MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Do you know how to get to Bells Canyon?
Episode Date: June 16, 2022Today’s podcast features two separate, unique, stories that are both themed around the same thing, strange events that took place in the wild. The first story you will hear is called, “Th...e Russian Death March,” and it’s about an event that was so terrifying, the one person who survived it could not speak when she finally stumbled, bloody and terrified, out of the forest. The second story you will hear is called, “Bells Canyon,” and it’s one of, if not the most, talked about episodes in the entire MrBallen content catalogue; It is about a solo hiker who comes face to face with a very strange nighttime visitorDISCLAIMER: This podcast is the remastered audio from two popular videos on my "MrBallen" YouTube channel. The first story, "The Russian Death March" is from a video of the same name. (Here is the link to that video -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vGtcfJOPOY). The second story, "Bells Canyon" is the top video inside of a Top 3 style video called, "Top 3 SCARIEST true stories | Spooky Stories Part 2." (Link to that video -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k402yukZAxE)For 100s more stories like these, check out my YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Download the Amazon Music app today.
Today's podcast features two separate, unique stories that are both themed around the same
thing.
Strange events that took place in the wild.
The audio from both of these stories has been pulled from my YouTube channel and has been
remastered for this episode.
The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
The first story you'll hear is called The Russian Death March, and it's about an event
that was so horrifying, the one person who survived it couldn't speak when she finally
stumbled bloody and terrified out of the forest.
The second story you'll hear is called Bell's Canyon, and it's one of, if not
the most, talked about episodes in the entire Mr. Ballin content catalog. It's about a solo hiker
who comes face to face with a very strange nighttime visitor. But before we get into today's
stories, if you're a fan of the strange, dark, and mysterious Delivered in Story format, then you've
come to the right podcast because that's all we do, and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday. So if that's of interest to you,
please kidnap the five-star review button and then force them to brush their teeth with a very
minty toothpaste. When they're done, make them drink a huge glass of orange juice. Also, please
subscribe to the Mr. Fallon Podcast wherever you listen to podcasts so you don't miss any of our
weekly uploads. Okay, let's get into our first story called the Russian Death March.
I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No? Short shorts? Free cocktails? Careless whispers?
OK, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all.
But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making with a secret he feels would ruin him if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
I'm Peter Frank-O'Pern.
And I'm Afua Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius
that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me.
Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all
time. Somebody who's had a huge impact on me, who I think objectively stands apart for the level of
her talent, the audacity of her message. If I was a first year at university, the first time I sat
down and really listened to her and engaged with her message, it totally floored me. And the truth and pain and messiness of her struggle, that's all
captured in unforgettable music that has stood the test of time. Think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across is so powerful, no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
By 1993, Lyudmila Korovinna, who was a 41-year-old Russian hiking instructor,
came under fairly intense criticism from her colleagues for being too survivalist with her students. They thought she was a little bit too aggressive with
how she pushed her students, putting them in unnecessarily risky situations out in the wild
where they weren't really ready for it and at any point she might push them too far and wind up
getting someone killed. Her students however absolutely adored her. They said on the mountains
she was fearless and in tune with nature, and they felt very safe around her.
And then at camp, she was very motherly and tender,
and always took the time to make sure all of her students were taken care of well before she was.
Former students have said the mentorship they received from Ludmilla went well beyond just hiking instruction.
They said she taught a mindset that they carried with them into adulthood, and they pointed to as one of the main reasons they were successful later in life. In the summer of 1993, Lyudmila was scheduled to lead an
expedition up to the Hamar-Daban Ridge, which is in eastern Siberia and it's one of the oldest
mountains on the planet. With her on this expedition would be six fairly experienced
hiking students that ranged in ages from 15 to 24 years old. One of those six students was a 23-year-old
young man named Sasha, who, although he was not Ludmila's biological son, she called him her son
because she had raised him ever since he was a young child, and he looked at Ludmila as his
mother. Sasha also happened to be the most physically fit and competent of all six hiking
students, and he would function more like an assistant to
Ludmilla on this particular hike rather than a pupil. The other five students were 24-year-old
Tatiana, 19-year-old Dennis, 16-year-old Victoria, 15-year-old Timur, and 17-year-old Valentina,
who she is the only reason we know anything about the horrible things that happened to this group up on Hamar Daban Ridge. On August 1st, 1993, Lyudmila and her hiking group boarded a trans-Siberian railway car
in Kazakhstan, and later that day they arrived in a town called Marino, which is on the eastern side
of Siberia on the southern end, and it butts up against the base of the Hamar Daban mountain range.
The Hamar Daban mountain was not considered a very
dangerous hike to make. It was relatively small. It was just under 2,400 meters in elevation,
and in the summertime, you'd have scores of recreational hikers all over this mountain range.
Plus, the weather forecast for Ludmila and her group's multi-day hike in that mountain range
was going to be incredibly favorable. It was going to be warm, clear, nice summer weather.
Ludmila had charted a course that began just outside of the town of Marino,
which is the town they were staying in that first night. They were going to start next to Lake Baikal,
which is the deepest lake in Russia. From the lake, they were going to move north and inland over the stretch that was totally barren. There was no trees, it was just rocks and grass,
before ultimately reaching the Hamar-Daban Ridge, which was their destination. And at that point, there would be shelter and firewood,
and they could take a break before ultimately descending. And so in total, from the lake all
the way to Hamar Dabon Ridge was approximately 50 miles. Ludmila's group would not be the only
group making this particular movement towards Hamar Dabon Ridge. They'd be taking their own
path, but there'd be two
other groups that were on similar courses, basically parallel to them, making their way up to the ridge.
And one of those groups was actually led by Ludmila's 16-year-old biological daughter, and they
had actually made plans to meet up on one of the last days of this multi-day hike. As they were
making their descent, there was a forest they were going to meet up in. So Ludmila and her six students
stayed the night in Merino, and the next morning they got up early and made their way
over to Lake Baikal. The weather's beautiful, they're excited to start their journey, and they take off.
And everything was going great until the late afternoon. It would turn out the weather forecasters
were just completely wrong, and as soon as the group climbed above the tree line, the temperatures
plummeted and it started raining and snowing on them.
It was just absolutely miserable.
This treacherous weather would persist over the next few days
and it really started to destroy the morale in the group.
But Ludmilla, she was a pro and she had hiked in far worse conditions than this.
And so she made a point of telling the group that this stuff happens.
Bad weather happens.
We are prepared.
We are trained. We're going to be fine.
You need to have a positive attitude about this.
We need to just keep pushing forward and not play a victim here.
And that was enough to inspire the group to just keep on going.
You know, they believed in Ludmilla and she's telling them to keep going.
So they kept going.
By the evening of August 4th, so this is three full days of hiking later,
they were only about 30 minutes
away from the summit. They have now reached the point where they are in the open section of the
mountain where there is no reprieve from the wind or the rain or the snow. There's no trees to block
anything. And so it's just an absolute abomination trying to climb this last stretch. Every step is
like an eternity as the wind just cuts through their clothes and they're soaking wet and miserable. Ludmila's students were not about to ask for a break. They knew how she
operated. She was someone that really believed in pushing through your own pain and fatigue and
misery. And she always led by example. And they saw her, you know, right out in front leading the
charge up towards the Hamar Daban Ridge. And so they were very surprised when she stopped
and she turned around and told them we're taking a break.
And in fact, we're actually gonna camp out for the night
right where we are right here.
No one knows why Ludmila made this decision.
You know, on the one hand,
it does make sense to take a break and say,
you know what, we'll reach the summit tomorrow.
We've had a really hard couple of days here
with the bad weather.
We'll make camp and we'll get some rest and we'll hit the summit tomorrow.
That makes sense.
But where she elected to make camp does not make sense.
She had them stop right smack dab in the middle of this totally open section of the mountain
where there are no trees.
There's no objects to protect them from the horrible wind and snow and ice and rain.
That's just going to be pelting them all night.
And so some people have speculated that when she looked at her crew of hikers, they were so badly
beaten down and tired and miserable that she knew she could not ask them to go any further. And so
that was why she said, let's just make camp here, we'll make do. Others have said her map may not
have been very accurate. And so she didn't know how close she was to the summit, where at the
summit there was literally a shelter that had firewood and a place for you to rest.
Maybe she didn't know she was so close. Perhaps she thought she was much farther away and this
is the best we can do. But what the inaccurate map theory does not account for is Ludmilla would
have known there is a forest about two and a half miles down the mountain, because the whole time
they've been on this hike, they've tried to stay up above the tree line as they make this final approach up to the ridge
and so she would have known there's a forest right down there and if i wanted to i could go down
there and seek shelter in the trees and so for whatever reason she decided that we can't go down
to the forest we got to stay here and so perhaps that lends more credibility to the idea that the
group was far more beaten down than maybe we even realize and
she thought they can't make the two and a half mile journey we're gonna have to just make camp
here and make do but regardless of her reasoning they did make camp right in the middle of this
open section they set up two wet crappy tents and they used their little kerosene stoves to make a
tiny meal and then they all crammed inside of these two tents and huddled as the wind howled outside.
That night, the storm got much worse.
The wind picked up and again,
they're totally exposed on this open section of the mountain.
And so they're just getting destroyed by this wind.
And at about 2 a.m., the wind actually broke the ropes
that were holding the tents down
and they had to go outside and retie them.
And they were able to do that.
And then a couple hours later at about 4 a.m.,
the wind actually lifted up the section of the tent that was facing where the wind was blowing and it pulled
the tent up in such a way that water rushed into the tent and soaked their sleeping bags and they
were able to go outside and they put the stakes back down on the ground but you know they were
sleeping in wet sleeping bags in the middle of this mountain in the middle of a storm so this
is getting quite dangerous at this point but they they were able to eventually fall asleep. And at about 10 a.m. the next morning, Ludmilla gets
up and looks outside and she can see that everything's frozen, that it's snowed and the
temperatures have dropped again and everything is just snow and ice. And she knows that, you know,
we're actually reaching very dangerous hypothermia territory. And if we don't warm up soon, this
could be life threatening. And so she woke
everybody up and she said, we need to go down into that forest and we need to start a fire as soon
as possible. And so everybody said, all right, they got up, they started packing up their things,
rolled up their tents, and they began walking down the mountain in a line. Although this was
not intended, when Ludmilla had said, we will reach the summit tomorrow, that had delayed their
schedule. And it meant they were not going to be able to meet up with her daughter the next day. But now in the morning when they're
deciding basically to abandon the summit and turn around and head down again, they were now back on
schedule to meet up with her daughter down in the forest. However, her daughter said she was at the
rendezvous point in the forest and Lyudmila and the six other hikers never showed. Four days later on August 9th, a group of
Ukrainian kayakers were making their way down this river in southern Siberia and they were passing by
the Hamar-Daban mountain range. And so as they're kind of slowly moving their way down, it's this
beautiful morning and they're looking up at the mountains all around them, the leader of this group
happens to see something move on his left side. There's a forest right up against the left side
of this river and he turns his head and he has to do a double take because there is
this girl who's standing there at the edge of the forest, looking out at them, totally expressionless.
And she's covered in blood and she's not doing anything. She's just standing there. And at first
he actually thought like, we need to leave. His first thought was we need to just get away from
this person. There's something wrong with this person. But very quickly, the group realized like we cannot abandon this girl.
This is a young girl who should not be out here. I don't know what she's doing out here. And so they
turned around and they went on shore and they yelled to her. They said, are you OK? And she
just stood there not reacting. And they tried a couple more times to say, you know, hey, we're
not going to hurt you. We just just wanna know what's going on.
And she didn't say a word.
She just stood there in shock.
She looked very scared.
They finally got up right next to her
and they asked her, you know,
what are you so scared of?
Where are you coming from?
And they just could not get her to speak.
But they're up close looking at her
and, you know, she's got blood all over her.
She looks dirty.
She looks like she might be sick.
And so they decide that, you know,
this girl needs help and they had blankets. And so they threw blankets over her. She looks dirty. She looks like she might be sick. And so they decide that, you know, this girl needs help. And they had blankets. And so they threw blankets over her. They put her in
one of the kayaks and they brought her back to town. Once in town, the Ukrainian kayakers went
and got authorities and said, hey, we found this girl. You know, she was covered in blood walking
out of the forest. We have no idea what's going on with her. And so authorities came over to speak
to her. And although she barely spoke, she would finally say that she was 17 years old, her name was Valentina Yudachenko, and that she had been a part of a seven-person hiking group up along the Hamar Daban Ridge.
And then she paused and they said, well, where's your hiking group? How did you get separated? This is what she told them.
Back on the morning of August 5th, so this would have been the morning after that terrible night's sleep on the mountain where the tent ropes are breaking and their sleeping bags are getting soaking wet.
Well, Valentina wakes up and she looks outside of the tent and she sees Ludmilla.
And she's standing there with her hands on her hips and she's looking around.
She looks very concerned.
Valentina goes out there and Ludmilla turns to her and says,
We need to leave. We need to go down to the forest and we need to make a fire.
Can you help me wake everybody up and start having them pack up their stuff so we can get moving?
So Valentina goes in, she starts waking people up and everybody very quickly packs up the tent,
packs up their things and they're in a line and they start walking down the mountain.
They had only made it about 10 meters into their descent when Sasha,
the 23-year-old young man that Ludmila considered her son, he just suddenly falls.
And the other hikers, Valentina included, run over and they help get him up again.
And he looks kind of shaken.
He takes a couple more steps and he falls again.
And this time when Valentina goes over to try to help him up with the others,
they see his eyes are wide and he looks like he's really terrified.
And then blood starts rushing out of his nose and his ears and his mouth.
And then he just suddenly dies. And Ludmila runs over and she grabs him and she's panicking and she's trying to feel
for a pulse and she's checking for his heart and then she screams out in pain and anguish and she
yells he's dead. The other hikers can't believe this is happening. They can't even process that
someone, any of them, had died, let alone it be Sasha, the most physically fit and healthy one of all of them,
including up until a few minutes ago.
He wasn't showing any signs or symptoms
that something was wrong.
He was perfectly fine.
What's going on?
Ludmilla was in shock.
She's on the ground and she's holding onto Sasha
and she's telling the group that she's not going anywhere.
She's staying with Sasha.
And Valentina would say,
the group is just falling apart at this point.
You have some of them that are crying, others who are just standing there looking around like what's
happening to us right now? And at some point Ludmilla collects herself and she says to the
group, go down to the forest. Go down to the forest and start a fire. And Valentina said they didn't
want to leave her and they were pleading with her to let them stay. And she said, no, go down to the
forest and start a fire. And finally, Valentina said the group would.
They'd get together and they'd turn around.
And not really knowing what was going to happen next, they just begin walking down this mountain.
And they only get a few steps before they hear Ludmilla yell out to come back.
She's saying, I can't move.
And they turn around and Valentina was towards the front of the returning group as they're going back up the mountain back to Ludmilla.
And she's now bleeding out of her nose and her ears and her mouth she's heaving like something's going on
inside of her and then all of a sudden she keels over on top of Sasha and she dies right in front
of them and now now the group is in hysterics and Valentina's in the front she can't see anybody
else and then she turns around and she can't believe what she's seeing to her side now everybody else is bleeding from their nose and their ears and their mouth. And some of them are
frothing from the mouth. Valentina reached for her mouth and her ears and her nose to look for blood
and there wasn't any. And then she turned and she saw 16-year-old Victoria and 24-year-old Tatiana
suddenly fall to the ground just like Sasha had, except they weren't just laying there. They began
rolling around and
ripping their clothes off and clutching at their throats and they're frothing at the mouth.
And so Valentina reaches down to try to help Victoria, the 16 year old, and Victoria bites
her on the hand that she pulls her hand back. And then Victoria curls into a ball and then goes
still. And then Tatiana begins hitting her head on a rock over and over and over again until she goes still.
At this point, Valentina is in pure survival mode. And so she looks at the other two,
which was 15-year-old Timur and 19-year-old Dennis. Everybody else is down on the ground
at this point. And she sees Dennis is moving behind a rock and he looks like he's not acting
as erratic as everybody else. And so she starts making her way over to Dennis to see if he's
going to be okay. And on the way, she sees 15-year-old Timur fall to the ground, and he's suddenly lying there still. And
so she believes he's dead too. She gets over to Dennis, and he's bleeding profusely from all of
his orifices in his head, but he's talking to her. And he's saying, okay, you need to go back to your
bag, get out whatever you can that is essential, ditch the rest, and run down to the forest, and
I'll meet you down there. And so Valentina says, okay, she makes her way up to her bag. She gets her sleeping bag and
a couple other small items. And when she turns around to go back to Dennis, she sees that he's
now slouched over his backpack and now the blood is just pouring out of his head. And she can tell
that almost certainly he's dead as well. And so not only is she all alone, she's now totally
traumatized and believes whatever has happened to them is going to happen to her. And so not only is she all alone, she's now totally traumatized and believes whatever has happened to them is going to happen to her.
And so she runs down the mountain and she goes into the forest and she gets underneath this rock overhang.
She puts her sleeping bag down, she crawls inside and she drifts in and out of consciousness for the rest of the day.
And then that night, she's still laying there and the storm picked up dramatically.
And she could hear all night these
huge trees all over the mountain falling and slamming all around her and so she's thinking
if I don't die from whatever killed my friends I'm gonna get hit by one of these trees but she
manages to get through the night the next morning the storm had cleared and so Valentina gets up
and she's thinking to herself maybe by some some miracle, one of them is still alive. And so she
climbs back up the mountain to where they were and she finds all of them still laying exactly
where they were when she left them, all motionless, all deceased. And so she decides to go one by one
and close each of their eyelids. And then she says her goodbye. And then she turns and kind of
wanders back into the forest where she would stay for the next four days
desperately walking around hoping to be rescued at some point the whole time just expecting to
die either from exposure from an animal attack from whatever killed my friends eventually she
does hear voices and she starts making her way towards where they're coming from and that's when
she gets to the river and she sees the ukrain Ukrainian kayakers who ultimately pick her up and bring her back to town. After authorities heard Valentina's story and realized
there were other hikers out there, they launched a search party and it would take them a month to
locate them. Their bodies were contorted and their faces were locked in these grimaces that looked
like they were in absolute terror and agony right as they died. In addition to missing most of their clothing and their shoes,
they were also all missing their eyeballs.
The autopsies were only able to conclude that hypothermia contributed to their death,
although it wasn't the only factor,
as well as a protein deficiency,
despite the fact that they had all eaten well over the course of their trip,
and that all of their lungs were very bruised,
but they didn't know what that was from. But nothing the autopsy concluded could reconcile what Valentina
said she saw happen which was a sudden violent death of six healthy people with no signs and
symptoms leading up. Suddenly they are bleeding out of every orifice and they're falling to the
ground tearing their clothes off grabbing at their throats, frothing at the mouth, and then dying. And whatever happened to them, why didn't it happen to
Valentina? To this day, we don't really have a good answer why that happened. And the case is closed.
It was ruled they mostly died of hypothermia and it was an accident. And that's that. But this isn't
the first time something like this has happened in Russia. In 1959, nine very experienced Russian
hikers set off on a 16-day expedition into the Ural Mountains in the Soviet Union, and about 10
days into their hike, they reached a part where they needed to crest over this mountain before
some bad weather rolled in, and they started moving up this mountain, which would be renamed
the Dyatlov Pass, after the leader of this group, his name is Dyatlov. They started making their way up the Dyatlov Pass and they were going too slowly and the weather was coming in too
quickly. And so they had to make a critical decision, stay put, but be in this totally exposed
open mountain face, much like the Hamar Daban situation where they were up on that open mountain
face, either hunker down there and get ruined by weather, and the weather was a lot worse for the
Dyatlov Pass group. It was, you know, sub-zero temperatures and just snowing ruthlessly. Or they
could go down and give up ground and go down to the forest at the base of this mountain where you'd
be sheltered from the storm with some trees. And so these hikers, who might be a little bit
overconfident in their ability, decide to stick it out right on this mountain face. And over the course of that
night, at some point, they cut open their tent with a knife from the inside and ran out into
sub-zero temperatures, most of them not wearing shoes, not wearing jackets, not wearing pants.
They're basically in underwear. And they calmly walked down the mountain all the way down to the
forest. And once they got down there, two of them tried to desperately climb this big tree where there wasn't any low hanging branches. And so they couldn't
climb up it. We don't know what they were trying to climb up it for, but they ended up building
this little tiny fire that could not have provided very much warmth at all. And they were found
deceased lying around this fire. The seven other hikers were found in two different areas. One that
appeared to go down to
that tree where those two were, but then doubled back and tried to get up to the campsite, but
didn't make it and fell to the ground and died there. The other group was not found for a couple
of weeks later. They were found at the mouth of this river. They were inside of this den,
and they were wearing the clothes of the other hikers that were deceased. And the clothes they
had on had traces of radiation on them. And the ones that were in the den had these devastating chest and skull
injuries. And one of them was missing their eyeballs. And the official statement by the
Soviet Union was they died from an unknown compelling force, which is a really mysterious
way to describe how someone might die. This case was actually reinvestigated in 2020,
and the new cause of death is death by avalanche, except loads of people disagree with that. In fact,
experts have gone out to where this happened, and they say not only was there no avalanche,
there's never been an avalanche in this area. There's literally never been one.
So what do you think? Is there a connection between
Hamar Dabhan and the Dyatlov Pass incident? Is there a cover-up in both cases where something
far more sinister has happened to both groups that we don't know about? Or are they unrelated
and these are just both examples of Mother Nature being far more powerful than we even realize?
Hello, I am Alice Levine and I am one of the hosts of Wondery's podcast, British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin, we tell the story of a British man
who took part in the first ever round-the-world sailing race.
Good on him, I hear you say.
But there is a problem, as there always is in this show.
The man in question hadn't actually sailed before.
Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy.
Oh, and also tiny little detail
almost didn't mention it.
He bet his family home
on making it to the finish line.
What ensued was one of the most
complex cheating plots
in British sporting history.
To find out the full story,
follow British Scandal
wherever you listen to podcasts
or listen early and ad-free
on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app. We just launched a brand new strange, dark, and mysterious podcast called Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries.
And as the name suggests, it's a show about medical mysteries, a genre that many fans have been asking us to dive into for years.
And we finally decided to take the plunge, and the show is awesome.
In this free weekly show, we explore bizarre, unheard of diseases, strange medical mishaps, unexplainable deaths, and everything in between.
Each story is totally true and totally terrifying. Go follow Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries wherever
you get your podcasts, and if you're a Prime member, you can listen early and ad-free on Amazon Music.
The next and final story of today's episode is a Mr. Ballin fan favorite. It's called Bell's Canyon.
In 2016, a 25-year-old Wall Street banker named Matt was camping near Mount Rainier in Washington
State. His job was so hectic that in the rare times he got a chance to, he would disappear
into the wilderness for a few days to clear his head. Despite living in one of the biggest cities in the world, Matt was actually a very competent
outdoorsman, and so for this trip, he decided he would stay way off any trail deep in the back
country in random locations. On the first night, he found a nice clearing in the trees, and so he
set up his campsite there. He ate some food over his fire, he pitched his tent, climbed inside,
and within a few
minutes he was fast asleep. Several hours later, Matt woke up to some strange sounds coming from
outside of his tent. It sounded like a couple of animals or maybe one animal moving around right
outside. And so after a while of just hearing this constant sound, he rolled over and he barely
unzipped his tent flap just to look out and see if he could see whatever animal it was.
And what he saw shocked him.
There was a man sitting in front of his fire pit.
There was no fire in his fire pit.
And the guy was just sitting there with his hands on his knees, looking straight down.
And periodically, he would just kick his feet in the ashes of the fire pit.
And Matt didn't even know what to do, so he's just looking at him through this little tiny gap in his tent. And this man all of a sudden looks up directly at Matt and makes eye contact with him.
And the guy's eyes go wide, and he stands up, turns around, and runs away from Matt's campsite.
Matt has no idea how to react to this, and so he just quickly unzips his tent, jumps outside, and shines his light into the forest looking for this guy.
He's thinking to himself, who is this guy?
I am in the middle of nowhere
in the back country of Washington State.
How long was he sitting outside there for?
What does he want?
And so as Matt is trying to make sense
of this totally weird thing, he's thinking,
okay, I'm gonna look out
and I'm gonna see his flashlight somewhere
or I'm gonna see his campsite.
You know, maybe he's set up nearby
and he's looking around into the total darkness.
He's looking through all the trees, any light source anywhere out there he would see.
And there's not one.
There's no fire.
There's no flashlight.
There is nothing.
And so eventually Matt goes back inside of his tent.
He zips it up and he's just left kind of dumbfounded.
He can't understand how some person was just sitting outside of his tent for no apparent
reason and then vanished into the forest without even turning on a flashlight. He can't understand how some person was just sitting outside of his tent for no apparent reason
and then vanished into the forest without even turning on a flashlight.
And so after a very restless night, finally the sun came up again and Matt was very relieved.
He stepped outside and after a little bit of time now from this strange incident,
Matt started to tell himself that all that was is some guy happened to set up his campsite nearby.
It is possible,
albeit rare, because we're in the backcountry. And maybe he was just intoxicated and he wandered
over here and, you know, stranger things have happened. So that's probably all it was. And so
Matt felt like there was nothing to worry about. He packed up his campsite and he began hiking into
the forest. Matt didn't have a planned route. Instead, he had a map and a compass and he began
just kind of wandering in the forest,
kind of exploring wherever he wanted to go.
And over the next two days,
he covered at least 10, maybe 15 miles
in kind of random zigzag directions.
He found a nice clearing, and he set up another campsite.
That night, he set up a fire,
and he was eating some food near his fire.
And then as he's sitting there,
he hears rustling coming from behind him.
And he's pretty sure it's an animal, so he turns around, and he doesn't see anything. And he goes back to eating his fire. And then as he's sitting there, he hears rustling coming from behind him. And he's pretty sure it's an animal. So he turns around and he doesn't see anything. And he goes back to eating
his food. And then a little while later, he hears some more rustling behind him. And this time he
can't really just write it off. Clearly there is something behind him that's moving around.
And so he stood up, turned around and remained motionless and just listened, expecting to see
maybe a deer come out of the woods. But instead, he hears a man's
voice come out of the darkness that says, do you know how to get to Bell's Canyon? And Matt's heart
starts racing. He knows that even though he can't see him, it has to be the same guy he saw two days
ago. Because they are in the middle of nowhere. He hasn't seen any other hikers or campers or anyone.
And clearly this guy has the ability to sneak up on him.
And so he's thinking, what does this guy want?
I just spent the past two days hiking in random directions
for 15 miles and he must have followed me.
And so Matt, not knowing what else to do, just says,
I don't know where Bell's Canyon is.
And then there's silence.
And Matt, one part of him is thinking,
I hope this guy does not come into the light. I hope he just goes away. The other part of him is thinking, I hope this guy does not come into the light.
I hope he just goes away.
The other part of him is thinking, well, you know, maybe this is a different person that is lost.
And they're looking for this place called Bell's Canyon.
And they'll come into the light.
It'll be a big relief.
I'll send them on their merry way and everything will be fine.
But as Matt is having this wishful thinking, the voice from the shadows does not come any closer,
but instead
asks the same question a bit more forcefully this time. Do you know how to get to Bell's Canyon?
This time Matt did not respond. Now he was scared. This is not some friendly hiker looking for
directions. There's something wrong. And so Matt, knowing he's all alone out here, he knew he had to
do something to try to take control of this situation. And so he took a deep breath, he reached down and grabbed his flashlight. And in one swift motion, he lifted his light up and
shined it in the direction of this guy's voice. And what he saw was this guy from two days ago,
looking out from behind a tree right in Matt's direction. He was hiding from him. And when the
light hit him, the man barked at Matt to aim it away. And Matt kind of instinctively lowered his light. But
now he was too scared to raise it again. And now he knows it's the same guy. This guy has been
following me for two days. And so for several minutes, Matt just stood there absolutely
terrified. And this guy, he just stayed out there. Matt didn't hear a move. It was just a complete
standstill. And then the silence was broken yet again by this voice except somehow he had moved even closer to Matt and when he came
through asking the same question do you know how to get to Bell's Canyon his voice was so close to
Matt that Matt got scared and raised his light up and the man was standing just a few feet away from
him and this time the man's eyes got wide like they did the first time they saw Matt. And he turned around and he ran into the forest again. Matt, not knowing any better,
just began running after him. But he only ran for about 30 seconds before he realized the terrain
out here is so rough. He's going to fall, get hurt. He's going to get lost. And this guy's already
long gone. He somehow managed to run immediately so far away. And so Matt just goes back to his campsite and he's thinking to himself, what do I do? I have no cell phone service. I'm at
least three days away from my car and I'm in the middle of nowhere. No one even knows where I am
because I didn't chart a course. I didn't tell anyone where I was going to be. And so Matt just
grabbed his knife and stood in the middle of the campsite. And for hours and hours, he just kept looking around,
expecting this guy to just show up again
or start speaking to him from somewhere out in the darkness.
It was absolutely horrifying.
Finally, by about three in the morning,
Matt was so tired that he had to go to sleep.
He hadn't heard this guy again.
He didn't see him again.
And he figured, I need a little bit of sleep
because tomorrow he's going to pack up his campsite and begin this epic journey back to his car.
And so he climbed in his tent and he had a very restless next couple of hours.
Then the sun came up, Matt jumped out of his tent,
packed up his stuff and began practically running in the direction of his car.
All day as he was hiking, Matt kept looking over his shoulder expecting to see this guy
because clearly he had followed him for multiple days over 15 miles. And so the likelihood that he's still following him was
really high. And so all day, Matt just felt like he was being watched. He was totally terrified.
And then the sun started to go down and Matt knew he would have to camp out again. And so he found
a clearing in the trees. He set up his campsite and he was so tired from running basically all day and being so
mentally exhausted from this experience that he just got in his tent and fell asleep very
quickly.
But several hours later, he woke up to the sound of somebody walking around his tent
and he knew it had to be this guy.
He's still in the middle of nowhere.
He's not even close to the parking lot yet.
And so this guy is still following him. And so Matt sat up in his tent. He clutched his knife. And for hours and hours and
hours all night, this guy just walked around this campsite. And then around four or five in the
morning, he scampered off. When the sun finally came up, Matt leapt out of his tent, packed up
his stuff, and literally just began running in the direction of his car, hoping that maybe he
could get there before needing to camp out one more night. And so all day as he moved, he's looking
over his shoulder, knowing this guy is following him. At this point, it's not even a question. He's
somewhere in the forest, but he could never see him. And unfortunately, as the sun was setting,
he knew he was not going to be able to make it to his car. He was just too far away. And so at some
point when it got too dark to keep moving, he had to find a clearing and set up his tent again.
And so once his tent was set up, he just climbed inside, grabbed his knife and sat there knowing
this guy was somewhere out there. And so Matt climbed inside of his tent. He zipped it up behind
him. He grabbed his knife and he sat there expecting to hear this guy come walking around.
But after several hours, he didn't hear him. And Matt started to wonder to hear this guy come walking around but after several hours he
didn't hear him and Matt started to wonder maybe this guy has left me alone finally maybe he's not
following me anymore and so Matt who was totally exhausted laid down to go to sleep and then as
he's laying there from somewhere out in the woods do you know how to get to Bell's Canyon Matt
immediately sat up his heart began racing so fast that he actually was concerned he might have a
heart attack he didn't know what to do he didn't know what to do. He didn't know what to say. So he just sat there holding his
knife. And then this guy began running past his campsite, making animal sounds. And he would stop
periodically and moan and grunt. And he'd kick up leaves. And then he'd run past his campsite again,
over and over and over again, until the sun finally came up and this guy scampered off back into the
woods. Matt didn't waste any time. He leapt out of his tent, packed his stuff up, and ran all the way
back to his car. When he finally got inside of his car, shut the door, and locked it, he cried tears
of joy. He was so unbelievably relieved. And he peeled out of the parking lot. He got to a nearby
hotel. He finally got cell phone reception. and he considered calling the police about this guy, but he thought, you know, what am I going to tell them?
He didn't commit a crime. He was just terrifying. And so he decided not to call the police. He
finally flew back to New York and he just had to accept that there was some strange guy out in the
wilderness of Washington state who was able to hunt him over three days and 30 miles in rugged terrain
without the use of a flashlight, without any gear.
And all he ever said to Matt was,
Do you know how to get to Bell's Canyon?
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