Bigfoot Society - Yellowstone National Park Employee Reveals Shocking Bigfoot Encounter!
Episode Date: January 12, 2026WARNING: This episode contains strong language. Join Jeremiah Byron on this gripping episode of the Bigfoot Society Podcast as he interviews Iggy, a former Yellowstone National Park employee, about hi...s first-hand encounter with what he believes to be Bigfoot. Iggy details his harrowing experience from the summer of 2021, including unsettling encounters with mysterious sounds, sensations, and ultimately, a sighting of the elusive creature. Iggy also shares his journey through dense wildlife areas of the park, the mystifying behaviors of the local fauna, and the emotional impact of the sighting which led him to quit his job shortly thereafter. This eye-opening account is sure to leave listeners with more questions than answers about what truly resides deep in America's national parks.🗣️ Share Your StoryHad a Bigfoot encounter or strange experience?Send it to bigfootsociety@gmail.com – your story might be featured on the show!🎥 Watch & Subscribe on YouTube🔴 Subscribe here → Bigfoot Society YouTube💬 Leave a comment & let us know your thoughts!📞 Leave a voicemail with your story → Speakpipe (Use multiple voicemails if needed)👥 Share this episode → Watch & Share🎧 More episodes → Podcast Playlist🌲 Recommended: New Jersey Bigfoot Encounters💥 Support the Show & Get Perks✅ Join the community on Supercast – Become a Member✅ Listen ad-free & early on YouTube – Join Here📱 Let’s ConnectInstagram: @bigfootsocietyTwitter: @bigfoot_societyTikTok: @bigfoot.society🧰 Tools & Partners I Use (Affiliate Links)These help support the show at no extra cost to you:Beam (Better Sleep): Try BeamWildgrain (Better Bread): Join HereSeed (Probiotics): Get SeedMedi-Share (Healthcare): Learn MoreLMNT (Electrolytes) Free Sample Pack with your first purchase! : Get LMNTOrganic and non-GMO groceries delivered for lesshttp://thrv.me/uarEhS🎙️ Podcasting Tools:Repurpose.io: Try ItDescript: Sign UpStreamyard: Start RecordingRiverside.fm: Try Riverside🎧 My Audio Interface: View on Amazon☕ Buy Me a Coffee – Support Here🛍️ Grab Some Merch – Shop on Etsy📬 Mailing Address:Bigfoot Society125 E 1st St. #233Earlham, IA 50072
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Listener discretion is advised this episode contains strong language that might not be suitable for all audiences.
You're listening to Bigfoot Society and I'm Jeremiah Byron.
In this show, we go beyond the campfire stories to bring you first-hand encounters from people who say they've seen something impossible.
From backwoods trails and remote mountain haulers to quiet farms and crowded highways, the stories come from everywhere.
And each one leaves us with more questions than answers.
these are the voices of the people who've lived it.
So settle in because today you'll hear another account that just might change the way you see the woods forever.
So stay with us.
All right, Bigfoot Society.
Thanks for coming back.
We've got a interview with a very interesting individual today.
His name is Iggy.
Welcome to the show.
Iggy.
How are you doing today, sir?
All right.
Good afternoon.
Thanks for having me.
I appreciate your time.
Absolutely.
Iggy reached out to me through email.
He's got a very interesting.
story. This is really the first time that you've shared this account, correct, Iggy?
Yes. Any detailed account? Yeah, first time sharing it publicly. Absolutely. So a little
background about Iggy and Iggy will go more into this in a few minutes, but Iggy was contracted
as a park employee in 2021 in Yellowstone National Park. And during your time there, you had a very
interesting encounter with what we believe to be a Bigfoot.
So you've got a fascinating story.
And Iggy, is there anything else that the audience would need to know about your background
before we get into it?
At the time, I was a college student and I was looking for an adventurous type of job.
And I had found that there's companies out there that sponsor students and people looking
for work in national parts across the country.
found that interesting and I went for it and I got the job. So I think that's important to realize
that almost anyone in this country, if they have no criminal background, can go apply for these
federal sponsored jobs and get access to the parks. Absolutely. Are you able to share anything
about what your normal day-to-day was like working at the park? Yeah. So we worked depending on where
the company, which I won't name, it's one. So if you really wanted to find it, you could. But in terms of where they assigned you, it was random. So you showed up to the West entrance. I believe it's the Roosevelt entrance. Someone can correct me if I'm wrong on the exact name. But there you meet at a type of a warehouse type of location. It's very almost militarized kind of vibe. You almost show up and they, depending on what your job is, right? There's people that do laundry. There's people that work.
in the hotel, everything you can imagine. You're kind of thrown into a group of people that are
also doing that. And they kind of become your friends and you start merging like-minded ideas.
I don't know, just anywhere you start a job, kind of. And from there, I was assigned to Mammoth Springs,
which is one of the earlier points in the park. It's right by the main entrance. We say right by,
but it's like 15 miles.
The next one would be, I think it's the Lake Cabin, or no, the Roosevelt Cabin, which is a very beautiful cabin.
It's out in middle of nowhere.
It used to be President Roosevelt's kind of horse stables or something like this.
And then it goes on and on from the Lake Cabin, which is very famous with the Geyser and then all the way up.
So in terms of where and how I can access the park, as long as I wasn't clocked in working, I could go anywhere.
And I didn't have to pay or anything.
I had a sticker and passes on my vehicle that showed I was a park employee.
So I was left alone most of the time.
Rangers never gave me trouble.
They did give other people trouble in the sense of like we usually had people.
I don't know who would do it.
I wouldn't now that I had this experience, but people would sleep in their cars in the park
to not have to wait in line or go in the next day.
and that's illegal if anyone didn't know.
It's also highly not advised, since there's bears and lots of things that could potentially
kill you.
When I was there, I don't like to get conspiracal, especially starting a new job.
I never really thought of bringing up Sasquatch while at work, but three people died while
I was in Yellowstone.
One girl was dragged out of her tent, supposedly because of an undiscarded tampon that
she didn't throw away, didn't take it out of her pack, left it in her pack. And they said a bear
dragged her out. Another guy was dismembered by the river. He was supposedly fishing down wind of the
river, came across a moose carcass. And these are all anecdotes that can be verified or not
verified, but I think the audience needs to take into account that I was in a town called
Gardner, Montana. It's the only town by that entrance. I don't know what the population is.
But it's no more than, I wouldn't even say, 5,000 people when there isn't, let's say, a peak time in the season.
So in terms of that, that's the areas I had access to and the areas that I started at when I got there.
Just to clarify a few things.
So the second, you're saying that an individual was down by a river and was dismembered by something by a moose carcass, correct?
Yeah.
Yes, he was actually a fly fishing guide for one of the companies that worked in Gardner.
Oh, my goodness.
Okay.
And then you said there was a total of three things that were reported?
Yes.
And the third one, I don't recall anyone dying, but I do remember they were saying there was bears and someone had to leave the area.
But the first two, I do recall vividly because I asked, I said, well, how did the girl pass away?
I believe this was during our first day training.
Like the first day you arrive, there's a guy who basically threatens you.
He's like, if anyone has anything that is federally basically prohibited because it is a federal park.
We got to remember this.
They were kind of patting us down.
And along with this type of vetting because they drug tested us and they did background checks as well before you get hired.
The bigger part was the bear training.
So this gentleman taught us, like, if you do encounter a bear, because we are in the park.
We're not outside.
You know, basics, you put your hands like this behind your neck and you try to throw your
backpack over the back of your neck type of stuff.
So, you know, the bear doesn't necessarily kill you.
At that point, I'd call it a quits.
But that was when I asked, I said, well, why did this girl pass away?
And he said, oh, you know, she did everything right to put her food and stuff in the tree.
But it turns out they, they certainly.
to 10 and she had a women's product that wasn't disposed of that she had apparently used.
And that's what the bear got a cent on.
From my understanding, I'm sure since you've come across people across this country,
I mean, I've been told bears can smell a drop of blood on 8,000 feet mountain.
So that was a big wake-up call for me, especially since I fish.
So like when I would have my free time, I would clock out.
get in my truck, I put the fly fishing route in the truck, and I literally drive up or down
until I felt like, oh, you know, today I'm feeling, you know, chill. I just want to fish close to
where I work and go home. Or then other days I'd go, you know what, screw it. I'm going to drive
all the way to the Eagle River or the Yellowstone River and drive through Lamar Valley, you know,
all the way up in there, a good 20, 30 miles. And I was very naive. I thought of the John Wayne movies.
I thought of the Wild West people.
And I'm like, oh, I'm good.
You know, I'm not bothering anybody.
I'm doing my own thing.
So that's basically the liberty I had there.
Absolutely.
Okay.
Another thing I do want to point out really quickly is that Iggy was nice enough when asked to do so.
Or you may have done it without me asking.
I can't remember.
But end of the day, you have provided.
evidence that you were employed doing what you said you were doing, which thank you for doing so.
So I have checked that employment history, which should lend some credence to this interview as well.
And as this is a very, very big deal for you to come on record like this, as we were talking about before,
another question is when you were working in the park or around the park, did you ever hear any reports or sightings of Bigfoot besides what you encountered yourself?
Well, my inquis, not inquisition, but my curiosity was always peaky.
I don't know how to say it, but I'll just say it how I would say it to a friend.
Whenever we would go out to like a bar or we would go to little towns along the highway,
I'm not sure if you, I'm sure a lot of your listeners have heard of a festival called the Sturges Motorcycle Festival.
And I'm not part of that type of community.
They're good guys, a cool guys, but very intimidating people.
And along the highway where we were at, there's lots of bars that these bikers stop at.
So we'd stop and go drink and talk to the people.
people there. And on one instance, on the Bairtooth Highway, I can send you the name of the bar. I have a
picture in front of it. I don't recall it now. I just remember they had a big Grateful Dead logo on the
top of the bar, and there's a beautiful mountain behind it. But I was speaking to a man there, and I brought up,
hey, do you guys believe in Bigfoot up here? Because if where I was was isolated, these people are
living in middle of nowhere. Like there's one road that goes through it. You know, they got one
general store. Honestly, I would never not recommend to anyone in our country to not experience
a Fourth of July up in, you know, the high country or God's country, as they call it there.
It's very beautiful. But I remember this gentleman saying to me, oh, you mean the hairy man.
And when he referenced it in a more, I guess, not domesticated, but in a more like joily,
like daily occurrence like oh yeah we see them all the time they run through a yard my wife's seen them and
anyone can a lot of my co-workers that were with me all these guys are you know just mount crazy boony people
and i'm like i don't know why this gentleman would have any reason to lie about this i mean one thing
is scaring off tourists or you know wanting to come off like oh i'm a big mountain man but the way
this gentleman had said it to me was pretty straightforward and pretty like it's it's here and it's there
and you just have to be aware.
Other than that, it wasn't like, yeah, we saw one last week or we saw one last month,
but he did reference it as the hairy man, and that's the first time in my life I had met someone that isn't online
or just, you know, in the field of Sasquots that referenced it like that.
So it's like if I met a random guy at a bar and said, hey, man, what did you see?
Oh, yeah, this.
And that shocked me.
It took me back.
Gotcha.
Okay.
Very interesting.
Um, Iggy, I'd say, uh, now as a good time as any, uh, feel free to, to share, uh,
what happened to you, uh, that day when you, you had your encounter in Yellowstone.
So, um, it, it went like this, um, along the mountain side. I think it's called Mount electric or
I don't know what the mountain is because there's so many mountains, but a lot of the
co-workers at the company I was working with, at, um, just like any social instance.
There's groups that create and come up out of, you know, working together every day.
And there was an age range of people being maybe in the older side of their early 50s,
even some people into the early 60s who, you know, they were older people,
maybe harder on their times trying to, you know, get their room and board paid for.
And at the same time, there was a lot of people below the age of 25.
And, you know, people who are younger, we like to party and do fun stuff.
And they would have these get-togethers in parts of the park that the employees would deem or consider where the cool kids or like the cool guys would go hang out, away from the tourist, away from the trails, away from the trailheads, mainly on logging roads or parts of the park that had been shut down by previous fires and stuff only they know about.
So when I got the invitation to go to one of these get-togethers, I, you know, I said, I'm not going to say no.
because I've been here three, four weeks, and I've noticed that at night when everyone's off,
the normal thing to do was like, okay, we have an employee can'tina where we can go and drink
and eat, and it's not where the guests are. And people hang out there. It's very much so like
a rec center. It felt like a summer camp. You know, it was like they had a big gym area,
like a summer camp, like you'd see in the movies from the 80s. You know, like, I don't know,
like cafeteria style food. It's just very Americana. And for these cool kids, it wasn't enough,
right? So we went out and I'm in a 96 F-150. I still have her. Beautiful truck. I love it. It got me
out of there. But in terms of going to this party or get together, whatever you want to call it,
I was, I think, invited mainly because my truck had enough space to take more people. I don't know,
but we went up there for a good hour.
We left out of Gardnery,
we went down and left the park,
went into Gardner,
which is in Wyoming,
not Montana.
And in Wyoming,
I could not tell anyone.
I sent you guys a geographical pinpoint,
but I don't know which way or how we got up there.
I was with people who were instructing me who knew the area.
So getting up was fine.
We had gone up to about around 8,000 feet.
This is after.
I wasn't looking at elevation when we were going up, but we were that high up.
And we had spent about an hour or so together.
We were cowboy camping.
For anyone who doesn't know that, here's just sleeping under the stars.
No, nothing.
Just bag on the ground.
And maybe 30, 40 minutes into the get-together itself, I had a little disagreement with
some of my coworkers.
We had a disagreement about some tobacco that we had purchased and agreed to use as a group
on the get-together.
And one thing led to another, and I was shorted my cut of the tobacco.
And in terms of me being a prideful person, I was upset.
And in a mindset, you know, I'm a city guy.
I'm from Los Angeles.
And you screw me over like that.
You piss me off, and I'm getting out.
So I decide to leave.
And that's my first mistake of the night, because we're on a mountain.
There's no lights.
I mean, I'm not going to be ignorant and say, like, I'm expecting their
be lights on every road in Montana or Wyoming, but we were high up enough up there that
without proper instruction, you can get lost. I vividly remember looking at Brady and going,
like, how the hell do I get off this mountain? And I'm talking to some stoner kid from Colorado.
I should have known better as well to ask him for how to get off the mountain. And I remember
him telling me, hang left until you, just hang lefts until you get back onto the highway.
I leave angrily, and I don't recall orienting myself before leaving.
It was kind of a thing of just get in the car and start driving.
I do that.
I go down one, two, three roads, and everything's fine.
I feel okay.
Maybe after the fourth or fifth turn and I start realizing like, okay, you know, now they're
turning into more roads.
And now it's like a little log road and there's more trees closer to the truck.
Like I could stick my hand out.
even extend it and there's a tree on the truck scraping my vehicle. I'm not a survival guy like we
spoke on earlier before we got onto this call. I have no experience in the woods. I'm not here to say
I'm a woodsman or I can survive or anything like this. But my instincts told me, you know, it's dark.
It's a 96 F150. The lights only go so far. I should stop my car and I should wait for a day.
And then the next day, you know, I might miss work. I might get in trouble, but I'm not going to drive off the mountain. I'm not going to get lost. I did have in the back of the truck, as most people do who work in the park, you have to have gasoline. So I had about nine gallons of gasoline in a jerry can. And I looked at my little gas monitor thing and it was maybe at a quarter of a thing. And I sat there. I just sat there in the darkness. And as I said in my email to you, I'm not a friend.
to say it. I don't think it makes me look less, but I listen to ASMR. A lot of people do nowadays.
And I have videos that I save on my phone. When I fly, whenever I'm, you know, in a space that I'm
nervous, I'll play it, and I'll just calm down. So I did that. I parked the car in the middle of a
dried creek bed or what I thought was a road, but later turned out to be a little creek bed.
And I said, I'm going to play these ASMR videos. And it's a single cat.
truck and I'm a big guy. So there's no laying down. Like you're like this. And maybe an hour into doing that,
I thought to myself, what are you doing? You're ridiculous. You're listening to ASMR on a mountain and
you're lost because you got angry of some tobacco. And it was just around then when I started
getting a sensation of being watched of being prayed upon in a way. I'm a pretty spiritual person.
I believe in Jesus.
I believe in the bad stuff as well.
So naturally, my first instinct is, you know, in the name of Jesus.
You know, I trust myself.
I trust God and all this jazz.
But it got to a point where I started feeling and hearing like pebbles and little things
ticking off the back of the bed of the truck.
It's an completely steel body vehicle.
So when you hear it get hit, it's like an older, it sounds like those.
movies when when a helicopter is getting hit by machine gun is tap tap tap tap tap tap and when I
started hearing that I'm like what the hell is that like I can't I can't make a connection to it
I lower my windows on my truck and I get the sensation that something's not good I don't hear a
single thing this is the middle of June in Montana and Wyoming so I remember specifically too
when I was fly fishing, all these people coming and going, oh, yeah, we're here for the salmon
run because the salmon flies and these big insects, they spawn at a certain part of the year.
And they're pretty big.
You can hear them, like zizz, and they jump on the water and the fish will go for them.
And I remember that hearing it all day, all night, every day, because it's summer, it's hot,
and it's humid and it's, you know, it's nature.
And there was nothing.
It was, there was no noise.
It's not even an owl hooting or anything.
I remember looking at the trees and I could see them swaying.
And as I say in my email, the moment I take my eyes off of the tree line with the truck, I see the silhouette and the figure of this large, just tremendous thing just standing there.
Like arms like this, shoulders, I don't know if it's because its shoulders are broader.
I don't know, but it didn't feel like it had a neck.
I'm doing here, like its necks are up here, and its head takes over here. No facial details that I
could make out of. All I could see was black silhouette. And this was a black that was blacker than the
tree line. There was a cloud in the night. It was a clear, crisp night. And after that, I just sat there
in my truck and said, what the hell am I looking at? Maybe. Maybe.
30, 40 minutes into just contemplating, like, what the hell is that? I start getting a sensation of
remorse and dread. Like, you need to leave. Part of me was like, should I get out and put gas in the
truck? A moment I started hearing more pebbles, I put that truck and start. I drive maybe 200, 300,
yards and I start doing the same thing. This time around when I'm parked, I'm parked more in a
downward slope so I can make out that I'm going down off the mountain. And as I put in my email,
that's when I really started hearing the pebbles and the stuff hitting my vehicle. In terms of
other people that I've seen on these podcasts, I thank God, this thing didn't make a noise. I
thank God, this thing didn't look into my rear view.
Oh, one thing that I do remember very vividly is when I specifically put the truck in reverse,
or not reverse, in drive, and I put my foot on the brake.
And I, you know, when you put your foot on the brake and those, the rear lights turn on.
When you're in the middle of nowhere and there's no other light pollution, those lights are bright.
And when I hit that brake light, I could not just make out the figure, but I could see the dark ball.
right here, or right here.
And the thing was, it was, it was just humongous.
And when I saw that, I put the truck and drive and I hauled ass.
I don't think this thing ran after me.
I did not take the time to look back.
But I started driving in a way where I'm like, if I go off, I go off.
And maybe 30, I know it's maybe not as eventful as some of the other anecdotes you guys have had.
but to me it was the scariest moment of my life.
I mean, I didn't know what I was going to do.
I did not have a firearm.
I had maybe a can of bear spray,
but to kind of take the anecdote to its end,
I eventually drive down the mountain.
I veer off into an opening or a clearing,
and I see a big barn maybe 50, 100 yards away from the tree line opening up.
And I, this is,
anyone's going to laugh. I think it's ridiculous, but I turned my flashes on. I was honking like a
maniac. I'm yelling out the window. I'm going like, hey, anybody. I see this man come out. And it's
almost laughable how Hollywood it looked. Because this gentleman is out in his, like, I call him
like Wild West pajamas, like all in all one color white. He's got a shotgun in his hand. He's like,
what the hell are you doing on my land? And all I could say was, sir, sir, please, please look at my license plate.
Look at my license plate. I'm lost. I'm not going to tell this guy. Oh, yeah, I just saw a
Sasquatch 300 yards away from your house up on the mountain up that creek. I was trying to tell
him like, how to hell do I get out of here? And I remember him looking at me. He calmed down once he
saw I was from California. He goes, son, how far are you, where are you staying?
And I said, sir, I'm staying in Gardner.
He goes, you know how far away you are from Gardner?
I go, no, sir.
He goes, 50 miles.
50.
When he said 50, I go, what?
Then I said, oh my gosh, I was disoriented by this thing.
I was confused by this thing.
I was, I don't know, manipulated or something, but the whole hour and a half where I'm
driving and stopping pebbles, I see this thing.
I don't know what it was.
I got to finish the story before I tell you how my anecdotal feeling about it.
But I got off the mountain and I went back to work and maybe a week later after this experience, I was just emotionally not there.
I was distraught.
This is during COVID in 2021.
And with my luck, I had an employee who was a coworker who was exposed to COVID and they locked us all down.
in camp, like parts of the camp that weren't for guests.
And can you imagine for two weeks sitting in a cabin thinking and remembering?
And I didn't even last two weeks.
Eight days into it, I quit the job.
And I got in my truck and I left.
I was telling my mom and dad, I was like, I couldn't tell my mom because she's very Christian.
And if she ever watches this, I'm sure she'll say something like,
oh, it was maybe a bad demon or a spiritual thing.
I know what I saw and I know what I felt.
That's no spiritual thing.
This thing was large.
This thing was imposing itself.
The one thing I take away, though, is that within that confusion, within driving off,
I don't know if I encountered the same one all along the same time.
And other people I've spoken to along the years, not like yourself, but when I would drive
back to school, I went to school in Oklahoma.
I would drive through Navajo land or the Sioux tribe land in Arizona.
And any time I'd stop, I'd try to talk to some people about it because they were the only people that would listen to me.
I still remember to this day, there's a gentleman in Tukamanshi or Tukumanshi.
I can't say the word right in New Mexico, but it's a very small town, Tukumankanxi, something like this, outside of Albuquerque.
And he would tell me about Skinwalkers and how not to whistle at night.
How even until this day, if you report a Sasquatch or whatever the tribe calls them, the shaman police, the tribal police will go out and they will verify and they'll do what they need to do for their own anecdotal sense.
But yeah, that was basically what I experienced.
I quit my job after eight days of that.
and I couldn't, I just couldn't be there.
I didn't, I didn't want to think about it.
I didn't want to be anywhere.
It was, it was very sad because when I got there, I was awestruck.
I was like, oh my gosh, look at this river.
Look at this mountain.
I want to go up this, this hill and climb it.
And then it turned into like, yeah, no, we're not doing that.
Like, we're staying within the peripheral of like, if I don't see a National Parks logo on a little, you know,
sign or whatever.
Like whenever you arrive at one of these little pinpoints in the park,
you'll always see a sign that says the name of where you're at.
So I don't want to go too fast,
but my experience wasn't something that lasted six,
seven hours.
It was maybe two, three hours up on that mountain,
driving down and up.
And not the last thing,
but the last thing I want to leave an anecdotal to that
is that I strongly believe that I think one of them wasn't bad that was trying to get me off the
mountain, if that makes sense.
Because people don't just get off those mountains.
That's what really like stays with me.
It's like, you see all these people in the missing 100 or whatever that thing is.
And it's like, these guys are avid hunts or hunters and they go missing.
And what stopped my fat ass, excuse me, for saying it that way from not dying?
That's something that really stays with me.
Like, I don't know how to explain that.
I guess it was God or my intuition telling me just keep going.
But I don't want to think of these things negatively.
So I do consider the potential idea that, hey, maybe one of these things was trying to scare the shit out of me because there was another one that was actually trying to hurt me.
This is Daniel Fischel.
And Ryder Strong from PodMeet's World.
Cat parents unite.
We have to look out for each other.
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Like how family is precious.
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today. Sponsored by GSK. And that's when I left. So that was my experience in Yellowstone.
There's some wild, wild stuff. My goodness, thank you for sharing what happened to you that night, Iggy.
And the location, so you did provide the location to me. Is that something that we are not putting out there?
do you feel about that?
That is something I would want you to share.
I think I left it out of my story, but thank you for bringing that up.
In the moment of looking at the ASMR video or just being on my phone, I had no reception.
There's nothing I can do on that phone.
But my good friend, he's the type of guy who does off-roading.
Him and his father would go into like Death Valley here in California, and they would camp
in like abandoned mining camps, like those type of guys.
So they know what they're talking about.
And he told me, he said, yeah, if you go up there, man, you should download this app, which I recommend everyone should download.
It's called On X Road.
You can cut that out if you don't do sponsorships.
I don't know if they sponsor here, but I wish they would.
Yeah.
But I didn't pay for any subscription or anything crazy.
I just downloaded the basic app.
And when I was having that sensation, I'm like, I'm not going to be one of those guys who dies lost.
like at least if they effing find something, it's going to be my phone with a geographical pinpoint or something.
So I remember I picked up this exact phone.
I opened the on X off road and it had no connection.
So the only option you had was like put a point where you are.
And I hit that.
I hit the thank God I did.
So I knew where I was.
And it shows exactly where I stopped and I was listening to the ASMR and contemplating to go up or down.
So if you do end up sharing it and people do look at it, please, you know, tell me.
The only information I've found was that, and it scared the crap out of me too, was on the BFO's website when you put in like the areas of Montana and Wyoming and you put it in by region and by locality and like the really, really nitty gritty stuff.
When I put in my stuff, there had only been two other sightings.
One in 2010 and one in 1991, so pretty distant in space.
But they were all within four to five days within the day that I saw it.
That scared the shit out of me.
Oh, wow.
Oh, yeah.
When I saw that it was like, I saw it on the 21st or the 22nd, and then the guy in 91 saw it on the 16th.
And the guy in 2010 saw it on like the 26th to 27th.
I'm thinking, I don't know if I saw the same one.
they were all sightings that were, I don't know what the legalities are, but I know the BFO
follows a certain protocol to what is in level A, B or C level siding.
And they were all A.
Yeah, exactly.
They were all like really like detailed encounters.
So I sent mine in to kind of give myself credibility in my mind that, okay, I followed.
I did.
If no one wants to believe me, that's fine.
But I did what the community is expected.
which is to report a credible encounter and to at least try to document something that could help someone down the line understand their experience.
Like I said, I've watched your videos and I've seen the people and how some can't live with themselves or some people move away and I can't relate to that.
It's fascinating.
And looking at the area, I mean, it lines up with the story.
It looks like it's in it's south of Hayden Valley almost on the border of the park.
But if you look at the coordinates you gave, it's right next to what looks like a service road or some kind of trail that you probably would have followed with with the vehicle.
I believe that's what I'm looking at.
And it is right at just over 8,000 feet.
So yeah, I mean, without going super detailed.
it lines up with what you are you're sharing.
Now, maybe a few questions, and I don't know if you're able to notice any of this,
but could you get a feeling as to how far behind you the silhouette was that you were looking at?
20 feet, 30 feet.
I mean, you got to remember, I mean, when, I don't know how if I'll ever in my life,
I think I'd have the balls to go up again and see it, specifically that area, because I don't want my mind to tell me things that aren't.
I want to go see it again because I remember when I turned and I opened my window, I would extend my arm and I couldn't fully extend my arm without hitting a sapling or hitting a tree or touching something that was vegetation.
So I was like whatever I saw was darker than the trees that were right in front of my car.
And I don't know how to explain it in a way that makes sense, but think of like a clear night.
It's dark, but the light is still bright.
Like you can make out whatever the hell is, you know, right in front of you.
I could see, okay, tree, tree.
And then the trail, whatever you're talking about was clear enough for me to be like, okay, I can squiggle through here.
I'll stop until either the truck can't fit or I got to either walk out.
So, yeah, I mean, I could tell this thing was 20, 30, 40 feet away from me.
the first time I saw it maybe closer to 100 feet.
It wasn't as like close because I would have,
trust me, I'm a scarity cat.
Like if I would have made it out,
like the first time if I would have saw it 20, 30 feet,
I wouldn't have stopped driving.
I'm Jeremiah.
I mean, there was no, like I'm just to give him more background.
I'm part Chilean, right?
In South America,
we don't really have this type of story
unless you go really, really, really south into Patagonia.
So where I live, well, you've got to be worried about a Puma maybe.
And for me to think or contemplate that there's something out there that I'm a big dude,
I'm 6-1, 330 pounds.
So, like, I mean, I get it.
Like a bear can still kill you and all this jazz.
But like, hey, I can, you know, I'm, I'm intimidating to people.
Maybe an animal will be freaked out now.
No way.
This thing was holding its ground.
I don't know if it's true or not.
But if you look at the satellite maps of where I was, I've noticed that there's all these trees that are just downed.
They're all like, it's all trees that are down.
And I don't think I was in an area where these things eat or sleep, but I do think I was in an area where they transition and walk through.
Because over the years, not sharing with anyone, your mind eats at you.
And you start looking at things.
And you look at like, not just where you were, but you start scrolling down.
And you're like, oh, my gosh, like, I'm in a valley.
Like this thing is going from this side of the valley on the mountain that I'm on, maybe across to wherever.
Because where this guy lived that I pulled out into his barn, it was beautiful.
There was a river running through it.
There was vast grass.
Like this guy, I guess he grew alfalfire or something for cattle.
It was very pish-pish picturesque, if that's the word.
But no, on top of that mountain, it felt like hell.
I felt like a scene from the Lion King, like when I was a kid, like when the Simba gets hunted by the hyenas, it was terrible.
It was it was not a fun experience.
So it sounds like after this happened, did you get to talk to any of the individuals you were out there with before you got separated about what happened or no?
I didn't speak to anyone about that.
But one thing I did do, since I stayed eight days after I had that experience and I saw what I saw,
me and my friends tried to like, my buddy, I remember, he was older.
So he was from Mississippi.
He went to, what's that, Mississippi State, very proud Southern guy.
And I remember him very well because we would go out into the mountains and we would listen.
He was an older guy.
So we'd listen to like 80s, WWE music, like macho man.
Oh, yes.
We'd listen to the intro songs all the way up.
up, just pumping ourselves up and enjoying the day.
And on one situation, and this is what really cemented in my mind that I think I encountered
a Sasquatch was that we were in the Lamar Valley driving back from the bars.
And I'm looking to the left of my shoulder or to the riders.
I don't know.
I'm looking out the window.
And I see this mountain and I see about 150.
I have the video too.
I'll send it to you.
I have about 150 or 100 bison or just running down the mountain.
And I don't know if I was just people.
that don't watch nature shows or I don't know.
I'm not an outdoorsman, but I know nature.
And I'm like, stop, Justin, stop the truck.
It's like, why?
Why do we guys?
I'm like, dude, these things are running from something.
Like, they don't just run.
Like, it's not, it's not like a movie.
And it turns out they were being, they were being hunted by some wolves.
And I saw it live and I filmed it.
I was yelling and screaming because my emotions are, it's a, when somebody,
when you see something in nature that you see on TV,
TV is so different than like seeing it on the television.
Like the, I don't know what how to explain it, but you get euphoria.
You get a you get like a primal feeling like, oh my God, like that thing is killing that thing.
And you know, if we wanted to, we could go scare it off and take the bison type of thing.
It's a very caveman vibe that I felt like I was, I'll send you the video.
I was yelling like, what the F is that?
Because it was shocking.
But the moral of the story and what I thought sealed the deal for me on the Sasquatch was that I went back to the park.
And we're sitting at the employee canteena that I was telling you guys about earlier.
And these Rangers, the Rangers are like, they're the cool, cool guys.
Like, they're the ones that they're the, like, they're the ones that to say, oh, yeah, I'm a federal employee.
I'm a, I'm a park ranger with the U.S. Park Rangers service.
You know, they wear their fancy boots and the high socks and all that jazz.
And I showed them.
I said, hey, you know, I just wanted to show you this because I thought it was cool.
And Jeremiah, this guy looks at me.
This old guy, 60 years old looks at me.
He goes, son, I've worked in this park.
30 years.
30 years.
I've never seen a wolf in the Lamar Valley on my own, let alone a wolf going after bison in the Lamar Valley.
And we were right by, it was pretty cool.
We were right by a national geographic camp where they set up camp and they work on documentaries and all that.
And I told the Rangers there, I said, yeah, I saw this.
I showed them the video that I'll send to you.
And that's what he said to me.
He said, I've worked here 30 years.
I've never seen a wolf in the.
valley, let alone a wolf going after bison alone, you know, in the middle of the day or towards
the evening, I think it was. So that in my mind told me, I'm like, okay, if this ranger guy who
literally is life passion is to go after these things and find them told me this, there's a very
good chance I maybe encountered a Sasquatch, even though I didn't want to tell myself that.
Like, every time I would say it, I'd get a gut feeling and I'd get chicken skin. But now I feel
about it because I truly don't believe they're bad or I don't know if that sounds immature to say,
but I just think that they're, you know, people take different perspectives,
but it could easily be a homo erectus that didn't get wiped out after the ice age or crossed
over from the ice bridge itself and could sustain itself in that type of environment.
I try to look at it reasonably and logically, so I don't go insane.
But that's something I thought I should say because that range you really, you know,
slap me across the face when he said that because I was like, wow, if this guy's been here 30 years,
he's never seen a wolf, there's a good chance that in the three months that I've been here,
I did see what I saw because I saw the wolf. So why couldn't I have seen Sasquatch?
No, I agree with it. I mean, there are places in that park where just people don't go, stuff can live.
It is, it is super, super remote. And there are stories of even park,
strangers that have had sightings and experiences from back in the day long ago.
But it is just such a privilege to talk to yourself, Iggy, and to hear what you experienced.
And I hope that this maybe encourages people that are listening that have also had an experience that worked in a national park or something.
similar to be able to come forward and to share what they've experienced.
I mean, Iggy, you're putting yourself literally on camera to share this.
It's a very big deal.
You know, before we go, I do want to say, you know, I could care less if it affects me
or my persona because I know what I saw.
I know what I experienced.
I've noticed that on these Bigfoot podcast or these, I don't want to say shows.
because I don't think they're shows.
It's not a show when someone shares something that's so personal to them.
But on these anecdotal reports, if you want to call them that,
they usually are older people or people that I think feel more like happy or complete with their life
in terms of these types of experiences.
Because I can't imagine being a person that has a generational type of issue where their family sees it,
they see it and all these types of things.
So if I could say anything, I know that there's lots of employees that,
maybe encountered something. I know that there's people that have worked in the parks in the winter
season when it's even less people, when it's all closed. And I encourage you to share your
anecdotes because, like, if I'm speaking to them, if you're watching and you work for the National
Park, you know how they operate. It's a very, like, cut off your head world. I'm not going to,
I'm not going to sugarcoat. If they want to get rid of you, they get rid of you. Like,
the first day you're there, and I'll leave it with this, they tell you. They're like, just to
remind you, we have a courthouse. They do. They have a courthouse in Yellowstone with a judge who lives
their full time who's ready to prosecute anyone for anything. Let it be park vandalization. Let it be
anything that is basically a federal crime. So in terms of going out there, don't be afraid. I'm not. I mean,
And, you know, I like to think of it as iris to myself to go work out there for them.
And I encountered something that is in, I don't know, I mean, I'm a taxpayer.
You're a taxpayer.
We pay for those parks to be maintained.
We should well know what the hell is in them.
So I thank you for your time and consideration and listening to me and what I had to say about my experience.
Thank you, Iggy.
And if anyone would like to reach out, they can contact me directly at email address, Bigfoot Society,
at gmail.com. Thanks again, Iggy.
Thank you.
Have you ever heard all the accounts of Bigfoot activity around Oak Ridge, Oregon, and you think
to yourself, man, I would love to get out in those woods and experience it for myself.
Well, guess what?
This year, you can.
If this is interesting to you, stay tuned because it's pretty cool.
Sasquatch Summerfest is coming up July 10th through the 11th, 2026.
it's going to be even better than the previous years reason number one.
I'll be one of the speakers.
It's going to be wild.
I'll probably, I'll say this.
There may be stuff you haven't heard anywhere else because let's just say sometimes it's, well, you just got to be there.
We'll leave it that.
More about looking for Bigfoot in the Oak Ridge Woods.
Now check this out.
You may know Jason Kenzie from.
his documentary series searching for Sasquatch.
Well, this year, you can not only go to the festival,
but you can also sign up for a trek deep in the wild forest
outside of Oak Ridge with Jason Kenzie to the Bigfoot spots
to look for Bigfoot.
There's only eight spots to sign up for this.
And yes, this will also be filmed for the next chapter
in his documentary series, which is
searching for Sasquatch.
This is a once-in-lifetime deal.
It's just, trust me, it's going to be a wild, wild experience.
To get a ticket, head on over to
Sasquatch Summerfest.com,
and listeners can use the code
BSP,
like Bigfoot Society podcast,
in order to get a two-day pass
for the price of a one-day pass.
So, thanks to Priscilla
for giving me that,
code so that you guys can get a little help with the cost there.
Appreciate that, Priscilla.
I hope to see you at the booth in Oak Ridge this year.
We can talk about your encounter.
I was able to talk to so many people last year and the year before.
It is an incredible time.
You're not going to want to miss it.
And I'll see you there.
Before we wrap this episode,
I want to say something directly to a very specific group
of listeners. If you're in the military, any branch, or forces, and if you've seen something
that no one can explain, or if you're a national park ranger or forestry worker who's been told
to stay quiet, if you're a pilot who's seen something strange down on the ground, or if you're
with the FBI, a federal agency, or working intelligence, and you stumbled upon something
you're not allowed to talk about, and if you're a firefighter, paramedic, or search and
rescue responder who's heard screams or found tracks that didn't make sense. If you're in the logging
industry on a remote oil field or trucker with government contracts and you've had something happen
that you've never told a soul. And if you're a biologist, a wildlife specialist or a field
researcher under contract who has found evidence you're not allowed to report, if you're a pastor,
a missionary, or someone on a spiritual retreat and you saw something that shook your faith,
or if you work in the shadows, CIA, NSA, or anything with clearance,
and you've seen what the public hasn't,
then I want to talk to you.
Even if it's anonymous,
you can reach me at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com.
The world needs to hear what you've been forced to carry alone,
and you're not alone.
You've got the story.
We've got the mic.
See you in the woods.
Thank you for listening to this episode of the Bigfoot Society podcast.
Every encounter we share reminds us that the world is bigger and stranger than we think
and that the truth is often hiding just beyond the tree line.
If you enjoyed this episode, please be sure to subscribe to the channel on YouTube,
hit the bell so you don't miss the next episode, and share this with a friend who's into mysteries,
monsters, or the unexplained.
And if you're listening to us on Spotify or Apple Podcast,
please follow the show there and leave us a five-star positive review because all that
helps more people discover the show. And remember, if you or someone you know has had a
Bigfoot citing, please, I'd love to hear from you. So email me at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com,
and let's start the conversation. If you haven't gotten a chance yet, check out our membership
community over at www.w.com.com. And that's where you can hear tomorrow's episode today,
early and ad-free, and members-only episodes every week. Also, it's a place to connect with other
people that are into the Bigfoot subject as much as you are. Thanks again for following along
with the Bigfoot Society. Until next time, keep your eyes open, trust your gut, and never stop asking
what else might be out there and see you in the woods. This is Daniel Fischel. And Ryder Strong from
PodMeet's World. Cat parents unite. We have to look out for each other. Yes, we all know the
feeling of being ignored by our little babies a little too well. Yeah, I often wonder to myself,
does my cat even love me? Well, there's only one solution to solve that. She,
Feed your cat Sheba and go from feeling ignored to truly adored in 12 days guaranteed or your money back.
Sheba has a wide array of products, appetizers, entrees, treats, and even a kitten's menu that will win over even the pickiest eater.
My cat bill is all about Sheba grilled.
Just snap, peel, and serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers.
He loves it.
Licks it to the bowl.
Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors, preservatives,
corn wheat or soy, so you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around the world,
but made right here in the USA.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious delicacies of Shiba.
To learn more, check out Shiba.com.
The all-new tropical butterfly refresher is now at Starbucks.
Dive into juicy guapa and passion fruit flavors.
With mango pineapple popping pearls bursting in every sip.
Ice cold, instantly refreshing, and impossible to put down.
Made for Summer only at Starbucks.
At the time,
I've learned some things,
like the value of the family,
the importance of the job,
and that the 99% of the people
of more of 50
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learn about the
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of the way difficult.
This is Daniel Fisciol.
And Ryder Strong from PodMeets World.
Cat parents unite.
We have to look out for each other.
Yes, we all know the feeling of being ignored by our little babies a little too well.
Yeah, I often wonder to myself, 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 a wide array of products, appetizers, entrees, treats, and even a kitten's menu that will win over even the pickiest eater.
My cat Bill is all about Sheba grilled.
Just snap, peel, and serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers.
He loves it. Licks it to the bowl.
Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors, preservatives, cornweed, or soy.
So you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around the world, but made right here in the USA.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious delicacies of Shiba.
To learn more, check out Shiba.com.
The all-new tropical butterfly refresher is now at Starbucks.
Dive into juicy guapa and passion fruit flavors.
With mango pineapple popping pearls bursting in every sip.
Ice cold, instantly refreshing and impossible to put down.
Made for summer only at Starbucks.
By the time I hit my 50s, I'd learned a few things.
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