Bigfoot Society - The River King | Washington
Episode Date: February 16, 2025In this episode of Bigfoot Society, Moe talks to host Jeremiah Byron and shares captivating details of her childhood encounters with Bigfoot near Granite Falls, Washington, around the mid-1970s. Movin...g to a remote log cabin in the mountains at a young age, Mo recounts her first sighting of an eight-foot-tall, ape-like creature while fishing with her father at Emerald Pool. She vividly describes repeated nighttime visits of the creature around their home, eerie noises, and unsettling smells. Mo's detailed story spans multiple encounters over subsequent years, including a shocking discovery inside their own house. Tune in to hear Moe's compelling and eerie recounting of life amidst Bigfoot activity.If you've had similar encounters or experiences, please reach out to bigfootsociety@gmail.com. Your story could be the next one we feature!🔴 Subscribe to our Youtube channel and leave a comment here: https://www.youtube.com/@BigfootSociety?sub_confirmation=1Want to call in and leave a voicemail of your encounters for the podcast - Check this out here - https://www.speakpipe.com/bigfootsociety(Use multiple voice mails if needed!)Share this video with a friend: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5v75Od-X38Watch more episodes of the Bigfoot Society podcast here – https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3t1vwtsKh-MGeHs0XglFJE5LwUHpmJm_&feature=sharedRecommended Playlist – New Jersey Bigfoot Encounters - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3t1vwtsKh-Mk4032IyZtWgP6LVPU8uat✅ Help me help others share their Bigfoot Encounter by joining the community on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/thebigfootsociety✅ Hear ad-free episodes early by joining the community on Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8Qq45W6iaTU8FE9kelxT7Q/joinLet’s connect:Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/bigfootsociety/Twitter – https://twitter.com/bigfoot_societyTiktok - https://www.tiktok.com/@bigfoot.societyAffiliate links mean I earn a commission from qualifying purchases. This helps support my channel at no additional cost to you.My Audio Interface: https://amzn.to/3L1q8XYPut some pep in my step by buying me a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/bigfootsocietyPick up some merch here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/bigfootsociety/?etsrc=sdtSend mail here:Bigfoot Society125 E 1st St. #233Earlham, IA 50072Send business inquiries to: bigfootsociety@gmail.com
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All right, Bigfoot Society.
We've got the privilege of talking to Moe tonight.
Mo is an individual that reached out through a YouTube comment.
And then thankfully we're able to be connected as I responded to that comment.
And Mo has agreed to come on the show to share what she's experienced over the year.
So, Mo, welcome to the show.
I'm going to go ahead and give the floor over to you.
Feel free to take us back to the time when all this stuff started happening for you.
And I'll let you take it from here.
All right.
When I was a very little girl sometime around 1975, my parents decided to leave civilization and move up into the mountains.
And I was about five years old, maybe six.
And we moved up to a very, very large, very beautiful log cabin up past Granite Falls, Washington, up by the 16-mile marker.
And we had no electricity. We cooked on a wood stove. And it was just very remote at the time. And there's a lot of people up there now, I think. But it was very different then.
but yeah one summer we've been living up there i think this was in 77 and we'd been living up there for a while
and we had never heard our seat we'd seen bears and things like that but nothing else and it was i believe
it was june and me and my father had decided to go and all the other kids were gone for the day
and we decided to go and do something and he wanted he decided it was time for me to learn how to fish
So we grabbed some poles and there was a place that everybody liked to fish and it was about a mile walk from our house and we crossed the road and go down a dry creek bed for about a mile.
And there was a bend in the Still of Guamish River there that it pooled right there at the turn in the river.
And we called it Emerald Pool.
It was just a really beautiful spot and it was a rocky beach.
and then on the other side there was a little waterfalls and a big cliff.
And the cliff was about, I'd say, 50 feet, 50 feet tall, maybe a little taller.
So we walked out there and it was a nice walk.
And we set up our fishing poles and sat down to fish and we were there for about two hours.
And I did catch my first fish.
And I saw my dad kind of stiffen and get a really steep.
strange look on his face and set up off the ground off the rock he was sitting on. And I looked over
towards the cliff where he was looking. And standing there was, at first I thought it was just a really
big guy wearing lots of clothes. But I could see that my dad was terrified. And I mean, he was just
frozen. And so, you know, looking closer, I realized that this was way too big to be a man. It was probably
close to eight feet tall.
Covered with brown hair,
looked very ape-like,
and was staring down at us.
And
my dad, I don't know what he was going through
at the time because he just couldn't move.
He was just frozen.
And he stood that way for a good couple of minutes.
And I said, dad, what is that?
And he said, honey, I don't know what that is.
I think I know, but I don't know.
but I don't know and I think we need to leave.
And I looked up and I took one last look at it and it was standing there and it kind of had its hand on the trunk of a tree and it was looking down at us.
And I remember thinking how sad it looked.
For some reason, it just seemed to have a very, very sad look on its face.
So me and my dad turned around and we walked back home as fast as we could.
And I don't think it could have gotten to us unless it jumped off the cliff.
and waited through the river, but he was afraid.
And we got back to the house, and that night, we started hearing things around the outside of the house.
And the way, when we went to bed at night, my mom would come into my bedroom, and she would light the kerosene lantern, and she would turn the wick up only so far, so that way within a couple of hours, it would burn out.
and I can remember that for actually for a lot of nights after that night we would hear branches breaking,
we would hear screaming, just howling that we had never heard before.
Then I would hear breathing outside of my window.
And I would wake up and hear this and I would be terrified.
And because the lantern had burned out in my room and it was completely dark.
there. I can remember I would feel around the walls of my room because I had to get out of there
because it was right outside my window. And I didn't know what it was, but I could tell it was
big and I had never heard anything like that before. And I would finally find the door and then
I'd run out to the living room and sleep on the couch that night. And I could still hear it,
but the living room was two stories up. So it was, you know, I felt a little safer.
there. And we started having things around our house being destroyed like plant. My mom had a garden.
My dad had his own garden. We won't go into what he grew, but those would disappear as well.
But it was just, it was scary. It went on pretty much for the rest of the time that we lived
there, which was a couple of years. And I do remember there were times when there was enough
moonlight to shine light into my bedroom window.
And I could see something out there.
And it looked like what I saw up at Emerald Pool.
And we also had a small house right next to our property.
And it was the strangest little house because I don't know why it had been built where it had
been built, but it was like surrounded by a pond.
I don't know if the pond gathered there after the house.
was built, but it was a very old, little tiny cabin.
And above the door, there was a little sign that said, Dr. Javago.
And we loved us.
Kids love to explore around in there.
We weren't supposed to, but we really liked to.
And I can remember when I would go in there, I would smell a smell that would take me back
to the nights when, you know, there's something outside my window and I could hear it,
And I could smell that strong, almost nose burning smell.
And I can remember there was many times when I could smell that inside that cabin.
And so we stopped playing in there.
But it went on for the next couple of years that we lived there.
I can't even begin to describe the noises that it made.
My dad would try and tell all the other kids that, you know,
It was just a bear or a cunger or mountain lion or whatever.
But I knew what it was.
And I can remember it.
My dad wanted me to keep what we had seen that day from my mom because my mom scared easily.
But after it started like showing up around our house at night, there was no way my mom wouldn't hear that and see those things herself.
she was up late in the night my mom always got up in the middle of the night for some reason for an hour or two
and she would see and hear things too and she would always ask my dad you know are you sure that's a bear
are you that sounds so big are you sure that's a bear and what is that smell what is the smell
I keep smelling around the house well my dad finally told her what we had seen at emerald pool that day
and then we finally told we had a couple of neighbors up there one that lived across the river
and one that lived right across the road and then we were the only ones up there and so the guy who
lived across the river his name was Greg and my dad went to him and talked to him about it
about what he had seen and Greg started telling stories because Greg lived up in that little
cabin that he lived in up there for most of his life.
And he told us all sorts of stories about what he had seen and that there's many of them up there
and that he had seen them all of his life.
And yeah, that's about my story.
That is absolutely fascinating, Mo.
Thank you for sharing that.
I definitely have a few questions for you.
going back to when you had seen
the one where its face made you think it was sad
do you remember if there were certain details about the face
that made you think that
yeah the eyes
it just seemed to have sad eyes
almost like it was crying I don't know I didn't
I couldn't see tears I was too far away
it just
it looked like an old
person who you see that was touting or looking really sad or looking kind of in its shoulders
were slumped and it seemed to sigh a few times and and it it's hard to explain it just really
looked like it did not want to see us there but that it wasn't angry or violent it was just
it just looked sad it had kind of a leathery face brown leathery face all wrinkly and
it just had a sad scrunched up look on his face.
What were the certain features that stood out to you as being more ape-like?
The face, the hands from as far away.
I mean, we weren't that far.
The iron pool was actually very small.
But the hands looked like an ape's hands, you know, back, the hair on the back of the hands.
But none on the front sides.
I couldn't really see its feet, so I don't know.
But the hair was, it was brown, but it was kind of an orangey brown.
And it just had really long arms, kind of bald leg.
It was just really ape-like.
Were you able to see any details about shape of the head or the neck at all?
Yeah, the head reminded me of like a gorilla.
Just darker.
skin, darker hair, but it looked a lot like a gorilla head.
I couldn't see the back of it, but it did look like a gorilla head.
And I do, if I am remembering correctly, I could, I also think, I mean, in my memory,
I think it was a male because I think I saw some of that too.
Gotcha.
And there were no large breasts or anything.
From what I can tell, Granite Falls, there are not a lot of people at this time.
So you're not having to worry about, you know, is there a zoo in Granite Falls or is there
wild animals, safari theme park, you know, that there could have been a gorilla escape from.
Nothing like that in the area, correct?
No.
No, it was a little tiny log in town.
Absolutely.
you know when you would walk around the the property after these nights where you would hear things outside
would you ever notice any footprints outside or anything out of the ordinary next to the house
you know i i don't think i ever really thought to look because i was so young but i remember my dad
looking around the house after those nights and i never really you know fully understood what he
was looking for, but I think I know now. He never really talked about it a lot. It was something that
really scared him. He was one of those very skeptical people. He did not believe in anything out of the
ordinary life was just very straightforward for him. So it's something that he just never really
liked to talk about too much. But when he did talk about it, he agreed with me that about what it
look like and about that it have a sad look on its face.
And when he finally started telling people about it, it just this thing happened that he
always thought would happen.
They told him he was crazy, except for, you know, our couple of friends up there on the
mountain.
But nobody ever believed us.
My brothers and sisters barely believed us, even though they heard what went on outside.
But at that time, a lot of them were leaving home and going off on their own, too.
and it was pretty much just as little kids left.
That makes sense.
Did you and your father have a discussion about this when you were older and grown up as an adult?
Actually, we had a discussion about it about less than a year ago.
I talked to him about it.
I wanted to talk, his mind was slipping and I wanted to talk to him about things before, you know, he passed away in September.
and then my mom.
And we, you know, I wanted to talk to him about it.
And he just, he said, I, he goes, I saw them afterwards.
I saw them after that.
I don't know why we never saw them before.
Maybe we just weren't looking.
And we don't know why they started coming around our house after we did see them.
We did see that one.
I know that there was times when I would lay there and I would think,
oh, there's one outside the window.
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It said everything happens for a reason, but maybe everything happens for a recesses.
Take noise-canceling headphones.
Do they block hearing to heighten taste?
Hmm.
That sound seems to show.
Everything happens for a recess.
And then I would realize there was more than one outside the window.
We never had anything like a lot of people described.
No rocks, groan.
nothing ever threatening.
We never heard any strange languages
or anything like that.
Just a lot of heavy breathing
and then when they were a little farther
from the house screaming or
kind of a woot-woot sound at each other,
I think. I think there was more than one
they'd be rooting at each other.
That's the only way I can describe it.
But yeah.
First off, I'm sorry to hear that you lost
both of your parents recently.
that is
great you were able to have
that conversation with your father
so recent
before he did pass.
How long did
they end up staying
at that property?
For two more years after that, we were there for about
four years in total.
Was there a thing that made them move
or it was just at the point that it's
time to move on?
It was time to move on.
Living up there was becoming
a little more than what my mother bargained for.
Oh, and my sister told me, because I was telling her that I was doing this tonight,
and she told me something that she had never told me before.
And that was that once during the summer, and she said this was about 77,
my grandparents had a little trailer that they lived in on our property
in the last couple of years that we lived there.
And one day, she was walking towards the train.
trailer and she was on one side of it and my grandpa looked out the window and said don't come around to the other side of the trailer get your ASS back in the house and she's like whatever and she walked around the side of the trailer and she saw she said she saw a big foot standing by the trailer and my grandpa had come over to the other side of the trailer and he was looking out the window at her and at this thing standing there and he said get in the house now and she turned around and she
ran and it watched her. He said it watched her running and then it turned her back around and looked
at him and then just walked away. My grandpa never told me about this. I can remember my grandma
mumbling something about it after she was, you know, her mind was a little bit gone, but
grandpa didn't talk about a lot. So I'm not real surprised he never said anything, but
my sister was telling me about that today and I didn't even know about that.
That is absolutely fascinating for you just to learn that today.
Was she able to describe what she saw and was it similar to what you described?
She described exactly what I described.
And I hadn't even described, you know, it had been a long time since I'd said anything.
I don't even know if I'd ever talked to her much about it because my dad was so strange about it.
But, and, you know, she was one of those, oh, there's just bears out there.
There's nothing out there until that day.
So, but she described it just like I described it.
And she also said that when her and, because the family across the road from us,
they were the only other kids up there.
But they had the same amount of kids as my parents and we were all around the same age.
So we each had kind of a buddy we hung out with.
And her and their older kid, they were out playing with weapons.
I don't know who was.
but apparently
and I
she this isn't another thing she told me today
I wasn't sure if I was going to say anything about this or not
but apparently the neighbor boy
fired at one in the wood
and it scared her really bad
it ran away
I don't know what to think of that story
I mean I don't think my sister was
lie to me but I wasn't you know I wasn't sure
if I wanted to tell that one or not but what the heck
were here. But she said she had also smelled things in that cabin when her and the neighbor
boy would go in the little Dr. Javago cabin to be alone. They would smell that smell in there and
they would notice things. And she said she did see footprints occasionally. That's absolutely
fascinating. My other family, my other family members, really, there's a couple that I really
don't talk too much anymore. But so I've never, and they were the older ones who were gone
pretty much by the time all this was happening, off-starting families of their own.
And so I've never really asked them if they saw anything because when, you know, I talked about my story,
they didn't believe us.
They just, oh, you guys are seeing bears.
You're hearing cougars.
But we know we weren't hearing cougars and bears.
We knew that's not what they sounded like.
Because, you know, we knew what they sounded like.
My dad was a very good outdoorsman, and he knew what he was hearing.
This cabin area, did your father in your family end up, did you build that as you were moving on, or was the cabin already there?
It was already there.
Do you know how long it had stayed vacant for before you moved into it?
I have no idea.
I don't think it was vacant long because the landlord, my parents actually, we didn't own it.
We rented it.
And the landlord had been living up there.
And he decided he wanted to move to town and rent the place out.
And he thought about renting it out as like a summer rental or something, but he knew my parents, my parents knew him somehow.
And he agreed to rent the place out to them.
I wonder if there was ever a conversation between your dad and this landlord something to the effect of,
hey, there's big foot on the property that you're renting to me.
Do you know anything about that?
I don't know.
I don't know if he ever did talk to him about it.
The only adults I remember talking about it, like I said, were my dad and his two friends up there, Greg and Les is the one across the street with all the kids.
and that those were the only people my dad
was ever willing to talk to, you know,
a few relatives, a few of the younger relatives.
You know, when he'd get a few drinks in him,
he'd regaled the youngsters with a story or two,
but they always thought he was just drunk and telling stories.
I would tell him, no, it's true.
I was there, and they'd be like, yeah, okay, you're cute.
Wow.
people who live up the Mount Luke, no.
They know.
Absolutely.
Was there anything ever left near the house that just didn't really make sense or maybe parts of animals or just really weird things like that?
No, nothing like that.
At least not that my dad said.
Gotcha.
That's true.
he if there had been there's a good chance he could have taken care of it because you were so young at the time
yep do you ever remember seeing any like lots of broken trees or bent over trees anything like
that around the property yes definitely around the house sometimes we'd see trees that were broken
or branches that were broken so high up that it would scare my mother it would really scare her
because my dad would, you know, it's his spares.
It's just fares. Mary, it's okay.
And she knew he was lying.
And he finally admitted to her, you know, what was going on.
And she's like, well, I already knew that.
But they always, it was like they always wanted to pretend that it wasn't happening
because that's what my parents did.
My parents were perpetual 12-year-olds.
And they just, you know, life was wonderful all day long and nothing bad ever happened.
And so that's how they wanted to live their life.
But everybody knew, you know, everybody knew deep down what was going on.
And then, you know, we also had a thing go on in our house where we kept finding food inside the house disappearing.
And then we were finding clothing disappearing.
And then one day I discovered, I was, I discovered this little doorway upstairs,
the house wasn't completely finished and a couple of the rooms were just kind of framed in but there was a real big space between a couple of rooms it was just like empty space but it was kind of set back and then there was this wooden wall and I noticed this little door in it and so I decided to peek in there one day and there was a 16 year old girl living in the wall that she had been there for a few weeks and she had run away from home so that
That was crazy. It was quite the house.
All right.
That's an absolute nightmare.
I'm trying to.
So did you find that individual yourself?
Yes.
Oh, my goodness.
Me and my two sisters were home alone one day, and we found her.
And we coaxed her out of there, and we sat her down in the kitchen.
My big sister did and made her stay there until my parents got home.
and my parents took her down into town to the police station.
She was just a runaway,
found her way in to our wall.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, she's like, hey, I can get in there unfinished.
It's kind of like a Goldilocks type situation.
So it was pretty obviously that,
obvious that she was a human runaway, though, like she could talk.
Oh, yeah.
It wasn't any, like, feral human-like thing.
She was a local girl.
Okay.
Right.
She was a local girl.
That is, I was not expecting that.
That's a little twist in the story.
That was just something that popped up in my head.
Did your dad finish the house after that?
If I would be like, all right, time to finish the house.
No.
No.
My dad, when I was really young, my dad was rear-ended in his work truck by a very large semi.
and he was in the hospital for many months after that.
And although he always tried, he would always try and get jobs or do some kind of, you know, work for himself or things like that,
it just he would always end up back in the hospital for doing too much.
So that was another reason why they wanted to live, you know, up in the mountain due subsistence living, I guess.
And it just, it got too hard on him.
They just couldn't do it anymore.
or so.
Down to town, we moved.
When you moved down to town,
did you start hearing stories from other people in town
about people that had also been seeing Bigfoot in the area?
Oh, yeah.
I made friends with a girl in town.
We became best friends.
We are pretty much still to this day.
And he knew some people that they had some kind of,
touristy little business thing up in Monty Cristo,
an abandoned like silver or
mining town or something that was up there.
And she would go up there and stay with some friends up there all the time.
And it was like, wait, it was, there was a,
it was like a ski resort or something.
And she would hear stuff all the time from people about,
oh, hey, you know, they'd come into the office and be like,
or into the lobby of this.
ski place and be like, hey, we just saw something. And, you know, nobody ever knew what to say.
Like, yeah, a lot of people see me. But, you know, campers have always seen things. People coming
into town. Hey, you should see what we saw up there. We saw a big foot. I swear, we saw a big foot.
And it's still to this day, people see them up there above Granite Falls. Absolutely. I mean,
I think we've heard a few of those on this show for sure,
but the area definitely has things going on.
It sounds like no one ever experienced any weird health ailments on the property.
Nothing that could be attributed to like infrasound or anything at that?
No.
Gotcha.
Nothing like that.
Like I said, there's a lot of things that I've,
heard from other people.
And as far as I know, as far as from what I saw and what I heard and what I've heard
from people that I know from the area, it just seems like some offshoot of apes or humans
or whatever that just lives in the woods and keeps away from us as much as possible.
I don't know about some of the other stuff I hear people say, you know, like they, from another dimension or that they can walk through portals.
I know nothing about any of that kind of stuff.
What I saw seems completely natural to me, just like anything else out in the woods.
It's a little scarier.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then, man, that would push me over the edge if, if, like, I was already amped up about Bigfoot being outside my house.
and then I find a person hiding in the walls upstairs.
Holy mackle, I would be just messed up for life.
I can't believe you're as good as you are, but, you know, there you go.
My parents were very, very good at handling situations.
That's good.
That's very good.
Do you have any advice for people that might be in similar situations right now
where they have Bigfoot currently on their property?
I don't know except that, you know, that they were up there first, try and be understanding of them.
Like I said, when I saw that thing's face, it actually made me sad.
It was sad to see us.
Leave them alone.
If they're not hurting you, don't hurt them.
If they're coming around your house and pooping and hollering, like my dad said it,
He always just thought it was a way of saying, just stay away from us and leave us alone,
and they're going to remind us frequently to just, you know, mind our P's and Q's.
That's about all I can say.
I was so young when all that happened, and I was terrified when it did.
Like I said, I would run around my room at night, trying to get out of my room because my room was on the first level and it faced the woods.
I mean, there was like trees, two, three feet from my window.
It was thick woods.
So, you know, like I said, that's their home.
And it sounds, it feels weird to say this kind of stuff.
Because it just, it feels weird to know that I saw that.
And over the years, with so many people not believing you were calling you crazy,
you start asking yourself, you know, was I?
Was I crazy?
But my dad wasn't.
He saw it too.
And so all I can say is, if they're not hurting you, believe them be.
I think that's great advice, Mo.
I just want to say thank you for coming on the show to share what you experienced through that part of your life.
And just to make sure that there wasn't anything else that you wanted to share before we close things out for it tonight.
There is one kind of piece of advice that I'd like to give people.
Sure.
If you're going to be going up onto the Mount Loop, whether it's camping, hiking, hunting, fishing,
be very, very, very careful because the bears and the Sasquatch aren't what's dangerous up there.
It's the people up there now.
And there's some people that live on the Mount Loop that stay on the Mount Loop and there's
things that have happened there. People are the worst monsters in the world. So just be careful
when you're on the Mount Loop on the Granite Falls side. Once you get over to the Darrington side,
it's a little calmer. But above Granite Falls, be really careful. That's about it.
I think that's, that's, I mean, that's great, sounds like great advice. Is that if you're,
so I'm personally not familiar with, is that a highway you can,
beyond or is that a trail you can hike?
The Mount Loop Highway.
Okay, so it's, even if you're on this highway,
people can still be
messing with you, is what you're saying.
Yeah, in the camping grounds,
and if you're out in the woods,
playing, just randomly out in the woods.
Hiking, we've had
murders up there, we've had
and there's people who live up there
that just,
If you're going to go up there, go real far.
Go at least 20 miles up past town.
Because that's kind of the danger zone there.
That's good advice.
Always be prepared to survive, but also to protect yourself against bears,
cougars, potentially Bigfoot,
and one of the most dangerous predators of all,
which would be human beings.
Great advice. And Mo, thank you so much for coming on the show. Don't be afraid to reach out if there's anything else that you would like to share. But I really appreciate you coming on tonight.
No problem.
I just want to take a few minutes to say thank you to you, all my listeners, for listening to the podcast.
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.
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Make sure that you're subscribed.
Share the show with a friend.
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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.
Number one, encounters from Franklin County, Texas.
Number two, encounters from the entire state of Iowa.
Number three, encounters from Oak Ridge, Oregon, or the surrounding area.
Number four, any individuals that know about Bigfoot being flown off after the Mount St. Helens eruption.
Number five, individuals that have had a Bigfoot encounter while in the military.
Number six, those that have had a Bigfoot encounter in the Southern New Hampshire or North Central Massachusetts area, including Franklin County, Massachusetts.
Number seven, individuals that have had a Bigfoot encounter in a Bible,
camp or Boy Scout camp setting.
Number eight, individuals that have had Bigfoot try to enter their house forcibly while they
were living inside.
Number nine, individuals that have actively have a Bigfoot living on their property.
And lastly, any sightings that are in the Wachita National Forest Area of Oklahoma or Arkansas.
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.
I'll see you back next time, listeners.
Satswit Summerfest, this year, July 11th through the 12th,
it's going to be fantastic.
July 11th through 12th in Greenwater's Park in Oakridge, Oregon.
And listeners, if you're going to go,
you can get a two-day ticket for the cost of one.
If you use the code BFS, like Bigfoot Society.
But BFS, and it'll get used.
Some off your car.
Priscilla was nice enough to provide that for my listeners. So there you go. I look forward to seeing you there. So make sure you head over to www.sasquatch summerfest.com and pick up your tickets today.
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.
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On this episode of Plant Killers, we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer,
Bad Dirt.
What makes bad dirt so bad?
The answer?
The ingredients.
But fear not, true crime enthusiasts.
This story has a happy ending.
Miracle Grow organic raised bed and garden soil.
It's made with quality organic ingredients
from upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark.
Unlike the other guys who can't say the same,
looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over.
Thanks to Miracle Grow.
Join us next time on plant killers.
