak Ridge and Willam it. But man,
I got to get over there next year. Maybe I'll go a little bit east. But, dude, I'm so excited
to talk to you about what you've experienced and what you've heard out there. But let's start
with this, Randy. How did you first get into this whole Wild Bigfoot stuff? Oh, great question.
I'll make it brief. A younger kid, of course. I'd,
watched a $6 million man and I saw that creature on there and referred to as Bigfoot or Sasquatch.
I'm like, oh, my gosh, that's fascinating, even though it was television.
And then later on, kind of as a spoof, my wife's grandmother got me a membership to Western Bigfoot Society that was located in St. John's, Oregon.
Ray Crow was actually the gentleman started that group.
And it was a fun little membership where every few months you get to,
the skeptical tri-fold little newsletter of the latest things going on in and around the Pacific Northwest.
And that just fueled me even more and went to a couple meetings and even hung out with a gentleman by the
name of Peter Byrne, who I didn't think that meant anything until later on in my journey of Bigfoot world.
So I did a couple of research papers in college and really enjoyed the topic even more and became just kind of quietly fascinated.
with the topic. Co-workers knew about it and kind of poke fun at me, but for the most part,
I kept it reserved into myself. And one day, one evening, a coworker called me at two in the
morning, and he was traveling from Salem back to Bend, from a family reunion. He had to get to work.
So it was two in the morning. He's coming around, subtle lake there. And whatever he saw,
scared him to the point of calling me and leave me a voicemail that something walked in front
of his truck on the highway. And he said, I'm a non-believer, but now I believe to Randy,
and I'll never make fun of you again.
So from then on, I took that information and went on my first expedition with BFRL soon thereafter
and met some great people doing that expedition and went on several, several more.
And then decided to start my own group here in central Oregon where we respond to local reports
here collecting as much hard evidence as possible and trying to be careful to filter that as scientifically as possible.
And so I have now pretty much, I get reports often.
My name is definitely out there locally.
And it's fun.
It's a great hobby.
So I'm in the woods.
Most of my free time, researching, following up in reports, tracking.
I really love tracking.
And it just seems like I'm getting busier and busier with local reports and having just a lot of fun with it.
But also, my group is a great group for people to have a safe platform to share what
they may have experienced here locally in central Oregon.
So that's pretty much me in a nutshell.
I love that.
It's so important to have someone in the area that people can trust.
You get how it works out there because you live in the area and just the people can talk to you directly.
That is so, so important.
Were you a BFRO investigator as well or you just went to a few expeditions?
Correct.
was not. I was curious about it, but I never really followed up on it. I probably have gone on
a couple of dozen BFRO expeditions. I certainly enjoy them, but I kind of wanted to branch off
and do my own thing. And so that's what I've done. I do love the networking part of the BFRL crew,
really, really kind people, knowledgeable. But I did not become a BFRO investigator. I, I, I, I
I'm my own investigator, not affiliated with anyone, just out there at the grassroots level of talking to people,
showing, responding to their reports, interviewing them, deciding if it's more of a misidentification or if it's worth gathering another teammate and going to investigate the area and interview with a person.
That is fantastic.
Were those all expeditions based out of Oregon then?
Correct.
Yeah.
Did anything cool happen on any of those expeditions that you were on?
Nothing notable, no.
And I think, you know, I think expeditions are fun for people who are curious about the topic.
But I think for any hard evidence to come from those expeditions is just too many people.
It's a lot of chaos.
And I think when you have a lot of people, I've had a, I'll backtrack, I did have a pretty interesting experience in Mountain Hood on my first expedition, which I should say,
really fueled me even more.
And that was only because I did a remote camp on that expedition.
So we had the home base, but then I volunteered to go and do a remote camp for one night
with two other gentlemen up at the base of Mount Hood.
And that's where I had an amazing experience.
So I went, okay, there's something to this.
So that trip really was pretty fruitful, especially for me.
But for the most part, I think there's just too many people in one spot in the woods,
you know, and whacking trees and hooting and hollering, you know.
I get that.
I just don't think it's conducive for these things to come out and be curious about you, you know.
Yeah, no, no, I totally get it.
I've never been on one yet, but it is really good networking experience.
But would you be able to share what happened that experience you kind of alluded to just then up in Mountain?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
So we did our evening meeting and dinner and then we put on, I volunteered earlier today.
They were looking for volunteers.
And it was my first trip.
and I'm like, yeah, I'm just going to send it.
I mean, this is why I'm here, right?
So I gathered for two belongings and two other gentlemen right up for an evening meeting,
and we hight, oh, maybe a mile, mile, a half, to a remote, killer, remote little lake.
It's called Cripple Lake.
And going through the forest with red light only or no light, and the forest was dead silent
and just thick and dark and just kind of an airy feeling anyways.
And we set up camp along the creek, or lake, I should say, there's a little fire pit that's already there.
So we got a little fire going and we're kind of chit-chatting.
Now it's probably 10.30 night, maybe 11.
And the one of the gentleman who did on a few expeditions, he said, okay, let's see if there's anything here.
And he took a decent stick and he hit the tree.
And he goes, okay, now let's just sit and listen, give it about 10 minutes.
Nothing happened.
He goes, okay, let's do it again.
So it did again.
And about 10 minutes later, after that one, we got a percussive knock across the lake.
And my eye just from, and they go, oh, okay, there we go.
And then he responded to it.
And then another one coming to, from my 3 o'clock, responded.
And this went on, gosh, for a couple hours, they were responding from different directions.
So across the lake being my 12 o'clock, we'd get a response from my 7 o'clock and then our 3 o'clock again.
And they would kind of move.
So each tree knock, we did two hard tree knocks, and usually it resulted in one of those three responding to us.
And it got a little nerve-wracking because the source of these percusses were moving.
And we had FLIR, and I remember seeing a coyote, but we didn't see anything else.
And I thought that was baffling at the time.
Now it doesn't surprise me.
And I said, well, where are these noise come from?
And there's only one trail in.
And there's no way to the backside.
So someone's on the backside.
Something is responding.
And then there's other things responding to it and us.
So it got to the point where the gentleman is a veteran, he was a Marine,
who started these three knocks and kind of led this remote camp.
And he got really, really kind of unnerved and even pulled out
is put on a tree step.
And he goes, okay, we're going to go to sleep.
We're going to do cowboy camp.
And he goes, God forbid, if something happens, that gun is right there.
And probably unorthodox for a BFRO trip.
But it just added a little bit of peace of mind.
And these knockings, knocks, I should say,
continued until about four in a morning.
And then we woke up a daybreak and went back to camp.
And holy cow, I couldn't believe, you know, what I was hearing.
And it definitely put me into high gear of learning more about the subject.
Sounds like you were just in it and no way out.
Yeah, and it was really well done.
That one, they had a couple of classes that you were asked to take.
And one of them was learning, you know, learning all the different vocalizations in the forest
and learning your forest.
And Chris Spencer taught it.
And I just became a huge admirer of his work of studying digital audio and learning
you know what's making that noise and what's that noise so there's a class on that and there was a class
on casting and I go wow this is really this is really something this is very productive and so you're
right that's that was probably what definitely propelled me into diving just drinking the
kool-aid and going completely deep down the rabbit hole absolutely then you get back to your own area
which is like the shoots national forest area it sounds like you start going in and doing your own
thing, correct?
Yeah, yeah.
And I was, you know, after probably six more expeditions, I thought, you know what?
I think we got some stuff here locally, and I'm going to start my own group.
So I got a couple of buddies together.
We created Ben Bigfoot Research Group.
We did a town hall.
I started doing every other month.
I do what's called Squatch and Brews.
And it was a little pizza joint with a secluded room.
And it'd be a Thursday evening six o'clock.
Go down, I have a slice of pizza and a beer.
And I tried to have a guest speaker.
I tried to have some substance to the meeting.
You know, let's talk about local reports.
Let's talk about following up or what was followed up on reports.
And then I tried to have a guest speaker of some sort.
And so people could walk away with something tangible.
But more importantly, like I mentioned earlier, it was a safe place for people.
If they wanted to speak, they could speak.
They could just show up and leave and not talk to anyone, which is fine.
But again, it was a safe platform, a safe room where they could tell their stuff.
story, get it off the shoulders, and feel like they were recognized and not ridiculed.
And that was a really big, it's still a very important thing for me because it's such a
taboo subject, even today. It's getting better. So I was doing that. And then just from that
and then putting a group on Facebook, started slowly getting reports. And now it's definitely
taking, taking a motion of its own. And now I'm getting reports consistently. And I'm
do filter them. I decide, you know, okay, is it misidentification. But I always let that person
tell the story and then I decide how far to go with it. So primarily, most of my reports are all here.
I have researched out in Tullumut Forest and then I spent a couple of trips over with Daryl and Toby
learning, and that's exactly it, just going there and learning what I can do better and as far as
collecting evidence, and then I'd come back here and try to apply it and use some of their
methods or mythology. And so, yeah, the group is growing. We've got some great stuff going on
here in central Oregon. I can think these things were here, and they are definitely here, and just
enjoy getting out there and trying to understand the habitat and respect what these things are.
Oh, man, I agree.
I agree so much.
I mean, it's incredible you don't hear more about Central Oregon because it's like everyone gets, you know, they're talking about like Olympic Peninsula in like Washington and Mount Hood, which is cool.
I mean, those places are great.
But like, dude, Central Oregon is nuts.
Like the stuff that is happening there, I don't think people even realize the stuff that's going on in there.
I absolutely agree.
I just recently this year met up with a gentleman who has been researching the other side of my area up by Palina-Nese Lake.
And he's got amazing stuff happening up there as well, which I did not realize.
I've been mostly focusing.
So my research area is the North Umpqua Summit Lake to Pinnagas, all the way north to Mount Bachelor, a little bit in the sisters area.
but my heart reports that I respond to
seem to be happening within 30 minutes
in my front door.
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So you are talking about the Summit.
Okay, Summit Lake, got it.
Yep.
Yeah, you see it?
Yep.
Yep, yep, I got it.
That's a great area.
So that takes you, I've done a lot of research down here.
That'll take you right to Oak Ridge, the backside, and they'll drop.
down the Hills Creek Reservoir.
But there's a Teppanagos Lake.
I've gotten some reports out of there.
And then also La Molo Lake.
I've done a lot of footwork in there.
We've got some great reports from Lomolo.
Also near Diamond Lake, that area, some great stuff.
But you really have to be in that area a lot.
And it's just hard with the fires and the snow now to get in there.
And it's getting true from my little area here.
but that rain, that's kind of my favorite area
is just going up along the spine there,
basically following the PCT trail.
And then you cross Crescent,
you cross Highway 58,
and then you go up towards Waldo, Charlton Lake,
right along Coltis, and it keeps going up.
I just think there's, it's just beautiful,
it's thick in there, a lot of water,
there's food, cover, of course.
And I truly think that maybe they kind of teetered back and forth
over on the,
on the west side a little bit
where it's a little warmer, milder maybe,
and then back over here in the summer
or late summer. So who knows?
Some people think they migrate here.
Some people think maybe not,
the more regional.
I'm still learning that.
I don't have a great answer for that,
but it seems like fall.
I think with most researchers,
this is my game time.
It seems like all the action starts
mid-August and goes right into November.
Dude, I'm telling,
and, you know, I don't live there.
I experienced it for a week and I talked to people over the phone for a podcast, right?
They're not migrating out of Oak Ridge.
They're living in Oak Ridge.
They have to be living in Oak Ridge around that town.
You go to that town and you can talk to anyone in that town.
And there's a good 90% chance that they will have a Bigfoot encounter story to share.
It is the most insane.
And that might be how it is out there.
And I'm just not used to it.
Maybe that's like that in other towns too, but it was nuts, dude.
That's great.
I'm glad you had a good time to experience there.
I'm glad you're coming back.
Next time we'll have to drag you over here and you can hang out with us for a little bit.
Oh, absolutely, man.
Yeah, because there's this like Bigfoot bar and where's it?
It's like, you know what I'm talking about, though?
I do.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's one of my favorite places to go.
I've been up in the mountains.
I'll stop there on the way home.
and have a sandwich and a beer.
That's awesome.
Yeah, the Bigfoot Tavern.
Yes, that's the place.
So tell me, you know, in your time doing research out there in the woods, have you had any
out of the ordinary encounters or anything that you've experienced that was just, it was a little weird
or you think it might have been related to Bigfoot?
Yeah, you know, I have.
in multiple different areas
I've experienced vocalizations,
percussives,
you know, loud, crazy tree knocks.
It sounds like a four by four
hitting a tree 100 feet away from your tent
with other people with me,
vocalizations coming from the Tillamuck Forest,
some of the craziest stuff I heard from there,
seeing prints over in the Al Moon Lab,
finding, I would say, impressions
and seeing some prints here locally.
probably my most recent
really crazy stuff
to the point where it got my wife's attention
and this is Coltis Lake again
and I've gotten probably
six more reports from Colchis Lake in the last two months
you know this recent trip
I went as a
we went as a family trip and my wife knows
that Coltis is one of my research areas but
I promised her we would go as a family
and just do family stuff so we loaded up
the boat and you
you have to get to this camp site via boat only or you hike in.
So that adds a little bit of excitement to it, right?
A little bit in the steep.
So we load up my,
just this little old dayliner that we have,
my daughter and her boyfriend and what was that.
So the four of us load up all our camp gear.
And Coltis Lake now is empty.
It's closed.
People have gone home.
The party's over, right?
You have that entire lake to yourself,
which is why I love this time here.
And we boated over to the cross the lake.
Beautiful.
You know, seven degrees, beached the boat.
got a tent set up, and it's a picnic table, firing, and an outhouse, and a beautiful sandy beach.
And so we were there just to do family staff, you know?
So we, great time, wakeboarded and good food and had some friends come up, and we played games at night.
Night number one was great, had a blast.
And I'm really focusing on not listening to anything or going for a little random hike by myself or tracking.
I'm being husband, right?
I'm cooking and laughing.
and so night number two, we went to bed, woke, and my wife, she's pretty logic, black and white,
everything has a reason.
And night number two, it was 5.15 in the morning, I unzipped the tent to go outside.
You take it quickly.
And as soon as I unzipped the tent, got my shoes, took two steps from the tent.
Something howled and roared at the same time across the cove, and then a tree crashed.
And I went, oh, okay.
In my mind, we're going, yeah, who?
But I was really calm.
And my wife goes, what the heck was that?
I'm like, oh, it's not like an animal or a tree, you know,
really, really working hard to downplay it.
Meantime, my heart should jump, and I'm so excited.
And so I take two more scaps, do my business,
and I can hear a crazy loud tree knock coming from my left on a ridge.
So something howled, tree crashed,
and a few seconds later there's a response from a ridge above us.
And now my wife's going, what that?
What's going on after?
I don't know.
I think another tree fell or a branch or something.
So I get back in the tent, get my seat and bag, and she's trying to deduce everything.
Like, what would cause it?
What do you think that is?
I go, I don't know.
And, you know, trees fall all the time, which they do.
And so 15 minutes of this discussion, we're kind of whispering.
It's still dark, still early.
Now we're hearing trees snaps.
tree breaks, sticks hitting trees, something whacking trees,
into campsites to our left, probably 300 feet away,
but it's really sick, dark, green, lush.
So you can't see clearly just because of all the growth,
but also it's still dark.
And so now my wife's going, well, what is that?
I go, well, I don't know.
I'm being really, really logical.
I don't want to get excited about anything.
I'm trying to remain calm for her.
and have explanations because, you know, a lot of things can be explained.
There's no wind.
Everything's dead still.
But something is, or some things, is gathering, breaking sticks, heading sticks with trees, and walking.
You can hear clear two or two feet bipedal hominid walking about four campsites over.
And I said, well, maybe some hikers came in.
You know, it's a two and a half hour height.
So maybe some hikers came in and they're gathering wood.
And I said, well, now I'm explaining that to her.
I go, well, that can't be.
I mean, who would hike in the middle of the night and go, oh, maybe tweakers.
So great.
Now we've got tweakers back here.
But they can't have a fire.
So there's no fire.
Why are they really doing gathering trees and snapping trees?
And then I hear one from above the ridge again.
I'm like, well, that must be a hiker up there too.
So now there's like two hikers here and it's dark out.
So now it's 545.
And she's like, what is?
And it's loud.
And my daughter from her tent goes, Dad, what's all that noise?
Who's over there?
I'm like, I don't know.
He can't see.
So I unsip at my tent, grab a flashlight.
The boyfriend does.
And we both, he wakes up, gets his shoes on.
And we both start going to research where this noise is.
Who are these people?
And I'm starting to really believe, like, there are people here.
This is nuts.
And we walk, gosh, we were gone.
probably 30 minutes.
I'll tell you, within the first five minutes of us
walking towards that source of the noise,
everything went quiet in the forest.
And we're walking and we're looking for disturbance in the dirt.
I'm thinking, okay, maybe elk is back here,
maybe he's sitting in the trees.
And the gentleman is with me.
He's an avid bow hunter and outdoors me.
He goes, oh, there's no elk sign.
And normally don't do that.
So I'm like, okay, so it's not that.
Maybe it's a bird.
Maybe it really is people.
The ground is not disturbed.
It still has that,
that it rained a couple days prior.
So it still had deformation, you know, where the rain drop that hit all the dirt
and nothing's disturbed it since.
So there's no fresh disturbed dirt.
There's no tracks.
There's no footprints at all in this entire campground.
So he and I, after 30 minutes, go back and now my wife sit by the propane campfire.
My daughter is.
And I go, oh, what did you find?
Do you see anything?
Well, who's here?
And I go, we found zip.
There's not a single soul here.
It's just us.
It can't be.
And so we sat down in the chair and it started back up.
And I'm like, what the heck?
But farther away, get back out on my chair and then it stopped and it stayed to stop.
So I'm like, oh, my gosh.
So we finished the weekend.
We had another night there.
It was quiet.
Had a great time.
Loaded up the boat, went back home.
I posted this on my Facebook group.
and reports started rolling in,
and then I had some co-researchers who were going to be in town.
He said, oh, do you mind taking us up there?
We got some audio equipment, and we have some parabolic dishes.
Do you mind taking us up there?
Well, sure, why not?
So it's one week later.
So we hop back to my boat.
I take them across the lake.
Same scenario, mild weather, clear, still, no wind, no people, not a single soul.
They get their parabolic set up on the beach,
and in night number one's quiet, as I suspect.
They just opened up fire seasons,
we had a small fire,
and then night number two,
I'm sorry, day number two,
start hearing some occasional tree knocks.
I go, okay, here we go.
Now I get to be researcher guy.
I don't have to be husband and good father, right?
So now I'm excited.
And so we started hearing some vocalizations
and a lot of things that made us scratch our head.
and night
number two
we went to bed
the audio recorders
were set up to record from 6 a.m.
to 6 p.m.
And these parabolic dishes
were, shoot, probably 400 yards apart.
Tucked away,
they're on the shore of the lake,
but they're tucked back towards trees a little bit.
So you didn't see them clearly
to walk right up on them.
and so we went to bed at 10 o'clock.
I went to bed a little earlier.
And then, and again, this recording, we didn't,
we didn't hear these recordings.
The gentleman didn't go through the recording until about a week later,
unfortunately, but we went to bed at 10 and the recorder picked up something an hour
and a half later.
So 1128, you can hear a little bit of snoring.
and then you hear something walking down the beach.
Very clear, heavy biped, hominoid, human, two-foot stride, heavy coming down the beach in the soft sand,
and it's a crunch, crunch.
And as it gets closer to the parabolic, the crunch is loud, and it walks right up to the parabolic dish,
pauses briefly and then curves back out and starts walking down the rest of the beach.
The parabolic dish is probably 30 feet from the first tent behind some fir trees.
As it walks away, another one lighter foot, biped, nice stride, lighter foot in the sand,
walks up to the parabolic also, but stands there.
and I assume is just checking it out, staring.
The other one you can hear in the background slowly walking away.
And then this one goes, oh, I need to catch up to that one.
And so starts to walk off, starts to walk faster, faster,
and then breaks into a small jog.
So we didn't realize that that had happened that night until a week later,
the audio was gone through.
And we, there is, you know, and I am, I try to be extremely,
logical and we kind of, you know, you think about, okay, let's break it down. So, so something,
some things, there's two of these things on two feet, walked up to the per bot. They knew where it was.
They walked right up to it and continued to walk on. So I'm like, okay. So now we have hikers on
a Thursday night, second week in October, walking 1130 at night on the beach. So we got hikers on the beach.
Well, okay, that's possible but not probable.
So, okay, and if it was hikers, you know, if you and I were going down the beach at night, 1130, a remote lake,
we'd be talking like, oh, okay, hey, this is a cool lake.
Oh, it looks like some people are camping here.
Oh, what's this plastic thing sitting on a tripod?
Oh, let's check that out.
Oh, yeah, that's pretty cool.
They must be researching something.
Okay, let's keep going, right?
There would be chitter-chatter talking of some sort.
And there was none.
What's even more baffling is I had a glad trash bag full of food scraps.
I left out because there's no wildlife there, and I'm not too worried about it.
Bigfoot Society will be right back after these messages.
Let's go, girls.
So this is the little pink pill everyone's been talking about.
Yep, that's Addy.
Good things do come in small packages.
And Addy is definitely a good thing.
Not just good.
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Addie isn't for men or to enhance sexual performance.
Addie can cause severe low blood pressure and fainting.
Your risk is higher if you drink alcohol close to your dose.
Don't take Addie if you have liver problems.
Take certain medicines or allergic to any of its ingredients.
Before taking Addie, tell your doctor about all the medicines you take.
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No matter the occasion, snack time should be easy.
That's why Skinny Popcorn keeps it light, airy and endlessly delicious.
Skinny Pop is made from just three simple ingredients,
delivering an irresistible taste without being complicated.
Skinny Pop simplicity allows you to freely enjoy as much popcorn as you want.
Just open the bag and then.
enjoy. No overthinking, no tough choices. When it comes to snacking, Skinny Pop just makes sense.
Deliciously popped, perfectly salted. Skinny Pop, popular for a reason. So whatever it was, didn't care
about the trash bag, which was 30 feet from the parabolic. So I deduced in my mind that it probably
wasn't on a hiker at 1130 a night. A bear. Okay, well maybe it's a bear. Okay, maybe it's on its two
feet. Okay, well, bears are kind of clumsy on the two feet when they're standing up, but then they
have erratic breathing, they're snorting or huffing, and they would have also had interest in the
trash. So probably not a bear. So two feet walking through the sand, didn't care about trash,
wasn't talking, simply walked up to the parabolic, checked it out, and kept walking. I don't know,
But it drew a lot of suspect for me, like, okay, we're in the right spot.
These things are here.
Obviously didn't want to be disruptor.
They didn't want to wake us up.
Whatever these were, it was, clearly knew we were asleep because everyone's snoring.
You can hear it on the audio.
And timed it by that.
Like, okay, these humans or people are asleep, let's walk up and see what they set up on the beach
because we're curious about it.
That's my interpretation of that visit.
And then weekend number three, so we backed up and had a great time, had a lot of great things
happen.
Weekend number three, I went back up with my cell cam, which is a no-no.
I'm not a big camera guy, but I've had experiences with things playing with my camera.
So I put the camera off a beaten path and just set it up, just to see what would happen.
And I had two buddies with me, and one was a non-believer, but he wanted to go and explore this area,
it's beautiful, and help us up to camera any day.
But he woke up.
We were only there one night, and of course nothing happened.
But he woke up and we're sitting about a fire.
And he goes, I know this sounds absolutely insane.
But he goes, I swear probably a little after five,
I could hear two kids chatting behind my tent.
I couldn't make out a single word.
But something, two of them younger were talking.
And I go, really, tell me more.
I mean, like, what kind of?
And then he just stopped.
And he goes, I never mind.
It's stupid.
So, and that's, so far, it's been my last trip up there.
And I'll probably go up and get my camera eventually.
I do believe that cameras detour them more than anything.
But it's fun to see if I, you know, get a little bit of something playing with my camera.
And something has been, which is kind of fun.
And I'm curious to check that out.
But that's, that's been my most recent activity.
with most bang for the buck.
Like something walking up into your camp while you're asleep is, for me, that's my best
local stuff yet.
I'm pretty excited about it.
It's so cool to hear that, you know, you yourself have also experienced stuff.
And it sounds like you've gotten multiple reports as well from that same area.
Or those other reports or those visuals or people experiencing like Class B type things?
or yeah unfortunately they've all been class B's most of the reports it's something coming into our
camp randy something walked around the tents about two in the morning and walked away
something poured gravel on the top of my tent i thought it was raining but something was
slowly dropping or or letting loose like a small handful of gravel on the top of my dome tent
my daughter had that happen as well that night we're up there as a family she thought
it was raining and and she goes now as pebbles were literally rolling down the top of my tent at
1.30 in the morning and and so I had another report just like that. I had a report. It was also this
year August. Same thing, gravel on the tent. This is a group of 40 people. They are,
they are ahead of central Oregon symphony, I believe it was, or orchestra. Anyway, it's a trip to do
once a year to the backside of Coltis Lake. They load up boats. They'll go camp over there and they play
instruments, cellos and violins, and I just have a little jam session once a year.
And there was two gentlemen that flew in from New Orleans for this event.
And not only did something slowly seem like dropped small gravel or dirt on the top of their
tent and the wee hours of morning, but also they heard something walking around their tent
as so along with two other campers in that group.
So what seems to be a common denominator at dislocation is music.
It's the non-threatening is to hang it out.
And that's why I tell people who want to have an experience.
They're going to have an experience.
Just go and act normal.
Don't put on the face paint.
Don't pull out clear.
Don't run around the woods with your camo gear on.
Just sit next to fire and play a little bit of music.
Just be normal.
Play games, chit-chat.
Don't get crazy.
And that's the most non-threatening way to have an experience.
In my opinion, I think that produces curiosity.
And more importantly, maybe they feel like they can go,
these things can go about doing their day-to-day business
and not be chased or stalked or killed or what have you.
But this particular area, whatever these things are,
there's been never a threatening experience.
It's more like, oh, God, there's something really big in the woods.
it's been a curious experience
at the best
I almost think whatever is at this lake
based on all the reports I'm getting
is barely even curious about humans
it's more like gosh darn it kind of annoying
I'm going to walk through the scam
because I get over to that creek
and I'll do a couple circles and move on
I'm not going to do any whoops
I'm not going to do any scary howls
no scary screams
no crazy tree knocks
the knocks I've heard up there
I think have been just for
communication to
Others, they've been slight. They're not overpowering type of wood knock. Not an intimidating
wood knock is what I should say. So this particular lake, I think whatever they are, just kind of
want to be left alone, do business as usual. And if there's humans there, they might go kind of
check them out, but they just want to be left alone. So that's extremely interesting.
You said there's a theme where they're not really aggressive encounters, because I'm remembering
from a lot of the encounters I took over from the Sasquatch Summerfest,
like that area near Oak Ridge,
there is a theme of,
I wouldn't say like Oklahoma aggressive,
but I would say maybe semi-aggressive,
like hunters getting their gun barrels bent,
people being chased out of the Spirit Lake area
by Sasquatch that look like they have dreadlocks,
just like really weird, semi-aggressive.
not like overly like we're going to take you down stuff but actually right i take that back
there's there is one but that's not exactly public um anyways gotcha got you i just remember that
myself but for the most part it's semi-aggressive so over in your area do you get for the most
part like non-threatening ones or are there sometimes ones where it's like oh you know things
escalated maybe a little bit there.
No, I've not, I'm going through my quick roll decks, my brain.
I have not ever taken an aggressive report.
Incorrect.
In 2011, hunters near Coltis Lake, I think they were held and yelled at by something in the
woods during hunting season and they packed up and left.
that's probably the worst one I've ever received.
So I am, you know, of course, again, this is a wild animal that hasn't been classified yet.
So I can't tell you if it's, you know, threatening or not.
But the experiences I've had and the stories and reports I have collected,
I've got a lot of Class A reports.
And these things want to be left alone.
They're like, it was accidentally running in front of a car.
I got a lot of those.
I got one that was surprised by a gentleman camping out of his kayak.
And he had a late start one night, and he did this camp out every other weekend, Friday and Saturday.
And so Thursday night, he got up there a little bit too late, and he was going up to Creek in his kayak,
twilight, and he stumbled upon a, he put massive, massive, what he said was a silverback
here at Wicayette Reservoir.
and the only reason this thing saw him
is because he was so shocked
that he kicked his paddle in the water
to turn the kayak to get a better view of this thing
which was 80 feet away
and this thing was up on a knoll
looking down at the creek and he described it
like this thing was watching children play in water
it was very intent
and didn't realize that the kayak was there
until the paddle hit the water
and then this thing turned hard left
and stared down at him in his kayak
And I actually believe that they both startled each other.
I think this thing was looking for fish.
I think the Kokeney was starting to spawn.
It was also late summer last year.
And so he turned his, well, two things.
He's 58 years old and he's a retired logger, non-believing lauder.
He had a 45 with him.
No, it's a 9-mill, I think.
And his iPhone, it goes, Randy, when I saw this thing and when it made eye contact with me,
I froze with the paddle in the air, and then I urinated myself in my kayak.
And the kayak just floated back down the stream until I hit a bank,
and it popped me out of my trance or my paralysis, if you will.
And then he goes, I just booked it out of there.
And then something splashed next to me.
He goes, I really can't tell you if it was a fish or a rock,
and I knew he hightailed at home.
He was even to the point where like,
I don't know this thing followed me home or not.
But it was, again, it was a moment where I think they were both startled.
The road crossing reports I get here, these things don't look left or right, which is absolutely
amazing to me. They just go. And sometimes in front of one or multiple cars, even in front of a
highway, I'm sorry, Oregon State Trooper and his wife. And that's a great report because that's
the same silver. This man is trained to take an action picture within seconds. And he has a beautiful
description of one crossing between Crescent and Simult, the Highway 58 turnoff.
But yeah, even the ones up by Palana, East Lake, they are a non-issue.
I think they just want to be left alone and live.
And I really don't have, I just haven't gotten any report for people like this thing
chased me, this thing screamed at me, this thing held at me.
I do believe, I absolutely back what you're saying, too, because
I've heard some really scary reports down south.
So anything south of 138 in your crater lake, I call Badfoot.
And that's maybe not fair, but that area I won't go by myself.
I'm in wooded a lot by myself.
That area, I'll take a partner with me or a buddy because there is a different attitude down there.
And I'm not sure why.
You know, maybe some groups like people, humans, some groups are more angry.
I don't know, some families are more angry, piss, maybe hunters who many people, what have you.
But that seems to be a more intimidating area for these things, for sure.
So that's really interesting.
I've gotten one report from down by Crater Lake.
And it was the lady I was supposed to talk to, but it didn't work out.
And she was driving towards, well, she was driving towards Crater Lake.
And she saw something cross the road.
And she wasn't a big foot person, but she's like, it looked like a moss man, like a big, tall man just covered with moss.
Which is really, really weird.
But you're saying that, so 138 is the highway that goes, looks like east to west, north of Crater Lake, ish.
And you're saying south of that highway, like there's some really rough stuff that happens?
Yeah, I believe they seem to be a little more agitated down that direction.
So 138 looking south and then parallel like highway 230, right?
if you look on your map there and 2.30 head south.
I just got another report from Highway 230 today.
She was out last weekend and heard some howls.
And I said, be careful.
I go, that's the only spot.
I'll tell you to be careful.
And it is.
I don't know if it's a crater lake thing, you know.
I don't know.
It's an area that I definitely caution for sure.
So, well, there must have been some catalyst event that made it so that you will not go down in that area.
yourself yeah yeah you could probably say that okay i've heard some reports that have made me and
plus i've talked to other people and that's where the noise i think the name was coined uh badfoot
and i hate to say it was bad big foot but it's just you know they're they're pissed off or something
they're just they're just they're just a little bit more agitated down there i there was no real
event for myself i've never been put in that situation
I've never felt scared or threatened.
But the reports that I've taken and heard from that area,
I think it's just an area to be cautious.
Just curious, anything in particular that jumps out in your memory of reports
that you've taken from that area that would contribute to that?
I have taken reports, nothing scary or intimidating.
I have road crossing.
two road crossing reports on 138.
Vocalizations.
I've gotten three.
That one most recent from this weekend, off of 230.
In Lookup Rabbit Ears, it's a rock formation off of Highway 230.
Her and her husband for about 30 minutes heard something,
communicating with something.
And they're non-believers, but they couldn't wait to tell me about it.
and then go north in that Lamolo area.
Next to La Mola Lake, we're heading north, just north of Diamond Lake.
If you look to the west of Lomola Lake, there's a dread and terror ridge.
And people told me that I've had two hunters that said something happened to them up there and they won't go back there.
Bigfoot Society will be right back after these messages.
Let's go, girls.
So you've been taking one of these little pink pills daily?
Yeah.
And you feel...
Uh-huh, and more.
More?
Huh, I didn't think we could feel like that again at our age.
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blood pressure and fainting. Your risk is higher if you drink alcohol close to your dose. Don't take
Addie if you have liver problems. Take certain medicines or allergic to any of its ingredients. Before
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And of course it sounds really cool, dread and tear ridge, right?
So, yeah, I've had, you know, reports, but nothing that really strikes my attention of, you know, being scary, just more from people I've talked to.
Other stories I've heard, but as far as reports that I've taken, no.
Oh, so I'll rephrase the question a little bit differently, and then I'll move on.
But so that area where there's like the bad foot stuff happening on, have you heard accounts that would specifically like you could point to that account and be like, oh, that's probably a big part of why it's called bad foot down there in that area?
Oh, no, I have not.
Okay.
Great question.
I have not.
No.
All right.
Just a weird feeling down there.
We're not going to go out by ourselves and things could get pretty interesting.
All right.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, absolutely. Yeah, just from the stories I've heard and then talking to other researchers, it's an interesting area. So who knows?
Well, listeners, if you know of some crazy stuff that has gone down in that area, south of 138 and east of 230, right?
That whole area.
Yeah.
For west of 230.
Yeah.
West of 230. Sorry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
All right.
Cool.
That actually, you know, I want to ask, have you come to?
to a decision or what's your current leaning as to what you think, you know, these,
these are out there?
How do you categorize Bigfoot?
Yeah, boy, that's a good one, right?
Yeah.
I used to be confident it was a landlocked ape.
I'm no longer confident that the more I do this and more I'm out in the woods.
I think, I think, yes, possibly that, but also there's something more to it.
I think, you know, I'm not much of an orb guy, but I had an experience that changed my thought process on an investigation.
So these things, I think for the most part, act like primates, but they have abilities that I cannot explain.
So that would take it into, I don't know if it's quantum physics, I don't know, is it a cloaking thing, a real thing?
Possibly, I don't know.
But I'm not sold on just flesh and blood, landlocked primate.
I think that's a piece of it.
But there's another side of these things that is unexplained.
There's abilities that they're able to perform that just haven't been explained yet.
And I do believe that they're out there and when they don't want to be seeing, they have a way of disappearing.
It's the most craziest thing I've ever seen.
I've seen prints to just stop.
You know, like what the heck?
Why?
So you see enough of that stuff, right?
You see that the more you're out there, the more you start to experience things are unexplained.
And that's the piece that's still very much a mystery for me.
like, you know, how can I not see this with a fleer?
How can I not see this thing with night vision, but I can hear it, right?
So that's a challenging part for me, but I love it.
I think these things, I feel very, very, very, very blessed that they are not far from
where I live and I can go and learn about them and respect them and try not to be an
inconvenience.
Just more of a benign observer is my goal.
I love that.
our ways of looking at are very similar.
And I mean, yeah, if I lived out there, dude, I would get nothing done.
It would be rough.
I would be out there all the time.
So it's probably why I don't live out there, to be honest.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
It becomes a challenge.
You know, we're empty nesters.
And I, yeah, I put awful lot of stuff I need to do on my property in my house because
I'm just out in the woods, just tracking and learning.
But you're right.
It can be highly addictive and you've got to be careful to have a little bit of balance too.
We experienced a weird phenomenon out in the woods in, let's say, Oak Ridge area.
And I'm curious if you've ever experienced it out in your area where sounds were picked up on audio.
No one heard it live except for one person in the group.
Have you ever experienced anything at that?
Wow.
I have not.
Okay.
Interesting.
That's a good one.
That's a real good one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was just, it was very, very strange.
What kind of sounds?
It was like a weird, a weird whooping type sound.
Yeah, and only one person heard it in the group actually happen.
It is very strange.
Have you ever experienced infrasound out there that you're aware of?
I have not.
Correct.
If it did, I wasn't aware of it.
But no, nothing that struck me now.
Okay.
Interesting.
But I do believe that's a thing.
No, it's a thing.
I don't know.
I will tell you, I do believe it's a thing because most of my class A reports, there's a sense
of paralysis with it.
I don't know if it's body, the human body going into shock and trying to classify what
they saw, or if this thing really has the ability to perform a moment of paralysis or
for sound.
So, yes, I believe that's a thing.
I'm starting to believe that.
I'm still very much, I always call myself a learner.
And so I am open to learning more about that.
And I'm starting to see definitely a correlation to most of my Class A reports of having that experience.
So that's really interesting.
I want to share another thing that happened out in this area by Oak Ridge, the last,
I think I've mentioned this maybe briefly in passing,
but we were sitting at the edge of the meadow and I was sitting in a chair looking into the tree line.
and for a good five minutes,
I was not able to move at all.
Oh.
And it was just like,
just could not move.
And then all of a sudden it was like,
you know,
then I can move again.
I was like,
whoa,
what in the world just happened there?
It was very strange.
So is that similar to other reports you've gotten?
Like you said,
there's some paralysis maybe involved?
Yeah,
you know,
I'm going to say yours is pretty,
that's pretty significant.
I would say most of my reports are
Class A reports are people who are frozen and trying to figure out what's happening, what's
looking at me, what is that thing, and feel like they don't have the ability to move.
And I don't know if that's the human body going into a little bit of a shock or when this
thing's making that eye contact, it's infosound or a combination of both.
But not to your extreme.
That's pretty powerful.
It's just it was a really weird thing.
Yeah.
Did you feel sick afterwards?
Did you feel nauseous?
No, but you know, keep in mind that I was, I probably had a fever by that time because the next day I had to go out to Springfield to urgent care for my legs.
Right.
Which the doctor had no idea how that happened.
Ah.
And they were like, they were like, it's probably cellulitis, which is funny because the printout they gave me.
there's like one of the causes is like can be exposure to like like some kind of like radiation
type deal but I think it's probably a fly bite or a few fly bites that got like maybe
messed up with some some stuff in the meadow who knows did your skin and I don't want to you know
did your skin bubble up at all did it feel like it was a bad burn no but it was it was
swollen up like crazy.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
Okay.
Interesting.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Yeah.
You mentioned that a few times,
Tob and Daryl's name have come up.
Yes.
Have you gone over to the Owl Moon Lab in the wilderness area and done anything's over there?
Yeah, yeah, I did.
I went over.
I know when he first moved to Oregon and met him in his group and became friends.
And then he moved from Glyde and bought that house there.
And he was telling me he's getting moved in, all settled in.
And then he texted me one day, he goes, there's something like there's monkeys up in the ridge.
I'm like, what?
And he goes, yeah, there's monkeys.
I swear there's like, there's crazy monkeys here.
And so our relationship furthered.
And then he said, hey, I met this guy, Toby, I call him Toby Johnson.
I go, oh, I'm pretty to Toby.
And he's coming out to my place.
I'm like, no way.
He goes, yeah, he's going to come investigate what's going on in the ridge.
Anyways, long story short, I went over there a couple of times with my group.
I took my family over there, my wife, two kids, and significant others, and Daryl, and Mark Parker took us on and took us down to their little area there.
Mark's such a cool guy and basically just learned what they were experiencing.
And then I took some teammates from my group and did a couple of overnighters there.
And nothing significant happened that I was aware of.
But it's a really, really interesting location.
There's a lot of things happening there.
It's almost overwhelming.
And, yeah, it's a cool place.
Man, I would be interested.
I always say, I mean, is this stuff still happening to,
there's a new owner to the property.
I wonder if the stuff is still happening.
But who knows?
Yeah, so I talked to Daryl and he said, yes, not as much.
The house itself is weird.
It's crazy.
Oh, yeah.
So there's stuff with the house where the new owners don't go upstairs at all.
but he
Darrell I was supposed to go on
Toby's expedition
strange days
and something came up
and I missed that one too
and Darrell went on it
and from there Darrell went back
to Al Moon Lab before going back to Oklahoma
and he said yeah he sent
sent out some pictures to me
a beautiful prints so I think they're still there
I still think they're habitating
that area and doing business as usual
in there
oh yeah I mean
the stuff that that I hear
I mean that whole area
Codge Grove and like I don't know if you've ever heard
a Sharp's Creek
I think it's Sharp's Creek
No that's a really
crazy area
Huh yeah I don't know if you ever get over there
Put that in the back of your head
Sharps Creek and that's in Carp Grove
No
it's it's actually over by Culpe Creek
You go over to Cottage Grove but then you
you drive like way past
Dorina Lake.
And then it's like, it's out there.
Gotcha.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
No, I have not been there, but I'll put it on my list.
I got a long list.
Oh, that's the thing.
I mean, I can't imagine living out there.
Like, your list would just keep growing and growing and growing.
It does.
Have you ever heard of a place called Baboon Creek out there?
Diamond Creek.
I have not.
I have not.
I have not.
I have.
Yes.
Have you heard of any things that have happened around there?
No, I have not.
But it's, I think that's one of Toby's areas.
Yeah.
Yep.
Oh, okay, okay.
Because I remember Toby talking about Baddun Creek.
I think that was one of his research spots.
I love to go check it out.
I'm afraid I had reasonably it burned last year.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's not far from my area as well.
But yeah, I love to check that out.
Yeah.
Man, it's just.
I, yeah, early July, I'll be out there again.
Well, I'd love to where it's, we'll drag you over here for a few days and see if we can knock your socks off.
Oh, dude.
Yeah, we'll talk in a minute.
Man, it has been just a pleasure talking to you, Randy.
I need to really get more familiar with what your group is up to there and start following all your stuff.
But what is the best way that people can keep up to date with what Ben Bigfoot Research Group is up to?
We're just on Facebook.
So that's the best way.
Go on Facebook, type in Ben Bigfoot Research Group.
A couple of questions, we'll pull you in the group.
We don't put up with any advertisements.
It is evidence and local events.
If you have something constructive or scientific to share, we love that.
So it's a learning platform with a combination of a.
safe place to tell a story. And we always, as much as I can, post often and sharing recent events.
So we'd love to have people on there. That's fantastic. Well, Randy, thank you so much for coming
on the show. It's been just a real fun time chatting with you tonight.
Absolutely. Love your work as well. Thank you for all that you do.
please take a minute to help out the show by subscribing on YouTube,
making sure you hit the bell so you don't miss any notifications,
and share the episode on YouTube with a friend.
Also, if you're listening to us on a podcast,
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Make sure that you're subscribed,
share the show with a friend.
Really, it's all about sharing the show wherever you can.
If you've had a Bigfoot encounter related to the following
or know someone who has,
please reach out to me
at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com
or pass on my email.
Here's the list.
If you've had any encounters in Oregon,
which I'm sure there's probably a few of you out there,
please feel free to reach out immediately.
You can use email Bigfoot Society at gmail.com.
A special thank you to all the Bigfoot Society
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It's your support that helps keep the show going,
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If you want to join in the fun, you can join over at patreon.com.
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I'll see you there.
And again, thanks for listening.
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Meet Addie, the little pink pill.
Addie is a prescription medicine for women under 65 with hypoactive low sexual desire disorder that's distressing to them.
Adi is for low desire that happens in all situations and isn't caused by a medical condition, relationship issues, or medicines.
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Your risk is higher if you drink alcohol close to your dose.
Don't take Addie if you have liver problems.
Take certain medicines or allergic to any of its ingredients.
Before taking Addie, tell your doctor about all the medicines you take.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or.
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On this episode of plant killers, we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so bad? The answer? The ingredients. But fear not true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle Grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same, looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on Plant
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