Bigfoot Society - The Closest Anyone Has seen Sasquatch at Lake Cushman, Lynn Gaspaire - Pt. 1
Episode Date: October 7, 2024Join us for an extraordinary journey with Lynn Gaspaire as he reveals his remarkable encounters with Bigfoot, stretching from his childhood in Ocean Shores, Washington in 1959 to more recent interacti...ons across various locations like Killen Creek, Mount Adams, and Lake Cushman. Lynn provides a detailed recounting of his initial close encounter at age six, the delicate process of building relationships with Bigfoot families, and the intricate behaviors and communication methods of these elusive beings. His narrative is not only captivating but also provides valuable insights into the intelligence of Bigfoot, the potential for interspecies friendships, and the fundamental dos and don'ts when engaging with them in the wilderness. Lynn’s profound experiences and in-depth knowledge are sure to fascinate and educate.Resources: Sasquatch:Face to Face by Thom Cantrall (https://amzn.to/3ZKdkhF) Amazon affiliate linkShare 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!)🔴 Subscribe to hear more Bigfoot encounters: https://www.youtube.com/@BigfootSociety?sub_confirmation=1Share 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're chasing data down instead of seeing it in one place, you need the Intuit ERP.
Intuit Enterprise Suite. All your data in one place with built-in AI for real-time insights.
Learn more at intuit.com slash ERP.
When energy dips, your reviving routine deserves more than a quick fix.
Reach for vital proteins, collagen, and protein shaking chocolate.
With 30 grams of protein and 10 grams of collagen peptides, it helps support healthy hair, skin, nails, and joints in a smooth, ready-to-drink shake.
So your afternoon reset actually sets you up.
for success. Vital Proteins. Stay vital.
Visit VitalProtene's.com and get started.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
During Memorial Day at Lowe's, shop household must-haves for less.
Save $80 on a charbroil performance series for burner grill to chef up something special.
Plus, get up to 45% off select major appliances to keep things fresh.
Our best lineup is here at Lowe's.
Lowe's. We Help. You Save.
Valid through 527.
While supplies last, selection varies by location.
See loos.com for details.
Visit your nearby lows on West Pico Boulevard in Los Angeles.
You're listening to Bigfoot Society podcast hosted by our captain, Jeremiah Byron,
where it's all Bigfoot all the time.
Have you ever had the urge to do more, to be more?
Now you can by joining Bigfoot Society on the Patreon.
Get ad-free episodes and even member-only episodes.
take part in movie night and even live video chats.
Interact behind the scenes with Jeremiah and other Patreon members like me, Slaya.
The powerful podcast goes on and you may contribute a verse in our Patreon community.
Carpe Diem. Seize the day, Bigfooters, and make your lives extraordinary.
Welcome to Bigfoot Society.
If you have Bigfoot activity to report from the same areas discussed in this episode,
please reach out to me directly after this episode.
episode. And if you'd like to be on the podcast to discuss a personal Bigfoot encounter,
please reach out to me directly at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com. Do you wish there was more
Bigfoot Society to listen to every week? Well, there is now. If you become a supporting member
over at Patreon, you get a special members-only episode every single week on Wednesdays and sometimes
even more episodes. Head on over to patreon.com forward slash the bigfoot society. And now let's
get on with the show.
All right, Bigfoot Society. I've got the privilege of talking to Mr. Lynn Gaspair today.
He's an individual that I found from the great book, Sasquatch Face to Face by Tom Cantrell.
Lots of great stories in there. And thankfully, he was like, yes, I'll definitely come on.
We can chat about what I've experienced. So, Lynn, it's great to have you on the show today.
Well, thank you for inviting me to be on this show, and it's all part of my research to help people understand big understanding foot.
I am in the book, Sasquatch, face-to-face. I did write chapter 9.
Absolutely. And we were having quite the conversation before we started recording. We were talking about, you know, you're involved with all sorts of stuff.
You talk to a lot of really cool people.
And it's everyone from, I mean, well, do you mind me saying who, what kind of people you talk to?
That's fine.
All right.
You talk to everyone from Dr. Meldrum to Bob Gimlin.
And you just have some really interesting conversations with some really interesting people.
And yeah, I'm excited to talk to you.
So, Lynn, take me back right to where this started for you, back to, it sounds like age.
All right, this is a true story.
It happened in 1959 at Ocean Shores, Washington,
which is a vacation area where people go to dig clams,
and the family was there digging clams,
got their limits and came back to the duplex to clean clams
and being the littlest guy there,
I got to go outside out back.
And I was looking for something to do,
and behind the duplex was his big blackberry patch running from right to left.
It was about 20 foot long and about 7, 8 foot high, and it was just loaded with blackberries.
So being a 6-year-old who liked blackberries, I decided I was going to pick blackberries.
And by the shed behind the duplex, there was three one-gallon white plastic buckets that got them.
when I went over to the blackberries bushes,
and I started picking the low-hanging clusters of blackberries.
And while I was picking the blackberries,
I would ever know,
and then hear like something pull on a vine,
or I'd see a vine snatch move,
and I had like a sucking like like somebody was slurping berries
or something off the vine.
And I would look around,
and I didn't see anybody or,
anything so I went back to picking the blackberries and filling the buckets and there'd be a pull on the bush or a vine would push and some breaking and I'd hear that sucking sound and I'd look again nothing so I decided to work higher on the patch so I went over to the shed which was about 10 feet away from the patch and I got this old-fashioned wooden step ladder and I came over and it
I put it up next to the black brave patch.
I had about a bucket and a half of berries left.
And as I started picking the berries, I'd climb up the step ladder.
And there'd be the pull on the bush again and the noise.
And I'd look and see nothing.
And I got about halfway up.
And as I'm picking black berries right up in front of me comes this black hand.
It's the right hand.
it's covered with hair,
clear down to the fingernails.
It's got fingernails.
It has an opposing thumb.
It looks like a human hand,
but only bigger.
And it's covered with fine black hair.
It pulls berries over to the side.
I'm not up high enough
where I can look over the patch yet.
And so I look at this and I'm going,
what was that?
Is that a person or something?
And so I pick some more and I reach over to pull a cluster to me
and this hand comes up again.
It's a right hand.
It's covered with hair from the fingernails,
clear down the wrist and the portion of the arm that I can see.
And this hair is fine, black hair.
It's about an inch or so long.
And it pulls the berries over,
and I'm picking berries.
And I keep thinking to myself,
is this some person or something?
Because I've seen the hand look like a human hand only bigger.
And so I'm back to picking the berries and the hand comes up again and it gets a hold of a cluster of berries right next to me.
So I reach over with my left hand and I touch the index finger and the forefinger on the right hand and it pulls back.
And I go, oh, that's interesting.
And so I go to start picking and the hand comes back real slow.
and so I reach
over and I
again the hair
is soft
and the hand
doesn't pull the way
it stays there
for a little bit
and then
we go back
to pick in the berries
and
I reach up to my left
to get a higher
cluster of berries
up comes
the right arm
and it's covered
from hair
as far as I can see
top and bottom
it grabs the
combine
and it pulls a
it pulls a
it pulls a bar
it pulls a
it down and I go, aha, that's the motion and the sound that I was hearing.
Whatever this is on the other side of the bush is doing it.
And so I pick more berries and I reach up to get a cunts of berries,
which is almost the area with a hand.
The hand comes up and this time it touches my hand.
Its fingers are across my index finger and forefinger.
On my left hand, and it pulls the berries down.
to a board be bought in front of me
and I'm just looking at this
like what is this? So I pick
some berries off with my right hand.
It pulls them over.
Meanwhile, the left arm
comes up on the other side of the bush
and pulls down more
berries. This is what we're doing. So
we keep doing this
and I'm picking berries
and they come up a couple more higher
I fill up the second by then working on
the third bucket. Well now I'm up
where
about the third
fourth rung on the ladder
I can see over it
and as I'm picking berries
the hand comes up
and gets a hold of some berries
right straight in front of me
and I take my right hand
and I just put it down
right on the hand
and it doesn't move back
and it pulls it back
and I reach over to
get another club of berries
with my right hand.
Up comes the left arm.
It's covered from hair from hand to shoulder,
top and bottom.
The hair between an inch to two inches long, black.
The skin on the bottom of the hand is lighter colored.
The nails are dark, human-looking nails, opposing thumb.
And it gets a hold of my hand as it comes down.
And so we're doing this back and forth.
So I finally get up next to the top rung
And I reach up to get a one of higher cup
Up comes the arm again and it pulls it down
It stops almost right in front of my face
I pick some berries
It ticks some berries
And I hear the slurping noise again so I go
So this time I come up and I'm getting ready to do it
And I just for some reason
I heard like a noise like a grunt or something
And I look down
Down to my left on the left
on the opposite side of the bush
and maybe 18 inches, 20,
20, 20, 20. There's the face.
It has a
tan-colored
forehead that slopes
back. The head on top
is covered with black
hair. It's wider
at the back than it is at the front. It goes
up, but it doesn't have a sagittal crest.
I can see ears
that are about
twice the size of a average
human. They're, the
ears are black colored with fine
maybe quarter inch long
hair on it and I look right into
the face. It has
brown eyes, black
pupils, there's whites
in the eye. It has a
flat Nubian style nose
with almond
shaped nostrils. The skin
is a dark tan color. It's
got like a full beard
an inch
long hair on its face
It has longer, the distance between the bottom of the nose and the lip is longer than a average adult.
And it has no visible neck and I'm looking down.
It has no clothes on.
As far as I can see down, it is covered in the hair.
And I'm looking at this and I'm trying to, as a six-year-old, figure out what this is.
is. My first thought was as an Afro-American kid. Why would an Afro-American child or teenager
be out picking blackberries, nude, all hair coverage? So I know it wasn't that. And it didn't
have a snout. It had a face. It had a nose, chin, ears, no visible neck, all covered
in black hair. So I'm looking at it. And being a six-year-old, I'm curious. I'm not. I'm
afraid of it and I speak to it and I say are you picking blackberries too the biggest and the
juiciest ones and the sweetest ones are up high it kind of ticks its head at me and as I reach
up to get some blackberries it reaches up it takes a hold of vine and my hand it brings it down
in front of it it puts towards me and I take some it takes some and I'm looking at this
And I talk to it again and I go, can you hear me?
Can you talk?
Because I'm trying to be its friend.
I'm trying to make friends with it.
It doesn't answer anything.
And I started to feel just super sad because it doesn't talk.
And I just for some reason reached up and I touched my right ear with my right
pointing finger, and I go, can you hear?
It reaches up with its left hand, and it touches its left ear.
And I'm going, is it mimicking me?
I'm thinking this to myself, or is it telling me that it can hear?
And I go up and I touch my ear again, can you hear me?
It does the exact same thing back.
So I'm thinking of a six-year-old, it can hear me.
Then I felt super sad.
And I'm looking at it in his face and I say, how sad.
You can hear what you can't talk because I thought it couldn't speak.
It kind of grunts.
And it looks at me.
And just being a six-year-old, right from the heart, I say,
do you need a friend?
Can I be your friend?
I just ask it to be a friend.
It takes with its left hand, it gets the whole of a cluster of blackberries, like enhance somebody over it, and it hands the black berries to me.
I take it with my right hand, and it puts his left hand kind of like at the waist level out, palm up, to the left side of me.
I take the blackberries,
I pick some,
and then I take a clump of blackberries
in the exact manner that it handed it to me.
I hand it back to it.
And it takes it with its left hand,
and I put my left hand down, flat,
in the palm of its hand.
We're holding hands.
I'm on the ladder.
It's on the other side of the back of the backerfish.
It reaches out,
And at that moment, I just felt this connection.
Like we just became friends.
And later on through research, I learned that blackberries or any type of berries is a significant part of their survival.
So from a big foot, a gift of black berries or berries to you, that's a pretty significant gift of friendship.
And I learned that from discussions with Tom Cantrell.
So this is what it did.
And we went on picking berries and touching hands, hold hands, back and forth.
I would talk to it.
I never thought to walk around the patch.
And we kept doing this.
We were friends as far as I concerned, being a six-year-old.
I just made friends with whatever this was.
It wasn't an African-American kid.
It was a big hair-covered.
animal, creature
that was about six foot, six, six, six, six, six, six, six, six, six,
covered with hair that picked backberries with me.
The people that were in the opposite end of the, of the duplex had a lab.
And the lab come, come out, fired out, running, it started barking and growling.
It could smell the big foot as all that I could figure.
And the big foot nip one at it.
growling, shaking the bushes, and when it came out, started, I turned to the left and the ladder
kicked out for me, and I hit the ground with a thump on my bottom. Bigfoot Society will be right
back after these messages. Let's go, girls. You know what I love about Addy? Everything? Well, yeah,
but it's as little as 20 bucks a month. Ooh, well, the little pink pill has always been a pretty
big deal. A really big deal. I'd call that a good investment. Chichang. Man, a fee.
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.
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.
any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, and dry mail.
Learn more at adi.com, including important warnings.
Eligible patients-only restrictions apply.
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 sponsored jobs.
You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills, certifications, and everything.
everything else you're looking for. Or go a different way and get no traction. Seriously,
sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire 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 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's sponsored jobs. When a child needs care,
whether it's recovery from a life-changing event or managing a lifelong condition,
children's miracle network hospitals are there for them. These hospitals are also non-profit
organizations, and right now they're doing more with less.
At a time when children's health care is becoming more urgent and complex.
That's why Children's Miracle Network is inviting you to join our movement
to ensure all kids get the care they need.
Learn more at CMN.org slash pledge.
The ladder went down.
One of my bucket, the last bucket of bear, it landed between the ladder legs on the ground.
And I'm on the ground, and the lab is.
just, I mean, it's trying to, I guess, protect me, and the big foot's trying to protect me,
and they're going at it back and forth. Well, it comes out from behind the patch going on the
trail to go into the woods, and it has to pass under a Douglas fir, and there's a dead branch,
about four inches thick that sticks out, and it comes out, reaches up with its right hand,
grabs that branch, just snaps it down, breaks it off.
off hits the other end on the ground and it's got like a three and a half four foot club
and it turns so much waist it puts its left hand out and it's facing the dog and they're
at each other no doubt in my mind that this whatever it was was was fiction to walk this dog and
people are starting to yell and scream and come out and i'm still sitting on the ground looking
right at it and it goes down the path in about 10, 15 feet down the path.
There's a little swale.
There's a dead stump and a bow down tree.
It goes down behind into the little swale there, a hole there, and behind the stump,
and it just drops down.
And I'm sitting on the ground.
I can look, and it's looking in my direction.
And the people come out and they call it, they're calling the dog off.
The dog didn't go after it.
it came back towards my direction and my parent my mom came out and my grandmother come out
and they're going what's going on here um and the owner says well the lab door uh went after a bear
or something that was near your child now we're going to stop right here and reflect back
two things one who picks blackberries in a blackberry pack
bear foot and what bear runs on two feet can reach up with a red of the right hand four fingers of
palm and opposing thumb and break off a branch and break it off the ground and turn while standing
on two feet and look at the dog and have that club held about shoulder height yeah right exactly
that's not that's not a bear so I get escorted off into the um into the duplex and
they pick up two of my buckets of berries and everybody starts asking me questions about
what I saw, what happened, and that scared me more than what happened outside because these
are adults and I don't know truly how to explain them in a park warden or a sheriff or something
shows up to remember the green uniform and they're describing.
this and my grandfather comes over and he asked me he says describe to me what it looks like and i
described me to him and i said it had a face covered in hair like a teenager with a beard and um one of the
adults maybe the warden or said does he know the difference between what a bear is and my
grandfather says oh yes he knows what a bear is no problem and i did at that age and i did at that age
And so my grandfather is asking me to describe it and he says, did it have a muzzle?
Did it have a nose?
I said, had a nose.
And I reached up and touched my grandfather's nose.
And it had nose like this.
And he says, I said, and he asked me more.
I said, had ears on the side.
It's not on top.
And I said, it had a chin.
I touched my grandfather's chin.
And one of the adults says, he's describing a big foot, a Sasquatch.
that's what I really connected at
that's what I saw
because I knew at that age
what a bear looked like
and this was not a bear
so I asked him
did you bring my berries in
and I said there's
there's
three buckets they said well we brought two in
and my grandfather says Patty
you guys in Valerie
go out and get his other bucket
my two uncles went outside
they walked around the back
side of the patch
and they found
13-5-14-inch
quadruple-e
barefoot footprints with a little
like a dirt in
the track going down the path
to where I said it stepped off
behind the stuff and then
they found tracks of it coming back
so they walked back
and I had told them that the ladder had landed
on its side, the legs apart
and the other bucket of berries was
between the legs.
When they got there,
the bucket was picked up
and all the berries
were put back in the bucket
and the ladder was put together
and laid next
to the bush.
And they had followed the tracks back
from where it went off
up to the bucket
to where the bucket of berries were.
What would a friend do?
It came back.
And that was what started out for me.
And I truly believe that that, because of that incident and the physical contact with that Bigfoot, led to many of the other encounters that I had with Bigfoot from then until throughout my life.
I believe is you make friends with them.
They know you from my observations.
If one knows you, I would put forth to the whole Bigfoot family, no matter where they're at or where they're at through the state, they'll recognize you.
I would agree.
And I think that goes both ways, too.
If you're recognized as someone who has bad intentions or is not a friend, that is going to go across.
the family as a word. Yes, that does. I've listened to a lot of people in Washington State say,
well, I've been out looking for 40 years. I've never seen the Bigfoot. And I go,
what's your intentions? What are you doing? We're trying to follow them. I said, if you're doing
things, you know, with certain expectation and intentions, they're going to respond to that.
without a doubt a big foot can read your facial expressions it can read your body language
and it can understand your voice inflection and um i had never at any time felt threatened by that
big foot it kind of felt like i had a big friend that was going to watch out for me and see
that i wasn't going to get hurt while we were picking blackberries uh it was curious
It definitely had intelligence.
It definitely had patience because, you know,
what a teenager would put up with a six-year-old?
Oh, absolutely.
It's probably one of the best accounts I've heard of them in regards to quick intelligence.
It's just incredible how many points in that account it shows its quick intelligence.
Yes.
I'm curious, you know, there are points when you actually had contact, physical contact,
with the big foot.
Do you remember
did it have a smooth skin
or do you remember anything about how that felt?
It felt soft.
Its hair felt very soft.
Of course, this was a juvenile.
The skin was soft.
It's definitely very much aware
of its strength
because it never like grabbed me.
It would touch and hold
but it was not hard.
It was very light and very gentle.
And if I moved to move my hand away, it would let go.
Of course, it could probably see me more than I could see it
because I still had some of the screening from the top of the berry patch
standing up, could look up and see me more clearly.
Right.
Wow.
Until I'd look down.
After you had this encounter,
did it put you down a path right away for trying to find them again or having interactions,
or was there a time period before you had your next interaction?
I was always curious about my friend.
And when we would go back there, if we went back to that same spot, I would look for it,
especially on the Blackbird patches.
My next encounter when I saw Bigfoot was about six years later, 10 years later, 1969 at Killing Creek, Mount Adams.
And we were camping there and we'd been fishing and the older people, the family members,
had decided to take a nap and there was a huckleberry patch down the road from where we were at
camp so I went to my mom and I asked her for her temperware bowl. I was going to go down to the
huckleberry patch and pick huckleberries. So I did that and I got the bowl from my mom and I
up the road maybe 75, 100 yards. And there was a big slow,
down hill that was covered
it was a bit logged off area
it was a blackberry
huckleberries in it and ferns
and stuff all the way down like
150 yards to the
wood line and then over maybe
75 to the opposite wood line
and as I stepped
off the road to the edge of the
of the patch
where the huckleberries were
I heard two
high pitched
two-tone
like people say a mechanic bird whistle i can't whistle with a hoopla like and i just look and i look
around and i don't see nothing and i take a step toward into the going into the patch and the huckleberry
bushes and the grass like something's walking going straight away from me down the hill so my thought is
maybe I walked up on a deer or something
and I looked at the huckleberries
near me bushes and here's something
what people miss
all of the branches on top
where the berries would be were missing
like they were neatly clipped off or broken off
and I'm looking at this and this doesn't look right
and I hear the
whistle again for
down at the bottom of the hill and I look in that direction and about 50 feet in front of me the grass
goes open and close again but this is going left to right on the brow of like a little rolling
stills as it goes down and it's motioning and it disappears behind a stump with rotten stump
has got huckleberry's something going on and I'd look at that and I go maybe I stepped on the deer
So I went a little bit further into the patch to look for huckleberries that I could pick.
And I noticed at the bushes where there were not the twigs and stuff that had the berries on it.
Next to it, there was like a pile and a scattering of twigs, all about the same size, maybe a berry on it, or maybe a leaf on it.
later like in
1972 I actually got to observe
a female bigfoot
picking huckleberries
and how she would break them off
and pull off with her lips
and then just drop to twigs
I go I was able to put that together
and so I kept
picking the blackberries
and every now and then I'd
see emotion in the grass
and I didn't think nothing of it
The only thing I could smell was dirt, grass, and ripe huckleberries.
And I looked at my bucket and I wasn't getting old.
I wasn't getting very much picking huckleberries.
So I decided I was going to make like a cough or a basque or something out of my t-shirt.
So I pulled off my sweatshirt and I laid it up on the bushes, took my t-shirt off, tied it in a knot.
there was no holes at the arms or sleeves had like a basket.
And I went as I went to put my shirt back out, I'm looking through it, and the brush right in
front of me moves. And I look at it and I get the glimpse of the right side of like a head,
a shoulder, a fat belly, and a hip going through the brush.
Bigfoot Society will be right back after these messages.
Let's go, girls.
So this is the little pink pill every.
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.
It's...
Mm-hmm.
Ooh-la-la.
Meow.
Man, I feel like a woman.
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.
Addie is for low desire that happens
in all situations
and isn't caused by a medical condition,
relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping and dry mouth.
Learn more at adi.com, including important warnings.
Use coupon code IHeart for a $10-med appointment at adi.com.
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.
You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills, certifications, and everything else you're looking for.
Or go a different way and get no traction.
Seriously, sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire 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 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.
DEDS sponsored jobs.
The next time you're at the checkout register, look for the balloon,
because a donation to Children's Miracle Network has the power to change lives.
Children's Miracle Network supports 170 children's hospitals across the United States and Canada.
These nonprofit hospitals provide care for all kids, from routine checkups to life-changing treatments.
So look for the balloon and make a big change for a kid near you.
Learn more at sea.
And man, I come up and just hold dead still because black, black shiny hair, Huckleberry
patch, the first thing that comes to my mind is bear.
I'm like nine, ten years old.
And I go, uh-uh, uh-uh, hold still.
So I hold still and I don't smell a bear.
I don't hear a bear.
I don't see it.
And I wait and everything's quiet.
okay nothing there so I go over to the bushes and I put my little t-shirt basket
and I'd shake the and I started getting huckleberries and I would move along and every now and
then out of the side of my eye I'd see that motion through the brush I'd catch the glimpse of black
hair a body part but it was kind of paralleling me and going
towards the opposite side of the woods.
See nothing, smell nothing.
Okay.
So I'm doing this and I'm picking the black huckleberries
and filling up my bowl.
And I'm looking down the path in front of me
and the path goes over a little hill
and into the woods.
And I can see under the big evergreen trees.
And right at the edge of the woods.
wood, there's like five small
Hucklebird, but I can see the path between them
going into the woods.
So I get just about
20 feet from that
spot and I'm filling up my bowl
and there's the motion
from my left side.
The bushes are open and closing and this time
I can see the form and it's black.
It's on all fours.
I can't make out a distinct
I can see it's got a head, I can't see it's got a head.
I can't part of it right here,
the right side of it. It's coming from left to right,
and it's going towards
the wood, so I just hold still.
And I have quite squatted down,
and I changed to a
kneeling position, and
I check my
bowl and the last in it,
and I look up, looking down
this path that goes under
the trees, and I can't see the path
underneath the tree.
I go, that's odd.
because I previously could see underneath it.
And about this time, this black form rocks back into a squatting position, and I just freeze.
And I'm looking right at it.
And it's looking at me.
And I'm kneeling down and I left foot down, right knee down, and I look right at it, maybe 20 faces away.
and it's looking at me and I kind of straighten up a little bit and it at the edge of these five blue pass
it rocks up into a squatting position I can make out the arms the belly and the head and it's got the
wider in the back ears on the side flat nose is covered in black and I'm looking at that
in my mind saying you've seen that before.
And I look at it and I know it's not a bear and my mind is racing back and I keep going back
when I was younger.
I've seen this before.
I've seen this before.
And so I stand up and I take a step to the right, the road's up to my right.
I'm going to go up and I take a step to my right and it stands up.
It's standing there on two feet.
It's more of a left profile to me at this time.
And it takes a step forward and stands still and it turns from the waist.
And it's looking right at me.
The Huckleberry bushes are taller where it's at and it comes up to about its hip.
I can see it from the left side of its head all the way down to its arm.
And I'm looking at it.
I see the head.
it's got an ear on the left side
it's got a protruding like lantern jaw
and it's got eyes it can shine
it's got no visible neck
I see the shoulder
I can see its chest move
it's breathing I can see its arm
and its wrist and its hand is down
on the bush and I'm looking at this
and I'm going
in my mind and subconscious
telling me you've seen this before
and so I'm watching it
and it's breathing
and I start looking down the body, and I hope this is generated enough.
I see nipples and breasts and a big fat, round belly, and instantly I feel myself turn red,
and I look down.
I break contact with it because here I am.
I'm 19 years old, so that was kind of an awkward, embarrassing moment.
And finally, I got enough courage to look up, and I look up.
up at it and it's standing there turned a little bit more towards me and it's smiling and it kind of
has an expression on its face like a mom or a woman would get you know when they a little child's
body and got surprised or embarrassed by their condition I'm going this is something different
this isn't you know a person person and so as I watch
And I'm watching it.
It's standing there watching me, and I'm standing there watching it.
And I have the bowl of berries in my right hand.
I have a shirt full of berries in my left.
So I take the sack, and I take that sack over the bowl and put the berries in it,
hold the bottom of the bowl with my right hand,
and I smooth it over with my left hand, and I look over.
at it and I it's smiling at me it puts its hand on the bottom of its belly its right hand
and it takes its left hand and the same motion they did over the top of the bit it rubs on its
on its belly and then it dawning on me this is some type of a pregnant something that looks like a
person and I just looking at it and it just smiles at you almost like you know how a beaming first
time pregnant woman would do.
And so I go, well, maybe I should leave, and I'm trying to figure out, well, what's
you do?
I never thought it didn't occur to me that maybe because it was pregnant, it might have been
hungry, and maybe it wanted to share some of the buckleberries with me, which I think
I could have done.
And so I start walking away on the edge of the road, and it walks along, and it's watching
me and I get to one spot and it looks at me and it turns to the right and goes down over the hill.
And as I walk to the edge of the road, it popped into my head the Blackberry patch when I was
six years old and then going, okay, this is a different Bigfoot.
And it's obviously it's a pregnant female bigfoot.
And I was thinking what was going on.
And then later, a few of the years that I reminisced on this, it became very simple.
Or maybe it was something that the Bigfoot was allowing me to finally put together really.
What would a first time pregnant mom or Bigfoot do?
They would watch other children.
and I believe because I was a child and she was an expected mom that she was watching me.
And so that's what it was for me on that day with that Bigfoot.
That was at Mount, like I said, at Mount Adams Killing Creek.
That's incredible.
Do you remember anything about the details of the teeth when it smiled at you?
Yes.
Their teeth are like ours.
They are only bigger.
They do not have canines like gorillas or chimpanzees.
They don't.
Their teeth are like ours, only bigger.
I learned in 1972 where I got to sit to the Huckleberry Patch with a family of Bigfoot
against next to a mom who was like eight feet away from me she opened her mouth and yawned
and then i could count her teeth and see her teeth they they do not have canine teeth like
we would perceive canine teeth for eye teeth like gorillas and you know long fat no their teeth are
like ours they're just thicker and bigger wow the um Mitch townsen in his book
describes the teeth of a big foot from bite marks.
And what he is describing in his book is exactly what I saw.
That is very interesting.
That's a name that comes up every once in a while.
Yes.
Take it to the bank when he puts in that book about their teeth structure.
Okay.
And like I said, I have seen their mouth up close.
And how he described him and from the bite marks of their teeth,
my observations to what he wrote is a match.
Seeing something at age six is definitely different than seeing something at age 19.
Nine.
Sorry, age nine.
Did that sighting at a little older, did that affect you in a different way than your initial citing?
or did you kind of have the same reaction after?
I felt a confirmation new to them myself
that this was the same animal, only a female,
as to what I saw when I was younger,
and I had always wanted to see them again
because this to me was a friend.
Okay, I know that this wasn't the same one,
but it was the same being creature animal really common that I'd seen before
gotcha it's extremely interesting it sounds like so that was
1969 and just a few years after that then you had an even more
close interaction yeah the that was uh let's see that was okay in 69
not the day that um armstrong landed on the moon that i was up at the same spot only i was on
the other side of the creek it's killing creek and i was fishing and i'm fishing you know and there's
birds and stuff and all of a sudden it went quiet and i hear that whistle again but i'm
kind of facing the creek off to my right about 30.
feet is this big dead first nag about four foot across and I never thought to look in that direction
and I look around and I don't see anything so I go back to fishing I catch a fish I throw it on the
bank and back to fishing and I hear like a rock on wood whack whack and I turn and I look and I don't see
anything. And again, I don't pay attention to the snag. And I look and I look and I look and I don't
see anything. So I go back to fishing and all of a sudden dirt pine cones and rock go across the ground
in front of me and next to my foot. So I go, okay, who's throwing stuff at me? And I turn a little bit
to the right and I look and I look at this dump, that snag around it. I look. I, I know, I,
don't see nothing. And I go,
this is, you know,
back to fishing.
And I'm back to fishing and
I get pelted again
with pebbles, rocks, and dirt.
At this time,
it goes across my foot.
And I go,
something that he's playing with me or trying to get
my attention so I turn
even more to the right. So the
creek is on my left side,
Killing Creek.
And facing right,
It's a clear cut.
The area is you have puckleberries, and there's that big stump again on my right,
and I look and I don't see nothing.
So I go back to fishing, and about this time out of my right side,
I see motion, and I look up and there's this softer-sized rock flying through the air,
and it hits in the water in front of me, and I go,
something they threw something at me or something through something.
So I turn to the right,
And for some reason, my attention focused on the big snag, and I see the left arm come back.
And I go, aha.
So I turn and look facing directly at the snag.
And I see this head and body leaning out from the left side, it's left side, from towards.
me on this big dead snag.
Bigfoot Society will be right
back after these messages.
Let's go, girls.
You know what I love about Addy?
Everything? Well, yeah, but it's as little as $20 a month.
Ooh, well, the little pink pill has always been a pretty big deal.
A really big deal.
I'd call that a good investment.
Che-chang.
Man, I feel like a woman.
Meet Addie, the Little Pink Pill.
Addie is a prescription medicine for women under 65 with high.
hypoactive low sexual desire disorder that's distressing to them.
Addie is for low desire that happens in all situations and isn't caused by a medical condition,
relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, and dry mail.
Learn more at Addie.com.
important warnings. Eligible patients only restrictions apply.
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. You'll get matched with candidates
that meet the skills, certifications, and everything else you're looking for. Or go a different
way and get no traction. Seriously, sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed,
are 95% more likely to report a hire 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's sponsored jobs.
We are Children's Miracle Network, a nationwide partnership of people and organizations, all working side by side to raise funds for 170 children's hospitals across the United States and Canada.
These nonprofit hospitals provide a wide range of care for all kids, from routine checkups to life-changing treatments, research and mental health resources.
Make big change today for kids in your community.
Support your local children's hospital with a monthly or one-time gift online.
Learn more at cmn.org.
And I'm looking at that and I go, that's big.
And it puts, it takes a sidestep and it puts both its hands up on this snag.
It's kind of like a bear with sidewalk or on the snag.
and I'm looking at this and I go,
you don't fool me, you're not a bear.
There's no snout,
there's no ears on top of the head.
Now, if you remember the old-time wrestler Haystack Calhoun,
he was 6'4 and 650 pounds.
This critter is three foot bigger
and got him by 300 pounds.
So this is big, and being at that time a little older,
I turn and look at it.
And the first thought that comes to my mind is,
who is this throwing rocks at me?
And then it dawns on me.
That's not clothes.
That's hair.
It's brown.
It's black.
It's got some lighter streakings on the torso.
It's a male.
I can see that.
It's not close.
And this thing, like I said, is about nine foot tall,
a good 900 pique 900 pounds and it's just standing there looking at me and I'm standing
looking at it and it sways a little bit and it goes and I go back at it and I stand up and look at it
and it has its right hand up on the on the dead snag and it brings its left arm over and crosses
over and fresh it and puts it on its left arm and it's standing there
looking at me and I'm watching it and I got a pretty good idea what it is it's a male
bigfoot and it's like what's he doing there and I can see the path the one thing I can
figure is it was coming down that path to get me get a drink of water and I was sitting there
in front of it but it was curious as to what I was doing I was fishing so I watch it
and eventually it kind of rocks a little bit.
Then from the waist, it turns to its left,
and then the body turns around,
and it starts walking away from me.
So I go, I'm going to see this.
I start walking behind it.
I'm not afraid of, I got an idea.
I'm pretty sure what it is.
I just walk behind it.
And as I walk behind it, I get about to the snag,
and it stops and it turns and looks to its left and looks back to me.
I stop just standing aside still.
I don't tell the other than, don't follow it.
I'm watching it as it walks away.
I can see the muscles in its back move.
I can see the muscles in its legs move.
I can see the bottom of its foot.
As it comes up, it comes down on the ground,
how the weight transfers.
I'm not close to it.
I'm maybe 35 feet behind.
walking a little bit behind it and I get to where that stump the stag is and I look down and I can see on the ground where it pulled the big rock out of the ground and threw it at me into the creek and there on the ground in the path is about an 18 to 19 inch track about six feet in front of it is another going straight to that creature so I do this was a male bigfoot and that was on the
same day that Neil Armstrong landed on the moon, I saw Mr. Bigfoot up close and personal.
And again, I believe I saw it not so much by coincidence, but because I had seen and
interacted with them before. It could have been a coincidence where we just happened to be
at the same place at the same time, but I never felt threatened. I felt that the whistle and
the rack clock and even the throwing the stuff at
my foot in this big rock in the creek.
It was trying to get my attention.
It was trying to get me to look at it.
I don't think it was trying to scare me away.
It made no aggressive motion.
It was more curious like, I'm here.
Do you see me?
But then it turned and walked away.
I guess I had occupied its time span enough.
And that was July 21st, 69?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Why do you think you returned the same noise it made to you?
Through the years that I've been around him,
I've learned that Bigfoot make certain vocalizations.
They also make certain noises with rocks and sticks.
Most people that are around Bigfoot don't put two and two together
or haven't heard them make rock clacks, you know, wood knocks or vocalizations, whistles,
they don't know what it is.
I've heard it before.
I've seen him do it.
So I know in my mind is that, gosh, I can recognize it.
This is what that is.
And over the years, I've learned to look and listen for that.
I've had them walk along
side of me through the woods
juveniles and adults
and when I'm aware that there's ones there
it's like I can feel them there
I hear them there by the sounds that they make
by the sounds of their foot
makes when they're walking
people that say you can't
tell the difference between a deer walking and a big foot
that's other nonsense you sure can
a hard clove and hoof
makes a different sound when it hits the ground
as compared to that big,
flappy foot of a big foot.
And people say, well, we don't see the tracks.
You've got to understand the area of that foot
can display 750 pounds of weight per square inch.
So you got a 15-inch track,
which is basically eight-foot tall, big foot,
that's 650 pounds.
Unless there's snow or soft ground,
you're not going to see complete tracks
because that foot can displace that weight on the ground.
It's the makeup of the soil that they're walking on.
I've found tracks that were quite clear.
I have found tracks on hard-baked clay
that you might find a tow print.
But if you look in the general direction, you'll pick up scuff marks.
And it's because of that big foot that you don't see a lot of tracks
because it can displace that body weight.
You see that there's that progression.
Still as a young.
And I still believe it's because of meeting that one when I was six
that they were there and maybe this big foot was checking up on me.
Like I was a friend that I believe the family,
the family's the Bigfoot,
if they've seen one person,
it appears that they all seem to recognize that person.
They choose that person to befriend.
And through research and reading a lot of reports
and other people's observations,
I believe that that is true,
that they'll check up on a friend.
See how you're growing.
What's you doing?
That's my belief.
That's really interesting.
Was then the next interaction you had with the family?
This was in 1972.
This one was verified by the BFRO because another people that were there at that day
saw two of the four that I saw.
We had went up to Lake Cushman, and again, this was in July.
Oh, sure.
The beginning of Huckleberry season.
And there were four of us, and we got to camp.
before late in the afternoon and made camp and fire and it was getting on towards dark
and people were coming in and out of their camps and we were listening and it was dark and we heard this
high-pitched like hysterical scream like a woman screaming in hysteria and like everybody just
kind of freezes and looks up the hill like what on earth is this and it's followed by a more like
baritone scream
and then like a child screaming
and this is going on
back and forth
and we're talking there
and other cameras they go and they thought it was
coyotes and I go no that's
that's too loud
and it doesn't have that yap
that coyotes do when they're
when they're
um
howling
and as other
prison well maybe it's a cougar screaming
I go no
that's not a
cougar screaming.
It doesn't have that
a cat in it when the cougar screams.
And I've been out in the woods a lot.
My dad had hunting dogs and they'd hunt bear
and cougar and with the dogs
and out deer hunting and I have heard
bear noises. I've heard cougar noises,
deer noises, elk noises, just about
anything that's out there that makes a noise,
I've heard it.
So this is going on.
on and people start adding a little extra wood to their fire.
And about this time, this woman comes in and she says, she was walking up and she heard
the screams.
She says, I thought I saw a mountain gorilla cross the road.
And I look at the people look at myself, there's no mountain gorillas in Washington state around Lake
Cushman.
And she's seeing something.
Maybe she saw a bear or something.
And so we were all talking and I told my friends,
I'm pretty good at hunting and tracking.
I'm going to get up in the morning,
and I'm going to walk up the old road up towards where I heard that sound coming from.
So it got first light, and I got dressed,
and I was wearing khaki pants and brown sweatshirt and had a hat on
and had long brown hair
and so I start walking up
and I crossed this wooden bridge
this is a major Kent site
on Lake Cushman
and there's a little like bridge
with a rusty gate and I go across the bridge
for the main road and I start walking up
the road
and I hadn't gone
50, 75 yards
and down in the gulf which is
stick with ferns and trees
and huckleberries
I hear branches breaking, something's moving below me,
and I hear it sounds like squirrel chatter.
And I just stop, because I'd never heard that before.
What is that?
And I'm on the high ground above it.
They had no idea I was above them.
And so I listen and I hear it move
and I move with it going up the road.
And I keep hearing the chatter, branches breaking and stuff like that.
And I'm looking at my watch.
It's maybe 5.30 in the morning.
It's light, but I don't see anybody.
And I keep walking and it stops.
It would break a branch.
It would stop and walk.
When it moved, I moved.
When it's stopped, I stop.
And I keep looking down, trying to look down through the trees and the brush,
the ferns, the hawkerberries, to see what's below me.
And as I'm coming up, I come to a tree, and I stop and I look down, and I see two figures
turn around and go down over the hill, and I'm looking at it.
It's a blonde color phase.
It's like a bouffant hairstyle from the back, and the other one's short, come up to about its
waist, and it goes back down in the gulf, and I go,
wait a minute
I know I was the first one
out of camp that morning
and you know
by the hair of the eye says
what would a girl
be doing out here
a mom and her daughter
bushwhacking at this time
in the morning
it disappears
and pretty soon
I hear the chatter again
and I hear the branches breaking
so I parallel them again
I got the high ground
I'm going to keep the high ground on them
and as they're coming up
almost the crest
of the road
I'm standing there by this tree
and I'm looking about
70, 50, 75 yards in front of me
and the shadow moves and I just stand still
and hugged that tree.
And it steps up to the edge of the road
and this thing is nine foot tall.
It's black. It is huge.
And my mind goes,
I know what that is.
No doubt about it.
That's a big foot.
It turns from the waist.
It looks up the right towards me,
up the road.
It turns to the left.
left, looks down the road, it goes across that road in two steps, 10% grade, thick brush,
and it goes up that like is walking on flat ground. And I go, nah-ha, I know what that is. I've seen
that before. That's a big fun. But then I don't know what's on the left side of me. So I walk a little
bit further and I hear it again and I go where's going to find out if a human steps on a branch
or breaks a branch they'll take that next step so I reach up and grab this dead branch and I go snap
and I stand still everything below me stops and I go okay if it's a person they're going to take
that next step nothing I go okay this is not person
A little while later, I hear it moving again, so I move.
And I'm at this clearing.
It's got stumps and huckleberries in it.
It's got old-gilled huckleberries.
And I step off the road, and I sit down in a stump behind like three little huckleberry bushes,
and there's a little four-inch stump next to my left foot, and I just sit down.
And I'm eating huckleberry bushes.
Beres, just picking them, it's quiet.
And to my left, about 8, 10 feet away, this blonde, brown arm comes out, grabs a hold of
the Huckleberry's, and pulls it back.
And I go, I saw that arm.
That arm was four or a half, five foot long, big long hand.
Blonde brown hair coloring on the hair looked almost like the bleach color.
of an Alaskan grizzly, but there's no grisney in this part of the country.
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.
Oh, get ready, girl.
Ooh, la, la.
Meet Addie, the little pink pill.
Addie is a prescription medicine for women,
65 with hypoactive low sexual desire disorder that's distressing to them.
Addie is for low desire that happens in all situations and isn't caused by a medical condition,
relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, and dry mouth.
Learn more at Addy.com, including important warnings.
Use coupon code IHeart for a $10 telemet appointment at adi.com.
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 sponsored jobs.
You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills,
certifications, and everything else you're looking for.
Or go a different way and get no track.
section. 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
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's sponsored jobs.
We are Children's Miracle Network, a nationwide partnership of people and organizations,
all working side by side to raise funds for 170 children's hospitals across the United States and Canada.
These nonprofit hospitals provide a wide range of care for all three.
kids. From routine checkups to life-changing treatments, research and mental health resources.
Make big change today for kids in your community. Support your local children's hospital with a
monthly or one-time gift online. Learn more at cmn.org. And I'm watching it and it pulls back
and I can see a form just inside the edge of the brush line and I look and I see
like a tan hourglass looking in my direction.
I just sit dead still and watch.
I don't move anything but my eyes and I'm watching it.
And pretty soon I pick up another
like an hourglass on its side mask,
tan colored and I pick up the eyes.
They're in front of whatever that faces.
And I'm looking and I can make an outline of
two figures
just inside the brush. So I just
sit still.
And pretty soon the one that's
a little further away, it turns
to its left and it's
on off and it kind of goes over the crest
of the hill. And I pick up
the back of the head.
It's blonde colored.
There's no neck. I can
see ears on the side covered in fine
hair. It disappears
over the
over into the brush and I go
what was that?
About this time
from the left
about eight feet away from me
this big
animal comes out on all fours
and sits down
eight to ten feet
in front of me I am sitting
just behind its right
shoulder like I said eight to ten feet away
and my head comes up
to the bottom of its armpit
and I'm five nine
and this thing is sitting down
And so it's, I figure sitting down on the ground, this thing has to be seven, seven and a half foot tall.
And it's got that bouffant hairstyle.
There's no visible neck.
Its head is about 20 inches wide, 22 inches high.
It's wider in the back than the front.
And I can see its back, its shoulder blades, its side cheek sitting with its feet and lays kind of pulled up to the right.
it's sitting on its left cheek and I can see the feet in the legs and I go, I'm going to just sit still and watch to see what this is.
And so I just sit there and I'm watching and I say, I wonder if this is the two animals that I saw come up the road that was done in the burst that turned around and went back down.
So as I'm watching, it straightens out and turns a little bit more to the right, looks in my direction,
and I don't move at all.
I just sit still.
I think, well, it doesn't know I'm there.
And again, I'm behind its right shoulder.
And it turns a little bit more of the right.
And it starts picking the huckaberry, snap off the trigs,
suck them off the twig, the berries and leaves.
And there's that same sucking sounds that I'd heard before.
And it drops those twigs right straight down.
So I go, okay, this is easy.
and as I'm watching it it turns a little bit more to the right and it flips its eyes towards me but a little bobby and I just look down I go is it looking at me and it looks away and I look at it and it looks back and I look down and we do this about five or six times that I figured does it see me if I'd have looked just past it I'd have found the answer to that question so it turns a little bit more and it's feeding and that
And it turns and looks in my direction again.
I don't look at it.
I just sit still.
And then I go, I think it knows I'm here.
And I remember what Jane Goodall in her studies with Chimp said,
act like your partner was going on.
So I start picking Huckleberries and eating them.
And I look over and there's the eyeballs looking right at me.
And it kind of looks at me and it reaches over and it picks up.
picks a prig of
Buckleberry, does the suck them off bit and drops it
and I kind of look at it and smile
and I'm tired and it stretches
and yawns and when it yawns
like I said I'm 8 to 10 feet
off to its side
it opens its mouth and I'm looking
full into its mouth I can see its teeth
it has a tongue like ours
its teeth are like ours they're bigger
no big long canines and it's yons and I try to cover my face and not yawn and I yawned at it and I go oh no
Diane Feinstein says in her studies of mountain gorillas showing your teeth is a sign of aggression I go
whoops I don't want to do that I look down and I cover my face and I yawn again and I flip my eyes to the left
and there she is
she's
yawning covering her mouth
and looking at me and I go
oh my gosh she knows I'm there
and she's looking at me and she's mimicking
what I'm doing and she sits
up and I sit up
and
I can see it's a female
it's got breast
blonde brown color formation
and she turned a little bit more
and she's sitting kind of on the side
and she's eating and so I
I'm eating and she'd look at me and I'd look at her.
And all of a sudden she kind of straightens up.
She rolls her eyes up and she looks behind me and she bears her teeth in like a grimace
and I go, uh-oh, is she telling me I'm too close or something?
I just look down and I turn and I look to the right behind me and across the road on the edge
of the brush.
There's this big black form like it's sitting there.
like a stump and I should have paid attention to it.
The male had walked up the hill, turned around and come back down and sat down behind me.
And he was there all the time watching me.
I found out when I did some tracking later.
So I'm watching her and she goes back to feeding and she comes up to her left hand to her mouth
and she puts a bunch of chewed berries and leaves in her left.
palm and she reaches out towards these three clumps of uh that has like a little stump in it off to her left
my eyes are right on that hand i'm watching that hand and as it gets towards the clump that little stump
goes over into all four and the hand comes out and it takes the berries and the two leaves from the
mom's hand and pops in its mouth and i go aha that's a toddler but it's not
the same one that I saw.
And so I'm watching it.
She does this a couple times.
And I'm just sitting there and I decided I'm going to sit still and watch.
Where did the other one go?
Because this little one is not the same one that I saw.
It was just a little further over.
And so I'm watching it.
And I sit there and I take my left hand and I put it down on my left knee next to the bush.
And all of a sudden this little doll.
face with golf ball
size eyes, a little bit of hair
on its face, like
a coo cut, black. You could see
the skin color
on its belly and it's under
its arm, kind of like a natural tan deer
and a pasty white.
It's looking right at me and smiling,
and it takes its right hand
and puts it on the bush to the right
of it, and I go,
it's watching me.
And so it pulls it back, and I
pull mine back, and then it takes its left
puts it over on the brush and it looks at me.
I take my left hand and I do the same back at it.
It gets excited, man.
You can see the excitement.
And we start doing this and it sticks its left foot out the one side of the bush.
I stick my left foot out.
It sticks its right foot out.
I stick my right foot out.
And I'm about going to die.
I'm playing with whatever this is.
And we're mimicking each other back and forth, back and forth.
And I bent.
down behind the bush
I'm going to look up and it drops down behind the bush
and I look out of the corner of my eye
and the mom does the exact same thing
and I'm going
are they mimicking me? Are they
playing with me? But occasionally
you do the same thing. So it comes
up. He does that
and the sun's getting a little brighter
and I got my hat so I go
down and I put my hand over the broom
of the hat, baseball hat
and I look up and I look across
he comes up and he's doing the exact same
thing and I'm trying not to laugh. I am so excited. This little one and I are playing back and
forth. And it ducks back down. I duck down. Mom ducks down. And I raise up and I point at it.
He raises up and points back at me. I go, this is interesting. So I decided, well, maybe I can talk to
it. So I very quietly would come up and it comes up and I point at it. And it, it,
points at me and I go very softly I see you and the mom sitting right she whirles around towards
me throwing dust and dirt and backs up and I go I scared it I never thought dawn on me that it probably
has never heard a human speak that close I think because of my appearance she thought I was another
juvenile bigfoot and she backs up and the little guy drops on all fours and it lets out
whimper and she is he he later puts out its hand palm up towards its mom and I go I've saw that before
and again again watching Jane Goodall and the chimps and Diane Fonsie the mom reaches out with her
left hand and she takes its hand and there's some communication back from more like grunts and
I take a deep breath and I said I'm going to try this the
minute she looks back, I reach my hand out towards her, palm up, the same thing as I see the baby
and I'm going to hold still, I'm not going to make eye contact with her.
She comes up to me on all six.
She's on her feet, her knees, and her hands coming towards me.
And they have a metarsal break in their foot, or joint, where we want to call it.
And I can see the front part of her foot is flat on the ground, but the back part in the
heels up off the ground. There's that flex. There's that joint. And she comes over and I still have
my hand out. And I'm thinking to myself, is this a wise idea? She could grab me and throw me in the
lake from here. She reaches over and she takes my hand and hers. Now, my hand is five inches wide and nine
inches long. And my palm of my hand fits between the knuckle of her thumb and the first finger joint.
and her fingers could wrap around and touch the back of my wrist.
And I go, okay, she holds my hand.
And I look at her and I go, I'm sorry.
I didn't mean to scare you.
And I take my hand slowly and just put it on my lap.
And she's looking at me like, how did you do to do that?
She's just calm, surprised look.
And she backs up and sits down.
I just hold still and I'm watching her.
and she reaches out and the stump is next to my left foot, she taps on it three times.
I go, I think she wants my attention.
And I reach down and I tap it three times back at her.
And she comes up on all floors and she looks me right in the face.
And I look her right in the face and I figure I'm looking at a prehistoric huge.
human, not a giant wood ape. This is more human looking, even though it has ape-like behavior and features.
This is a human. It's a prehistoric ancestor. It doesn't smell bad. It has a very expressive face.
And she's looking right in the face. And I look at her and I talk to her again. I say again, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to frighten you.
and I figure she's going to leave and she sits down almost next to me.
And I'm like I'm 19 years old and I am just about ready to burst of the excitement.
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 end.
Oh, get ready, girl.
Ooh, la la.
Man, I feel like a woman.
Meet Addy, the little pink pill.
Addie is a prescription medicine for women under 65
with hypoactive low sexual desire disorder that's distressing to them.
Addie is for low desire that happens in all situations
and isn't caused by a medical condition, relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, and dry mouth.
Learn more at adi.com, including important warnings.
Use coupon code iHeart for a $10 telemet appointment at adi.com.
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,
sponsored jobs. You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills, certifications, and everything
else you're looking for. Or go a different way and get no traction. Seriously, sponsored jobs posted
directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire 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.
The next time you're at the checkout register,
look for the balloon.
Because the donation to Children's Miracle Network
has the power to change lives.
Children's Miracle Network supports 170 children's hospitals
across the United States and Canada.
These nonprofit hospitals provide care for all kids,
from routine checkups to life-changing treatments.
So look for the balloon and make a big change for a kid near you.
Learn more at cmn.org.
Here's this animal that people say does not exist.
It's sitting with an arm's length of meat.
there's a toddler 12 feet away from me and it's playing with me and I am really trying to stay calm
not jump out of my skin with excitement because I am here having an up close and personal encounter
with a mother Sasquatch and a toddler and she sits down and watch me and she starts feeding
and I start feeding and all of a sudden the brush with a little one he grabs him with a brush
He goes, he shakes it at me.
And I grabbed the bush and they go,
back at him.
And he starts, we start doing this playing back and forth.
Arm, leg, push this way, this way, up, down.
And the mom sit there.
She kind of looks over at me and rolls her eyes and looks at the little one
and rolls her eyes.
And I look at her, go, you obnoxious big sister.
And we just keep playing like this.
And finally I get tired.
and I said, well, maybe I should let them go, and I put my arm on my elbow on my knee and my hand and my chin.
The little one does the same thing, and the mom does the same thing, and she turns from the waist, and she shows me her backside, and she crawls away from me, and I figure, okay, she's going to go, and she reaches out, and she pulls up the youngster, and she goes over the bank behind this tree, and I figure she's going to put this tree,
behind me and go down or she's going to cut to the right and as she goes over all of
and she comes up or she stood up to walk and as she stood stands up against my even with a tree
here comes the blonde head and shoulders across like well there's the other one it was just
over the hill from where it's it crosses over and joins the mom and they disappear behind the tree
when they disappear behind the tree i move on down on like all fours and i shoot about 20 feet
to my right because there's where the trails intersecting.
One comes up to the road and I get over there to the edge and I kneel down and as I kneel down,
it's rind in pine cones and dirt and I go, something made three something where I knock something loose.
And I turned and looked to my left and about 15 feet away, five foot tall, female,
blonde brown is a juvenile female
Bigfoot and she just
She has this look like a bashful little girl like
Whoop you saw me and I just look at it and about this time
Off to my right I hear
Oh scratch goes a tree and I turn and I look to my right
And I go distraction and I see it
I turn back to the left
And the juvenile
Pupils run and takes off running full tilt down the hill
and I look over and the male, he goes up the bank into the woods and I go,
why did he do that?
He's been watching me.
I didn't realize, but there were four other people, the other people that verified they saw him
and the female coming up and he saw them.
I guess there were too many people around because I was well within its comfort zone of the
mother, the toddler, and the other one.
and so I turned and I look
and this blonde brown street
comes firing off the corner
running through
there's a
clip of Douglas
First saplings are about 10, 12 foot tall
and she goes through them like a
D8 cat man she goes right through them
and she's jumping and stepping over logs
and steps, stumps and logs
that we'd have to jump over and she
comes down about
65 yards or 70 yards
below me and stand still and turn
up and looking at me.
She has that slope-like appearance at the,
and she's standing there looking at me,
and I go, okay, there's,
and I watch the juvenile run around
and go behind the mom,
and I'm looking, where's the toddler?
Where's the baby?
And I go, did I scare him?
Did she lose the baby?
And I'm looking around.
I looked at the area that she ran,
with the other one ran,
and I couldn't see nothing.
And she makes a vocalization.
I can't hear it, but I feel like a vibration on me.
That's that low infrasound, line of sight.
And so I look at her and she's looking in my direction,
but I'm trying to see, it's like she's looking below me.
And so I come up to edge and I look down 10 feet below me,
about two feet away.
There's some huckleberries, and I see this little butt
in the fetal position sticking out from behind it.
There's the toddler.
It's on the ground.
And I'm looking at it and I kneel down and I say, very soft to it.
I can see you.
And it jumps up and stands up and it's looking to my right across in the direction of the male.
It sighs and it's looking around.
And I go, it's looking for its mom.
But it's looking at me or the other.
And its mom is straight down below it.
So I take my hand.
I put my hand up and it watches my hand
and I make like a pointer and I point
really slowly down
at its mom.
It pulls its hand up. It makes it
like a pointer. It turns from
the waist. It points and
sees its mom. It whips around.
It has this big expression
on its face like, you found my
mommy. I'm
chucking and I go, hey, I didn't
scare you. That was your dad or
whatever that was it threw down the tree and growled.
And it looks at me, but then
kind of got its nerves too much and it takes off running down the hill and there's a log about
20 feet in front of it's about five foot and a stump and he hits it with its left hand and it
volts it and it comes up its feeder apart he'd run it down that hill sometimes he would swing on a
branch it would it could teach marshawn lynch broken field running it goes down and it stopped by the
mom and uh i hear the vocalizations again it's got it
It's arms up and the mom touch it.
And I can read that by language.
Mom, pick me up.
Mom doesn't pick it up.
And it's there and I'm watching it.
And like a toddler holds on to its mom's dress or pant leg, it does that and it steps
in behind it.
It's mom.
And she's standing there left profile and it's to her in front of her.
But walking, it's behind him.
And I keep watching.
And pretty soon it.
like you do a tree peak,
it peeks out from behind its mom,
and I point at it and I go,
I can see you,
and it pops back up,
and I hear some more vocalizations,
and all of a sudden,
she turns,
and he turns,
and he points up the hill at me,
and I hear a definite four-syllable vocalization.
And I discussed it with Scott Taylor,
who talks about,
Dr. Johnson, the linguist, and according to what they told me, the native magazine,
what the vocization basically meant was, and so it is or so you do, I see you, and it was
answering back.
And so it turns, and the monitor, and it starts walking down the bank towards the woods.
And I cut my right horn about my side, and I just raised my arm, and I weigh that.
at it at the tool and he's looking back and like a toddler would weigh at you, it weighs
back at me and it disappears over the bank.
And I go, all right, I'm going to do two things.
I'm going to walk over to where that tree got thrown down and see what I can do.
And I walk over there and this tree, it was dead snag is thrown down and it split,
almost like a 25 foot tall spear is on the ground.
and as I walk back towards where the stump would be,
it smells like somebody turned an outhouse over.
And I walk a little bit farther,
and there on the ground is two piles of fresh steaming poop.
And then on one side of the water drainage on the side of the road
is a footprint.
On the other side is another footprint,
the size of a, like a football, bigger.
The male would have been sitting behind me all the time
He got up, he threw down that tree.
I think that was a warning.
And I looked to see what he was looking at from that position.
I could see her eyes sitting.
And as I'm looking over the bank, I see the tops of the heads of four people coming up.
He had seen them and did that warning bark for the family.
And I talked to them as we walked back to camp and they said they saw him go up the hill.
the hill to their left, my right, and the daughter said,
she saw one or two that were like a light brown color,
go to the other way, and go, yeah, that's the other ones.
So we walked out, and I told them what I'd seen,
and I got back to where I came to my friends, go,
what did you see?
I said, if I told you, you wouldn't believe me,
but I eventually did tell them.
And that is, and I have that written indeed,
That's the one siding that I get the most questions about.
Because like the first one and the other sightings,
those were all first time encounters with the Bigfoot.
The later ones that I would have in Eastern Washington are with a family of Bigfoot
that is camped, that live in the area that we camp at.
But Lynn, this is absolutely incredible.
It's probably one of the most incredible accounts that I've ever heard.
we had talked about those pages you have written.
You have got to make this into a book so it's not lost to time eventually.
No, it took me a while to get all my notes.
It took me a while to get all my notes back together.
I don't type.
It's all handwritten.
They're all very descriptive of what I've seen.
I have drawings and pictures of glyphs.
And they do communicate with you and with others with glyphs.
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.
Oh, get ready, girl.
Ooh, la, la.
Meet Addy, the little pink pill.
Addie is a prescription medicine for women under 65 with hypoactive low sexual desire disorder that's distressing to them.
Addie is for low desire that happens in all situations and isn't caused by a medical condition, relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness,
Trouble sleeping and dry mouth. Learn more at Addy.com, including important warnings. Use coupon code
iHeart for a $10 telemed appointment at adi.com. 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 sponsored jobs. You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills,
certifications, and everything else you're looking for. Or go a different way and get no traction.
Seriously, sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire 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 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's sponsored jobs.
We are Children's Miracle Network, a nationwide partnership of people and organizations,
all working side by side to raise funds for 170 children's hospitals across the United States,
and Canada. These nonprofit hospitals provide a wide range of care for all kids, from routine
checkups to life-changing treatments, research and mental health resources. Make big change today for kids
in your community. Support your local children's hospital with a monthly or one-time gift online.
Learn more at cmn.org. Also, they make the wood structures. Glifts, some are for you.
ones that they leave for you, you'll know it.
Others are between them.
Some are art.
Some are like a map.
Tom Canterall says I shouldn't be able to read them.
Oh, actually for general ones, but I've had the ability since I've had that contact with them.
It's like I'm reading something and it'll jump up off the page.
I know what that means.
And it comes from interacting with the Bigfoot.
they choose who they will be friends with.
They choose who they will show themselves with.
Most people around the woods, they see a big foot.
The first thing you do is point at, scream, yell, point a gun, they're gone.
Are you talking about a habituated big foot or a non-habituated big foot?
I've seen both.
Glassing across a canyon, I see this black form by a rock.
Okay, I put the glasses on it.
It's an animal sitting there.
I crank it up.
I get a little reflection off my thing.
It turns and looks at me and stands up.
It was over a mile away looking at me, and I was looking at it.
That was an un, not a habituated Bigfoot.
They're very, very elusive.
They'll see you before, and they're generally gone.
The ones that most people have encounters with are habituated people.
Being habituated to people, he has both positive,
and negative consequences.
You've got to leave your fear at home.
If you show fear,
you're going to get a negative response from them.
I, for the most tired,
have just been either sitting down or stopped walking
and then seen them.
One I,
in the Eastern Washington family that I interact with,
the one juvenile,
He used to walk along and follow me walking through the woods.
Every now and then, he'd peek out at me where I could see him.
And when I walk in the area and I become aware that he was there,
in a very calm, quiet voice, I would say, come walk with me.
And after a while, he would step out and see me.
And I would walk along and I would say, hey, company, are you there?
I've got company again.
And I was walking out, and eventually he walked up next to me.
And that was a lifetime thing.
I was going to try and take his picture.
I took my phone out, turned it on, put my hands in front of my body, and then I realized, no, that's a defensive thing.
And their body length, that means go away.
He's back straight up away from me.
And a lot of people got to, if you see when he got to, if you see when he got.
to learn their body language.
You see pictures, and people describe a big foot, brings its hands up in front of it,
and kind of like push away, and as it turns, that's go away.
Or I'm going to leave.
That's that body language.
They reach out, a palm up, like a mother just a baby.
That's a greeting.
That's a comfort thing.
Woodnocks are a form of communication.
Rock clacks are a form of communication.
Sometimes you can get.
the way with imitating what they do.
Like, I shake a bush, he shake a bush back at him.
But you've got to keep your personal security and responsibility
because as one friend of mine found out up there,
he heard a Bigfoot banging rocks back and forth,
and he started banging the rocks in the same thing.
Well, I guess in Bigfoot culture,
he just challenged the big dominant male.
He said, like in the God,
that's the King Kong movie.
He said he came down that hill towards him and he said,
I got on my quad and I was out of there before he got there.
You hear that, like a bark, that's a, that's a communication that a male will do.
You hear like squirrel chatter.
That's generally between a mother and juvenile.
I've been up at night and I put some beans and stuff out on the rock.
and I kept hearing like turkey calls.
Turkeys don't puck at night.
Turkeys are in the tree.
And I got up and went over there at the morning.
I went over there.
All the bees were gone.
There was no feathers.
There was no poop.
But a lot of the brush had been pressed down.
Okay.
And it's like, yeah, they were there.
There's lots of pros and cons about gifting.
and leaving food for them.
I leave food gifts for them.
Some they'll take, some they won't.
Lynn, I could talk to you for absolute hours.
I would love to continue this conversation on a later date, if possible.
That's possible, yeah.
No problem.
I'll be gone.
Yeah, I'll be gone in October from like the 10th to the 22nd.
That's when I go over hunting, and that's when I go over.
and do some work and research with the Bigfoot family that's over there.
Yeah, we definitely need to continue this.
I feel you have probably some of the most detailed information I've ever heard.
But thank you so much for sharing what you've learned so far.
And I look forward to chatting with you at a future date as well, Lynn.
Okay, I had fun.
It's all to help you and others understand Bigfoot.
Yes, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you.
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,
thank you so much. 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.mail.
A special thank you to all the Bigfoot Society Patreon and YouTube channel members.
It's your support that helps keep the show going,
and I extremely appreciate it.
If you want to join in the fun,
you can join over at patreon.com forward slash.
the Bigfoot Society.
I'll see you there.
And again, thanks for listening.
Her and I can get on here and we can tell our stories.
Maybe there's somebody else out there listening
that's too afraid to tell their story.
Maybe this will give them the courage to come out.
And now I feel so bad about it.
Who cares what anybody's things?
I know what I saw.
I know what's out there.
That's all I care about.
Please let people know.
Please let them know if you ever see one of these things.
You need you tell because if you don't, then shame on you.
You know, shame on you.
...to Bigfoot Society podcast hosted by our captain, Jeremiah Byron, where it's all Bigfoot all the time.
Have you ever had the urge to do more, to be more?
Now you can by joining Bigfoot Society on the Patreon.
Get ad-free episodes and even member-only episodes.
Take part in movie night and even live video chats.
interact behind the scenes with Jeremiah and other Patreon members like me.
Slay it.
The powerful podcast goes on and you may contribute a verse in our Patreon community.
Carpe Diem.
Seize the day, Bigfooters, and make your lives extraordinary.
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.
It's...
Oh, la la.
Meow.
Man, I feel like a woman.
Meet Addy, the little pink pill.
Addie is a prescription medicine for women under 65
with hypoactive low sexual desire disorder that's distressing to them.
Addie is for low desire that happens in all situations
and isn't caused by a medical condition, relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, and dry mouth.
Learn more at adi.com, including important warnings.
Use coupon code iHeart for a $10 telemed appointment at adi.com.
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,
sponsored jobs. You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills, certifications, and everything
else you're looking for. Or go a different way and get no traction. Seriously, sponsored jobs posted
directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire 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's sponsored jobs.
When a child needs care, whether it's recovery from a life-changing event
or managing a lifelong condition.
Children's Miracle Network hospitals are there for them.
These hospitals are also non-profit organizations,
and right now they're doing more with less.
At a time when children's health care is becoming more urgent and complex.
That's why Children's Miracle Network is inviting you to join our movement
to ensure all kids get the care they need.
Learn more at CMN.org slash pledge.
Let's go, girls.
You know what I love about, Addie?
Everything?
Well, yeah, but it's as little as children.
20 bucks a month.
Ooh, well, the Little Pink Pill has always been a pretty big deal.
A really big deal.
I'd call that a good investment.
Che-chang.
Man, I feel like a woman.
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.
Addie is for low desire that happens in all situations and isn't caused by a medical condition,
relationship issues, or medicines.
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.
If you have had any mental health conditions, are pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding.
Side effects may include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, and dry mouth.
Learn more at adi.com, including important warnings.
Eligible patients only, restrictions apply.
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.
You'll get matched with candidates that meet the skills, certifications, and everything else you're looking for.
Or go a different way and get no traction.
Seriously, sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire 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 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.
In the blink of an eye,
A children's hospital can go from a place you've never heard of
to the place your whole world depends on.
Children's Miracle Network raises funds for 170 children's hospitals
across the United States and Canada.
These hospitals provide care for all kids,
whether it's helping them recover from life-changing events
or treating lifelong conditions.
Visit CMN.org to see how Children's Miracle Network
is making big change for all kids.
This is Daniel Fischel.
And Ryder Strong from Podmeet's world.
As cat parents, Ryder and I know the feeling of being ignored by our cats.
I often wonder, does my cat even love me?
Well, there's only one solution to solve that.
Sheba.
Feed your cat, Shiba, and go from feeling ignored to truly adored in 12 days, guaranteed, or your money back.
Sheba has so many incredible products that can satisfy even the pickiest eater.
Like new Shiba grilled, made in the USA with the finest ingredients from around the world.
They are savory strips in a succulent sauce that cats are sure to love.
And it's 100% complete and balanced with essential vitamins and nutrients for adult cats like My Bill.
Made without artificial flavors or preservatives, no corn, wheat, or soy.
To learn more, check out shiba.com.
From the neon lights of the club to the harsh, buzzing lights of the office.
Don't let the wear show on your face.
Just swipe Mabeline instant eraser concealer to erase the night before,
wherever that happens to be.
Instantly covered dark circles and under-eye bags
for a brighter, more awake look.
This do-it-all formula also contours,
corrects, and highlights,
all while staying lightweight,
crease-resistant, and smooth.
It may be the world's greatest eraser.
Find your shade of instant eraser concealer
at your local retailer.
On this episode of Plant Killers,
we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer,
bad dirt.
What makes bad dirt so bad?
The answer?
The ingredients.
But fear not, true.
crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending. Miracle Grow organic raised bed and garden soil.
It's made with quality organic ingredients from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the
other guys who can't say the same, looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow.
Join us next time on plant killers.
