We [the Shoshone people in nevada] have a story about this woman and her newborn looking for willows until sundown. As she tried to run back to her camp, Bigfoot (although he had a different name) caught her running. She quickly undressed herself and her baby, covered themselves with mud and stayed still. Throughout the night, Bigfoot would poke her and tease her to try to make her to move so he could eat her, but she didn’t move. Finally when the sun came up, she ran back to her camp still naked. Her people saw her and laughed cuz she was nude. There’s still a song sung about that story
I have encountered one back in 1974, west side of Military trail, Palm Beach Gardens, Fl. I was out after midnight on my horse during a full moon when all of a sudden my horse refused to go any further along the power line road, on one side wwas a canal and the other were strawberry and corn fields. Back then this was undeveloped and the Corbet area was a few miles west. All I know is when it stood up it was as tall or taller than me and my horse and the smell was worse than anything I had ever smelled before or since. It seemed to be hiding in the wooded side and blended in perfectly. My horse wanted to have none of this and we quickly turned around and galloped off fast back to the ranch. I never took night rides alone after that.
Why are you afraid to ride at night? Whatever it was didn't harm you or your horse. It sounds like whatever it was , just curious and if anything timid. I would welcome another chance to experience such a unique and special encounter. Having spent a great deal of time in Florida, and the deep south generally, there are any number of creatures that live in this area that I would be much more concerned about than a bigfoot hiding and scared of me. There are several things not so timid that can hurt or kill a human. Gators, bears, snakes, pigs. I would more concerned about them than a curious and seemingly meek bigfoot.
I have a voracious appetite for sasquatch content, and consume very much of it. This is among one of the best videos I have watched. Thank you sir, well done.
@@Jesse00001 Nelson!! Sorry to hear you gotta be in Vancouver… it ain’t the Koots. Beautiful country spoiled by a city and the hordes of city slickers. You right in Vancouver?
I have no idea how you put out as much content as you do, especially these long form videos. I'm just settling in to watch the video, I'm sure it's going to be awesome as always.
@@stanglassman Bob is the realest in the game. All of his videos are gold too, not just his sasquatch-related ones. His video on the man-eating lions of Tsavo is one of my favorites on the entire site.
brother, take a moment to appreciate how much emotion you posting a new vid rouses in people all over the world. there isn't much in the world this old cynic really likes, but your vids are among it.
I love these accounts! I studied the spiritual beliefs of the local First Nations from between Hope an Chilliwack, the Sto:lo. I found a few accounts of Sasquatch, but at the time I wasn’t as interested in it. Now that I’ve personally heard of sightings near Harrison, I’m fascinated by the forest beings. Also, I’ve stumbled across two sacred sites in the area. One in the Cheam mountains and one on the Fraser between Lytton and Boston Bar. I felt a tangible power at these sites, especially the one in the mountains. My hiking friend and I actually turned around because of it. Thanks for all your great work.
@@HammersonPeters It took me years of asking local First Nations about what we found in the mountains before someone was willing to fill me in. Many times I would ask, and get told to never go back or tell anyone where it is, and also to never touch anything there, but they would not tell me what it was. Later, in university when I took anthropology, I also learned more about the site in the mountains. When we found and examined it we were hiking off trail high in the mountains, and we both got a strong foreboding feeling to end our hike and head back, which we did. The one on the Fraser was a circle of around 6 or 8 large ( 3 foot by 3 foot ) square stones arranged around a larger one, maybe 5 feet across, with a concave top. It is located so that it is under water for parts of the year when the river is high. A few years later I met the love of my life, 19 years ago, and she is First Nations, so I have been blessed to attend a memorial potlatch and other ceremonies. Keep up the good work.
@@MrGarymuldoon All the First Nations people I’ve asked about it told me not to say where it is. I can describe it though. It’s off trail, high up, maybe 5000 feet elevation, and consists of retired dancer’s costumes tied around tree trunks. The newer costumes were on the lower trees and they got older the higher up the mountain side you go. The ones at the top were disintegrating and looked very old. I’ve been to the top of Cheam, Lady, and Welch, and made it to the alpine on Knight but it was late in the day so we turned around. Happy hiking!
@@BlackGuardXIIII know where it is I've been there. Your right about the higher up you go. When I was up there I saw a dirty old pair of underwear with skid marks hanging from a tree
Hi sir i have a copy of john greens book on the trail of the SASQUATCH"by John Green.crazy thing is inside the cover its stamped British Columbia Provincial Museum"Dept of Rec and cons.Victoria B.C dated oct 21 1968 and it has couple paragraph inscription from author to Director about the existence of Bigfoot and its signed in pen by the Director G Clifford Carl.I live in Ontario and it was found at a yard sale.the 📙 is like a original text book copy.have you youself studied the book its full of interesting stories and early proof prior to 1968.i do wonder how the book made its way to Ontario.Thanks for another great video essay.
People that don't think certain industries wouldn't cover evidence of sasquatch for the sake of their bottom line consider this: in the Amazon, entire tribes of humans have been murdered by mercenaries hired by logging companies and ranchers,maybe even within the last 20 years...along with that in the 70s an oil company in the Amazon began dumping it's sludge into the water utilized by a certain tribe for drinking, people from the company told the natives the black stuff had good vitamins in it, and that it could cure illnesses and even reverse balding. Within 10 years pictures began circulating of these people, children to the elderly with massive tumors growing all over them. Do not put anything past these seekers of profit. I'm certain more than a few important archeological discoveries have been covered up and/ or destroyed by contractors at construction sites as well. But that's what happens when money is king and the idea of nation is good for little else than fabricating shallow identities.
Money is king for the Hoh Indian tribe of north west Washington, little do they understand, it is appointed for man once to die and after this comes his judgment
Just look into what happened in the Ohio Valley to most of the Mounds... Farmers would quickly Destroy them so no Historical Preserve or any of the ilk could stop their Farming...
When i was a kid, our music teacher would put on, every halloween, the legend of sleepy hollow. It was by the rabbit ears production, and although glenn close was the narrator, you bring me back with your voice, storytelling, and music to those years watching every halloween. It's my happy place. One that no one can take from me. That's why you're my favorite. Keep doing what youre doing friend!
I lived in Lillooet in the late 70s/early 80s. At age 12 ('78) my step-brother, 17, and I went for a hike up the mountain near our house. He had got hold of a BB gun he wasn't allowed to have. 2 of his friends were supposed to go with him but couldn't, so I did. We went to a spot that he had been to before with friends, about an hour and a half up, a small clearing next to a very small creek or stream. He had brought some flattened tin cans, nails and a hammer and nailed the tins to trees as targets. Once he'd run out of BBs after we had shot at the cans, he buried the gun, wrapped in an old pillowcase, in a shallow hole under one tree, covered it with rocks, said he would come back soon, with his friends, swore me not to tell his Dad, who would be angry if he knew. We were eating some sandwiches and other food we'd brought and drinking water, then were going to go back home. All of a sudden things went eerily quiet and things were thrown at us. Pinecones, twigs, small stones, and we could smell a bad stench, like mouldy, earthy, rotten garbage. I felt odd and was covered in goosebumps. There were weird noises like thuds and odd grunty sounds- but we never SAW anything. I thought squirrel or raccoon at first, and looked up into the trees, but my step-brother was totally freaked out and said "No, it's a bear!" Then a rather large rock the size of a man's fist hit one of the trees behind us with a dull thwack, so we grabbed our stuff and ran. It felt like we were not welcome. And, we felt like we were being chased or followed and heard thuds, but never saw anything. We were both very scared. I had a really bad headache and my SB said he felt sick and dizzy. Eventually we did not hear or feel or smell anything anymore but kept running as fast as the brush and ground would let us. We both tripped and fell a few times, and were scratched and bleeding in spots, my new jacket got ripped, his jeans got ripped as well. Finally we stopped to catch our breath and my SB realized that as he had left the gun behind the only way to get it back was to go back there at some point. He looked at me and said, "I'm not going back for that ever, and I'm not dumb enough to risk getting eaten by any bear!" For decades I thought we were lucky to escape a bear attack. It was not until I was in my 40s when it suddenly hit me: bears don't throw things. No animal in those woods would. Or could. Also, a bear would have shown itself. We'd have seen it. 😳 As far as I know, that BB gun was never retrieved.
Hammerson is the man. Quality interesting tales with good narration. And the brother can carve. I gotta get me one of those custom carvings by the man himself. Thank you for your superb work.
I miss Lytton so much.... I spent a LOT of time there... I was devastated when the whole town burned down....in less than 50 minutes. Gone.. And it has never been rebuilt.
I ALWAYS GET THAT GOOD FEELING WHEN I DISCOVER A NEW VIDEO HAS ARRIVED FROM HP. ALWAYS KNOWING THAT HP's LATEST WILL SATISFY MY SENSE OF MYSTERY AND INTRIUGE
Most excellent show ! As always. A vintage Canadian TV series "Gold Trails And Ghost Towns" has been a real help in understanding Canadian old west history. Thanks again for you top shelf productions. Merry Christmas all ! from the Four Corners USA.
Please keep revealing all of the Bigfoot information from the last hundreds of years and recently of this mysterious Canadian place that we call Alberta and British Columbia thank you so much for your research and knowledge we are appreciate and love you!
I saw a sasquatch between Seabury and Pyramid Lake on the north side of the Trinity River. It was just standing next to a big redwood watching me fish. I thought it was fake until it stepped behind the tree and kept peeking around it at me. I didn't stay very long. edited: In northern California.
@@CRT4Dummies How can you be sure it wasn't a bear or deer? Unusual but not impossible, a far wandering moose from NY or PA? I have been in the woods at that hour hunting predators or walking to an early morning turkey hunting spot. On a moonless morning it is literally pitch dark. Dark enough that you can't see your hand in front of your face. In my experience, with bear and moose, bluff charges usually break off by about 20 feet or so. In the conditions you describe, I would be hard pressed to identify a fast moving animal at 20 or 30 feet from me. Just curious as to how and why you are so certain this was a bigfoot? Seems there is a few other options more likely than a bigfoot. Did you get pictures or casts of the tracks? I know from experience a large animal moving at charge speed leaves tracks to some degree. It would be great if you would be more specific and provide details. Thanks.
@@jayheslin803 it (or they) was far heavier than any black bear. if i lived in grizzly country i would have chalked it up to two massive grizzlies having a tussle down the slope. but there are no grizzly for over 1,000 miles. coywolves are the apex predator in that neck of the woods. not to mention, it put the fear of God into my dog, simply by the sound of it. and that dog feared nothing.
@CRT4Dummies So you really don't know what it was? Do you understand black bears can outweigh a grizzley in some instances? In the Northeast, every year, there are numerous black bears harvested that scale dressed in excess of 400lbs. I believe the NYS record is estimated at 750 lbs plus. The heaviest bear in PA scaled at 875 lbs from Pike County 2010. I bet those weigh as much or more than any bigfoot. Listen, I am suggesting an alternative that is, in my estimate, more likely. Maybe you ran into a bigfoot, maybe not. I was just looking for more concrete evidence than I heard something big, and my dog was scared. What time of year? Location? No tracks? Were you camping? Food stored properly? Bluff charges are usually a warning and serve to size you up. Did you retreat? Did it? And why would it not turn back after the bluff. Most bears will bluff and then take measure of your response.
Great content as always. Appreciate the hard work an time you put into all this to keep us happily informed. Hope you have a blessed holiday season if you celebrate an looking forward to a new year of amazing videos stories an knowledge. Stay safe, thank you
Went camping on the Sunshine Coast (coastal peninsula, BC) and we were hanging in a shallow but wide stream when I had to go to the washroom and get smtn back from camp so I came back out the woods to the dirt road with more forest on the other side. I went to find a spot to piss, and felt watched the whole time. Like hair standing on end level despite trying to be as Tucker away as possible. I quickly got done and went walking down the gravel-dirt hill. I heard what sounded like a snap under heavy weight to the left, hear a knock, look to the side into the forest, and see two Sasquatch there following me and trying to stay hidden behind trees. One bigger one slightly smaller. They peaked out at me repeatedly. I paused and said hello, spoke to them in my traditional native language (am First Nations) and continued to walk. They just followed for a long while then left me alone once I got close to the campsite again. Nobody else was out camping at all, it was so rainy and not super warm and so other people didn’t want to, so we had the whole place to ourselves. They were literally only a dozen yards from me, so damn close and clear.
WOW! This video was awesome! kept my interest the whole time! I think I'll watch it again! There's been sightings of bigfoot here in Northern New Mexico! And I love all the stories about it!
The myth of the old antropophage woman living isolated in the woods is found in a lot of culture. From the witches of Grimm's tales, to the oni baba of Japanese folkore, to the famous Baba Yaga: It seems to have some reality in these bedtime stories children. During the rough times of prehistoric eras to post-modern eras like the middle ages, cannibalism was a way of surviving for some. Old secluded women were potentially predatory to children, cause they were easier preys than wild animals. Misery turn people into wild beasts.
Fantastic video! There is a history of Sasquatch reports just as long as the history of the people here to witness them. I have not been fortunate enough to see one myself, but at this point, with all of the reports made by seemingly very credible people, I would be more surprised if it turned out the Sasquatch did not exist.....
@@HammersonPeters for having filmed such a variety of locations it's quite nice! Many people just use stock footage when talking about locations so I very much enjoy that you have actual videos of the them!
I remember seeing that on the news. So very tragic. Was the gentleman who died from Chapman bar? My husband is related to some of the Chapman's. His mother's side is from the Yale first nation.
The idea that the giants/Sasquatch emit a stink that has hypnotizing effect on humans reminds me of the very old Nordic saga of Beowulf and the monster Grendel. Grendel is not very clearly described in the saga but he is clarly humanoid. He manages to steal into king Hrothgar's hall - which is full of fierce viking warriors - killing some of the warriors every night with none of the warriors waking up,
not a lot of people come out in Saskatchewan with big foot stories, but on my moose hunt late October about 4 years ago it was about 9:30 at night and after playing the moose caller we listen and hear a big foot if you heard them they sound like a owl but with a completely different tone, strangest stuff ever if you watched the 411 the hunted at the end a guy film’s actual sounds!!!! Than around the same time period a family from my home town was traveling home and their daughter was looking out the window of the vehicle and apparently seen a “hairy monkey” running across the road after the vehicle had passed it whatever it was! strange intelligent creatures
A graduate student who had earned his bachelor's at Oxford was in my dorm one year. He could sit in a chair, and the stench would be recognizable 10 minutes after he left.
Really cool video! Thomas Steenburg took me to the exact spot where the supposed Jacko incident took place.Train Tunnel #4 just outside of Yale BC.It was pretty damn cool to actually be there.And it was definitely a far drop from the rocky ledge to the train tracks below.I don’t know if the Jacko story is real or not but it sure is historic! :D
I live in this area and drove that highway many times. Surely a beautiful landscape. I wanna go do some gold planning in the Fraser River this Summer just for fun. Hope I don't run in to any SamSquanch!
I have heard of the giants located high in very tall mountains of Canada. Unlike the Sasquatch, that seem to be seen in almost every state of the USA, the giants are specific to a mountainous area of Canada. They have only been seen in very high elevations and are vicious to any living thing, especially to smaller human beings. They have been seen carrying clubs and are much, much taller than any Sasquatch. The people who have reported seeing these things have been hunters though I don’t remember just what they were hunting for that far away from civilization.
daylight still saving it till darkness a log on the fire some coffee 420 and my best two friends -my two pets ! cheers all Hammerson simply the best there is if only paulides would listen lol
It's interesting that some First Nation peoples believed that the giants had three toes. Down here in the US in Arkansas where I live, the Boggy Creek creature has been known to leave tracks with three toes.
Yeti are known to have 3 toes as well. There's plenty of accounts of them seen here in the states. They're a more aggressive relative to Sasquatch but most people wouldn't be able to tell the difference unless you look at their feet. It might be some kind of adaptation they developed from climbing snow covered mountains or something they purposely do to their feet to help traverse that type of terrain.
That’s because Smokey used an old stuffed alligator foot to fake them. Kinda like Harlan Ford faking them at honey island. But in addition the monster mart had several five toe tracks. So your logic doesn’t work
It's a shame what happened to Lytton. True mountain giant accounts are rare and hard to find, in the passed 10 years there's 2 I've heard that I believed. One was in Alaska, the other was in Montana. There's another account in Afghanistan of red haired giants which are the same sort of deal. Apparently the one a hunter saw in Alaska had tusk like teeth.
My grandma lived on chehalis reservation and one harassed her and the neighbours for three nights. She seen it come up to the window when she was six or nine. She just seen a giant hand on the glass. This was in the thirties or fourties. I was also camping off hw18 on Vancouver island and had something push over a very large tree at about 1am. It scared us enough to pack our camp in about one minute. Folded the tent up like it was a bag, not even emptying it I threw it in the trunk. Our band says they meet on Morris mountain every three years and they have their own pow wows to see who’s left. I don’t believe the story of the 120 pound caught on the cliff. I’ve been told you shouldn’t even try. They have powers like what we would consider magic like disappearing right in front of you. Our elders say they share the spirit world with ours and can go back and fourth.
On the West End of Calgary there used to be a massive old building called the LaComb home named after father Lacombe and I think it was a psychiatric hospital also it was abandoned in the 60s or 70s and just one front part of it was being used it might still be there actually but the old massive building behind it is gone and there used to be tunnels Islander it that went down into Fish Creek Park that had staples for horse riding those tunnels at Fish Creek or hidden but they're still there funny how all these places have underground tunnel systems
Thank You my Friend excellent as Always, Hammerson is there one special book you could recmmend on the history on the Natives, explorers, fur trappers etc. Times in Canadian History, such rugged determined people in Beautiful nature fraught with danger, nature and the wild. Thank You. 🇨🇦🇺🇲 👍
I'm biased, of course, but I think my book 'Legends of the Nahanni Valley' is pretty good. mysteriesofcanada.com/nwt/legends-of-the-nahanni-valley-book/
What I meant was "Scottish, French-Canadian, and Hawaiian fur company employees." The Pacific Fur Company, the North West Company, and the Hudson's Bay Company all hired Hawaiian voyageurs, as well as voyageurs of Scottish, French-Canadian, and Iroquois extraction.
@@briancowan528 Before the construction of the Panama Railroad in the mid-19th Century (which bridged the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in the longitudinal centre of the Americas), fur trade enterprises which had a presence on the West Coast of the Americas could only realistically supply their westernmost outposts by either massive overland journeys across the continent, or by long voyages around South America and up the west coast. Because of the ocean currents, Hawaii became a natural stopping place for the shipments by sea. Hawaii had a lot of strong and industrious men who wanted to work, so various fur trading enterprises hired them as voyageurs on the West Coast.
Lytton fire natural? I trust the dude that saw the train sparking on fire into town and the fact the railway tried to offer up a settlement. So sad the artifacts lost in the historic centre.
I live in the Similkamen and I met a guy who says he was attacked getting into his logging truck by a Sasquatch, he got time off work and everything and everyone else seems to back him up but idk man. I thought I heard Sasquatch twice before but it's probably just buck rutting. It sounded like something smacking two heavy stones together, once at the river and oncce out in the bush
This is easily the most extensive and detailed account of Sasquatch that I have ever read or listened to.
As have I
another fantastic channel for shared wisdom from the experiences of honest hard working people from all over the planet. www.youtube.com/@proguide66
Have you never heard of Willstar Mysteries?? You will change your mind
Ohhh so this is the first video yo have ever an your life?
We [the Shoshone people in nevada] have a story about this woman and her newborn looking for willows until sundown. As she tried to run back to her camp, Bigfoot (although he had a different name) caught her running. She quickly undressed herself and her baby, covered themselves with mud and stayed still. Throughout the night, Bigfoot would poke her and tease her to try to make her to move so he could eat her, but she didn’t move. Finally when the sun came up, she ran back to her camp still naked. Her people saw her and laughed cuz she was nude. There’s still a song sung about that story
I love the story telling. I put it on and listen until I fall asleep.
I have encountered one back in 1974, west side of Military trail, Palm Beach Gardens, Fl. I was out after midnight on my horse during a full moon when all of a sudden my horse refused to go any further along the power line road, on one side wwas a canal and the other were strawberry and corn fields. Back then this was undeveloped and the Corbet area was a few miles west. All I know is when it stood up it was as tall or taller than me and my horse and the smell was worse than anything I had ever smelled before or since. It seemed to be hiding in the wooded side and blended in perfectly. My horse wanted to have none of this and we quickly turned around and galloped off fast back to the ranch. I never took night rides alone after that.
Got bluff-charged around 3am on a moonless night in Ohio around 20 years ago. Fun times. God bless.
Why are you afraid to ride at night? Whatever it was didn't harm you or your horse. It sounds like whatever it was , just curious and if anything timid. I would welcome another chance to experience such a unique and special encounter. Having spent a great deal of time in Florida, and the deep south generally, there are any number of creatures that live in this area that I would be much more concerned about than a bigfoot hiding and scared of me. There are several things not so timid that can hurt or kill a human. Gators, bears, snakes, pigs. I would more concerned about them than a curious and seemingly meek bigfoot.
@@CRT4Dummiesnope
26:19
I have a voracious appetite for sasquatch content, and consume very much of it. This is among one of the best videos I have watched. Thank you sir, well done.
I do too… and I live in the Kootenays where I hunt and fish… so I kinda wish I didn’t also voraciously consume this content 🤦🏼😹😹😹
@@Vikingocazar Nice bro, I was born and raised in the Kootenay, now in shithole Vancouver. Where abouts you located?
@@Jesse00001 Nelson!! Sorry to hear you gotta be in Vancouver… it ain’t the Koots. Beautiful country spoiled by a city and the hordes of city slickers. You right in Vancouver?
@@Vikingocazar No I'm in Burnaby. Nelson is a beautiful town, enjoy and appreciate it good sir.
I have no idea how you put out as much content as you do, especially these long form videos.
I'm just settling in to watch the video, I'm sure it's going to be awesome as always.
I am partway through, and impressed with the amount of quality stories here, went to the comments to see if anyone had said something similar :P
Thanks for the kind words! I did a lot of the legwork for these in the summer..
I agree. If you’ll enjoyed this you might like Bob Gymlam’s youtube page.
@@stanglassman Bob is the realest in the game. All of his videos are gold too, not just his sasquatch-related ones. His video on the man-eating lions of Tsavo is one of my favorites on the entire site.
my plan was, to listen to maybe 5 minutes of this but now I am only 5 minutes away from watching this till the end 😛
well done, my friend!
I grew up in Lytton, so this has been very enlightening!!!
Your videos are little treasures, Hammerson. So much effort and passion in each one. Thanks for your work and stay blessed.
Been my favorite channel since subscribing.
Willstar Mysteries is the best Bigfoot account giver.. Hammerson is my second favorite !
brother, take a moment to appreciate how much emotion you posting a new vid rouses in people all over the world. there isn't much in the world this old cynic really likes, but your vids are among it.
Thank you for the kind words! I'm so glad you enjoy them.
@@HammersonPeters same's true for books, btw. so... ticktack, Mysteries 1to3 and nahanni can only be re-listened-to so often.
You give quite the presentation. Honestly, it's as good as anything found on History Channel or Discovery.
I love these accounts! I studied the spiritual beliefs of the local First Nations from between Hope an Chilliwack, the Sto:lo. I found a few accounts of Sasquatch, but at the time I wasn’t as interested in it. Now that I’ve personally heard of sightings near Harrison, I’m fascinated by the forest beings. Also, I’ve stumbled across two sacred sites in the area. One in the Cheam mountains and one on the Fraser between Lytton and Boston Bar. I felt a tangible power at these sites, especially the one in the mountains. My hiking friend and I actually turned around because of it. Thanks for all your great work.
Very interesting! To my mind, your description of those sites evokes the legendary 'land and water mysteries' of Interior and Coast Salish folklore.
@@HammersonPeters It took me years of asking local First Nations about what we found in the mountains before someone was willing to fill me in. Many times I would ask, and get told to never go back or tell anyone where it is, and also to never touch anything there, but they would not tell me what it was. Later, in university when I took anthropology, I also learned more about the site in the mountains. When we found and examined it we were hiking off trail high in the mountains, and we both got a strong foreboding feeling to end our hike and head back, which we did.
The one on the Fraser was a circle of around 6 or 8 large ( 3 foot by 3 foot ) square stones arranged around a larger one, maybe 5 feet across, with a concave top. It is located so that it is under water for parts of the year when the river is high. A few years later I met the love of my life, 19 years ago, and she is First Nations, so I have been blessed to attend a memorial potlatch and other ceremonies. Keep up the good work.
I’m around there, been up cheam. Would love to see where you are talking about
@@MrGarymuldoon All the First Nations people I’ve asked about it told me not to say where it is. I can describe it though. It’s off trail, high up, maybe 5000 feet elevation, and consists of retired dancer’s costumes tied around tree trunks. The newer costumes were on the lower trees and they got older the higher up the mountain side you go. The ones at the top were disintegrating and looked very old. I’ve been to the top of Cheam, Lady, and Welch, and made it to the alpine on Knight but it was late in the day so we turned around. Happy hiking!
@@BlackGuardXIIII know where it is I've been there. Your right about the higher up you go. When I was up there I saw a dirty old pair of underwear with skid marks hanging from a tree
Hi sir i have a copy of john greens book on the trail of the SASQUATCH"by John Green.crazy thing is inside the cover its stamped British Columbia Provincial Museum"Dept of Rec and cons.Victoria B.C dated oct 21 1968 and it has couple paragraph inscription from author to Director about the existence of Bigfoot and its signed in pen by the Director G Clifford Carl.I live in Ontario and it was found at a yard sale.the 📙 is like a original text book copy.have you youself studied the book its full of interesting stories and early proof prior to 1968.i do wonder how the book made its way to Ontario.Thanks for another great video essay.
Always a great day when HP uploads, cheers from the Okanagan!
One of the greatest channels on youtube.
People that don't think certain industries wouldn't cover evidence of sasquatch for the sake of their bottom line consider this: in the Amazon, entire tribes of humans have been murdered by mercenaries hired by logging companies and ranchers,maybe even within the last 20 years...along with that in the 70s an oil company in the Amazon began dumping it's sludge into the water utilized by a certain tribe for drinking, people from the company told the natives the black stuff had good vitamins in it, and that it could cure illnesses and even reverse balding. Within 10 years pictures began circulating of these people, children to the elderly with massive tumors growing all over them. Do not put anything past these seekers of profit. I'm certain more than a few important archeological discoveries have been covered up and/ or destroyed by contractors at construction sites as well. But that's what happens when money is king and the idea of nation is good for little else than fabricating shallow identities.
I totally agree. You are 100 percent correct.
Money is king for the Hoh Indian tribe of north west Washington, little do they understand, it is appointed for man once to die and after this comes his judgment
Then they get on the Internet and cry 😭😭😭_wahhh whahhh_
_the Sasquatch gave me a dirty look and growled at meee whahhh_ 😭😭😭
Just look into what happened in the Ohio Valley to most of the Mounds... Farmers would quickly Destroy them so no Historical Preserve or any of the ilk could stop their Farming...
On point. 💪🌏
When i was a kid, our music teacher would put on, every halloween, the legend of sleepy hollow. It was by the rabbit ears production, and although glenn close was the narrator, you bring me back with your voice, storytelling, and music to those years watching every halloween. It's my happy place. One that no one can take from me. That's why you're my favorite. Keep doing what youre doing friend!
I loved that one! Tim Story's music is haunting.
I lived in Lillooet in the late 70s/early 80s.
At age 12 ('78) my step-brother, 17, and I went for a hike up the mountain near our house. He had got hold of a BB gun he wasn't allowed to have. 2 of his friends were supposed to go with him but couldn't, so I did. We went to a spot that he had been to before with friends, about an hour and a half up, a small clearing next to a very small creek or stream.
He had brought some flattened tin cans, nails and a hammer and nailed the tins to trees as targets.
Once he'd run out of BBs after we had shot at the cans, he buried the gun, wrapped in an old pillowcase, in a shallow hole under one tree, covered it with rocks, said he would come back soon, with his friends, swore me not to tell his Dad, who would be angry if he knew.
We were eating some sandwiches and other food we'd brought and drinking water, then were going to go back home.
All of a sudden things went eerily quiet and things were thrown at us. Pinecones, twigs, small stones, and we could smell a bad stench, like mouldy, earthy, rotten garbage. I felt odd and was covered in goosebumps. There were weird noises like thuds and odd grunty sounds- but we never SAW anything.
I thought squirrel or raccoon at first, and looked up into the trees, but my step-brother was totally freaked out and said "No, it's a bear!" Then a rather large rock the size of a man's fist hit one of the trees behind us with a dull thwack, so we grabbed our stuff and ran. It felt like we were not welcome. And, we felt like we were being chased or followed and heard thuds, but never saw anything.
We were both very scared.
I had a really bad headache and my SB said he felt sick and dizzy.
Eventually we did not hear or feel or smell anything anymore but kept running as fast as the brush and ground would let us. We both tripped and fell a few times, and were scratched and bleeding in spots, my new jacket got ripped, his jeans got ripped as well.
Finally we stopped to catch our breath and my SB realized that as he had left the gun behind the only way to get it back was to go back there at some point. He looked at me and said, "I'm not going back for that ever, and I'm not dumb enough to risk getting eaten by any bear!"
For decades I thought we were lucky to escape a bear attack.
It was not until I was in my 40s when it suddenly hit me: bears don't throw things. No animal in those woods would. Or could.
Also, a bear would have shown itself. We'd have seen it. 😳
As far as I know, that BB gun was never retrieved.
Hammerson is the man. Quality interesting tales with good narration. And the brother can carve. I gotta get me one of those custom carvings by the man himself. Thank you for your superb work.
I miss Lytton so much.... I spent a LOT of time there... I was devastated when the whole town burned down....in less than 50 minutes. Gone.. And it has never been rebuilt.
20/10 this was amazing. I will rewatch a few times!!! Im in Charlotte, NC and learning about the wild things near me..
Thank you for these shows, excellent Canadian history
I ALWAYS GET THAT GOOD FEELING WHEN I DISCOVER A NEW VIDEO HAS ARRIVED FROM HP. ALWAYS KNOWING THAT HP's LATEST WILL SATISFY MY SENSE OF MYSTERY AND INTRIUGE
Most excellent show ! As always. A vintage Canadian TV series "Gold Trails And Ghost Towns" has been a real help in understanding Canadian old west history. Thanks again for you top shelf productions. Merry Christmas all ! from the Four Corners USA.
That was a fantastic show, I just loved it! I often think of it when I watch HP productions!
I am so grateful that your channel came up in my algorithm. The information you put out is impressive and addicting. Thank you for all your hard work!
Love your channel. Keep up the great work. Could listen to you talk about these stories all day.
Love your channel! One of my favorites and great content. I love the Sasquatch and other native/indigenous stories. Much love from Mississippi!
I’m very early for once! Thanks for another great video bro! Love the channel and always have! ❤
Your videos put sasquatch chronicles to shame , way to be excellent work
The quality of your research and your thorough examination of the archives is so commendable and very much appreciated 😀 thank you
New favorite channel!
Growing up in Vancouver, I’m almost embarrassed that I didn’t know any of these stories. Thank you so much for making this series
*Field, BC. I think...unless I've just never passed by "Flood" 🙂
Love your vids and voice of narrator. Very clear and calming
Thank you! Flood is a tiny community just downriver from Hope.
Please keep revealing all of the Bigfoot information from the last hundreds of years and recently of this mysterious Canadian place that we call Alberta and British Columbia thank you so much for your research and knowledge we are appreciate and love you!
Hammerson! Another well done well researched narration. These are addicting and just so fascinating
EXCELLENT as always, my friend!!! 👌
Thanks for watching!
I saw a sasquatch between Seabury and Pyramid Lake on the north side of the Trinity River. It was just standing next to a big redwood watching me fish. I thought it was fake until it stepped behind the tree and kept peeking around it at me. I didn't stay very long. edited: In northern California.
You're lucky. I got bluff-charged around 3am on a moonless night in Ohio. Fun stuff.
Why didn't you take a picture or video?
@@CRT4Dummies
How can you be sure it wasn't a bear or deer? Unusual but not impossible, a far wandering moose from NY or PA? I have been in the woods at that hour hunting predators or walking to an early morning turkey hunting spot. On a moonless morning it is literally pitch dark. Dark enough that you can't see your hand in front of your face. In my experience, with bear and moose, bluff charges usually break off by about 20 feet or so. In the conditions you describe, I would be hard pressed to identify a fast moving animal at 20 or 30 feet from me. Just curious as to how and why you are so certain this was a bigfoot? Seems there is a few other options more likely than a bigfoot. Did you get pictures or casts of the tracks? I know from experience a large animal moving at charge speed leaves tracks to some degree. It would be great if you would be more specific and provide details. Thanks.
@@jayheslin803 it (or they) was far heavier than any black bear. if i lived in grizzly country i would have chalked it up to two massive grizzlies having a tussle down the slope. but there are no grizzly for over 1,000 miles. coywolves are the apex predator in that neck of the woods.
not to mention, it put the fear of God into my dog, simply by the sound of it. and that dog feared nothing.
@CRT4Dummies So you really don't know what it was? Do you understand black bears can outweigh a grizzley in some instances? In the Northeast, every year, there are numerous black bears harvested that scale dressed in excess of 400lbs. I believe the NYS record is estimated at 750 lbs plus. The heaviest bear in PA scaled at 875 lbs from Pike County 2010. I bet those weigh as much or more than any bigfoot. Listen, I am suggesting an alternative that is, in my estimate, more likely. Maybe you ran into a bigfoot, maybe not. I was just looking for more concrete evidence than I heard something big, and my dog was scared. What time of year? Location? No tracks? Were you camping? Food stored properly? Bluff charges are usually a warning and serve to size you up. Did you retreat? Did it? And why would it not turn back after the bluff. Most bears will bluff and then take measure of your response.
Blessings I really like the content.. thanks for the hard work you do to bring us this awesome doc's..
What a well made and beautiful video. Really makes me appreciate my home! Thanks for your work
Again another great video. 👍
Never go gentle into the good night 👀
New to your channel and so impressed with the quality of your videos, really engrossing.
Thank you for notification... 14,7000 unseen on RUclips believe it or not 😊. At least your show comes inn 😊
I really enjoy these features! You have a great storytelling voice and style that adds to the experience. Well done and keep them coming!
Great content as always. Appreciate the hard work an time you put into all this to keep us happily informed. Hope you have a blessed holiday season if you celebrate an looking forward to a new year of amazing videos stories an knowledge. Stay safe, thank you
Went camping on the Sunshine Coast (coastal peninsula, BC) and we were hanging in a shallow but wide stream when I had to go to the washroom and get smtn back from camp so I came back out the woods to the dirt road with more forest on the other side. I went to find a spot to piss, and felt watched the whole time. Like hair standing on end level despite trying to be as Tucker away as possible. I quickly got done and went walking down the gravel-dirt hill. I heard what sounded like a snap under heavy weight to the left, hear a knock, look to the side into the forest, and see two Sasquatch there following me and trying to stay hidden behind trees. One bigger one slightly smaller. They peaked out at me repeatedly. I paused and said hello, spoke to them in my traditional native language (am First Nations) and continued to walk. They just followed for a long while then left me alone once I got close to the campsite again. Nobody else was out camping at all, it was so rainy and not super warm and so other people didn’t want to, so we had the whole place to ourselves. They were literally only a dozen yards from me, so damn close and clear.
WOW! This video was awesome! kept my interest the whole time!
I think I'll watch it again!
There's been sightings of bigfoot here in Northern New Mexico! And I love all the stories about it!
Wow the Cannibal Woman sounds like Baba Yaga of Slavic culture, that detail of calling their victims grandchildren send chills down my spine...
The myth of the old antropophage woman living isolated in the woods is found in a lot of culture.
From the witches of Grimm's tales, to the oni baba of Japanese folkore, to the famous Baba Yaga:
It seems to have some reality in these bedtime stories children.
During the rough times of prehistoric eras to post-modern eras like the middle ages, cannibalism was a way of surviving for some. Old secluded women were potentially predatory to children, cause they were easier preys than wild animals.
Misery turn people into wild beasts.
Great Stories. I enjoyed them.
At this rate I can't wait for you to get to the East Coast of Canada. I know of quite a few stories from around here.
Excellent video. I appreciate your listing of sources as you go.
Dang! We live in a stunning province❤
That you do! It is great you appreciate that beauty too.
I love your stories, you’re the best 💜
Fantastic video! There is a history of Sasquatch reports just as long as the history of the people here to witness them. I have not been fortunate enough to see one myself, but at this point, with all of the reports made by seemingly very credible people, I would be more surprised if it turned out the Sasquatch did not exist.....
Another great video thank you
Thanks for watching!
What do you use for recording your live footage? Its really nice quality, I didnt realize you film some of the locations yourself
I think you're being too kind. I use my iPad to film, and desperately need an upgrade.
@@HammersonPeters iPads/iPhone use Sony cameras. Sony always made good cameras next to Polaroid and Nikkon.
@@HammersonPeters for having filmed such a variety of locations it's quite nice! Many people just use stock footage when talking about locations so I very much enjoy that you have actual videos of the them!
Love this channel. My new fav ❤
Very well done! Thank you great content
Thank you, your research is impressive.
Rest In Peace to Janette and Michael Chapman who died tragically on June 30th, 2021 in the Lytton Fire. They were the only two fatalities.
Yikes.
I remember seeing that on the news. So very tragic. Was the gentleman who died from Chapman bar? My husband is related to some of the Chapman's. His mother's side is from the Yale first nation.
The idea that the giants/Sasquatch emit a stink that has hypnotizing effect on humans reminds me of the very old Nordic saga of Beowulf and the monster Grendel. Grendel is not very clearly described in the saga but he is clarly humanoid. He manages to steal into king Hrothgar's hall - which is full of fierce viking warriors - killing some of the warriors every night with none of the warriors waking up,
I think Infra-sound theories are far more likely to be true then any kind of skink based method.
@@RipOffProductionsLLCI think people get hypnotized when the Sasquatch burps really loud or when it rips a smelly fart
They were brought here by aliens. Probably unwanted creations or something. Lol OK, but maybe
not a lot of people come out in Saskatchewan with big foot stories, but on my moose hunt late October about 4 years ago it was about 9:30 at night and after playing the moose caller we listen and hear a big foot if you heard them they sound like a owl but with a completely different tone, strangest stuff ever if you watched the 411 the hunted at the end a guy film’s actual sounds!!!! Than around the same time period a family from my home town was traveling home and their daughter was looking out the window of the vehicle and apparently seen a “hairy monkey” running across the road after the vehicle had passed it whatever it was! strange intelligent creatures
A graduate student who had earned his bachelor's at Oxford was in my dorm one year. He could sit in a chair, and the stench would be recognizable 10 minutes after he left.
Really cool video! Thomas Steenburg took me to the exact spot where the supposed Jacko incident took place.Train Tunnel #4 just outside of Yale BC.It was pretty damn cool to actually be there.And it was definitely a far drop from the rocky ledge to the train tracks below.I don’t know if the Jacko story is real or not but it sure is historic! :D
Hammer-Time, Thanks again Hamm
Thanks for watching!
Makes me miss just a good ole long story being told
Well done Hammerson!
Special thanks to hammerson for being a good human as well as a BOSS RUclipsr
Thanks brother
I love these 🥰
Great content
Wow good work
awesome
I live in this area and drove that highway many times. Surely a beautiful landscape. I wanna go do some gold planning in the Fraser River this Summer just for fun. Hope I don't run in to any SamSquanch!
Fantastic! And as with UFO/USO subject the work of Ivan T Sanderson is seminal
Fascinating! Wa, State🙌
He sounds like The History Guy..kinda... Can listen all day..
They are the old ones that didn't change and stayed the same and we as native people evolved to who we are today
I have heard of the giants located high in very tall mountains of Canada. Unlike the Sasquatch, that seem to be seen in almost every state of the USA, the giants are specific to a mountainous area of Canada. They have only been seen in very high elevations and are vicious to any living thing, especially to smaller human beings. They have been seen carrying clubs and are much, much taller than any Sasquatch.
The people who have reported seeing these things have been hunters though I don’t remember just what they were hunting for that far away from civilization.
So good!
Hell yes. This is exactly the upload I wait weeks and weeks for .. lmao #innawoods
You are amazing! That's all. What more can anyone say about Hammerson Peters?
Would that be Sunshine coast as in just north of Brisbane where I am ? And yes he is good
@@alanburton3578 I'm guessing the region known as the Sunshine Coast in British Columbia
daylight still saving it till darkness a log on the fire some coffee 420 and my best two friends -my two pets ! cheers all Hammerson simply the best there is if only paulides would listen lol
17:12 is that town Spuzzum, itself?
It might actually be, I’m not sure.
@@nonamenoname1737 Thanks! I’ll check it out.
It's interesting that some First Nation peoples believed that the giants had three toes. Down here in the US in Arkansas where I live, the Boggy Creek creature has been known to leave tracks with three toes.
Yeti are known to have 3 toes as well. There's plenty of accounts of them seen here in the states. They're a more aggressive relative to Sasquatch but most people wouldn't be able to tell the difference unless you look at their feet. It might be some kind of adaptation they developed from climbing snow covered mountains or something they purposely do to their feet to help traverse that type of terrain.
That’s because Smokey used an old stuffed alligator foot to fake them. Kinda like Harlan Ford faking them at honey island. But in addition the monster mart had several five toe tracks. So your logic doesn’t work
I’m from arkansas too. Ive heard crazy things in the Ozark mountains
It's a shame what happened to Lytton. True mountain giant accounts are rare and hard to find, in the passed 10 years there's 2 I've heard that I believed. One was in Alaska, the other was in Montana. There's another account in Afghanistan of red haired giants which are the same sort of deal. Apparently the one a hunter saw in Alaska had tusk like teeth.
'Piscean plunder...' 🏅
I literally came looking for this comment. ;)
This world is a lot different that what we're told. If one looks for the truth, it can be found.
My grandma lived on chehalis reservation and one harassed her and the neighbours for three nights. She seen it come up to the window when she was six or nine. She just seen a giant hand on the glass. This was in the thirties or fourties. I was also camping off hw18 on Vancouver island and had something push over a very large tree at about 1am. It scared us enough to pack our camp in about one minute. Folded the tent up like it was a bag, not even emptying it I threw it in the trunk. Our band says they meet on Morris mountain every three years and they have their own pow wows to see who’s left. I don’t believe the story of the 120 pound caught on the cliff. I’ve been told you shouldn’t even try. They have powers like what we would consider magic like disappearing right in front of you. Our elders say they share the spirit world with ours and can go back and fourth.
I've read other stories about Chief Dicks. his sister Ophelia was a legend in those days.
1st view 1st comment .good luck on a good life
Wasn't first, so it's not looking good. :)
congrats! reply also for the algorithm : ))
Lytton was torched. Dr. Hoffe’s office was there.
Yes. Anti fa burned the church and it burned the town very quickly
I just got off work off tomorrow drinking a few beerstime to Zone this world the Frunk out
thanks for put subtitles, im Chilean but i know english
On the West End of Calgary there used to be a massive old building called the LaComb home named after father Lacombe and I think it was a psychiatric hospital also it was abandoned in the 60s or 70s and just one front part of it was being used it might still be there actually but the old massive building behind it is gone and there used to be tunnels Islander it that went down into Fish Creek Park that had staples for horse riding those tunnels at Fish Creek or hidden but they're still there funny how all these places have underground tunnel systems
I need to investigate this further. I'm very often in Fish Creek and didn't know that there were supposed tunnels in the area
Thank You my Friend excellent as Always, Hammerson is there one special book you could recmmend on the history on the Natives, explorers, fur trappers etc. Times in Canadian History, such rugged determined people in Beautiful nature fraught with danger, nature and the wild. Thank You. 🇨🇦🇺🇲 👍
I'm biased, of course, but I think my book 'Legends of the Nahanni Valley' is pretty good.
mysteriesofcanada.com/nwt/legends-of-the-nahanni-valley-book/
@@HammersonPeters Thanks for the reply I'll check that out.👍👍👍
Thanks for the stories! Merry Squatchmas! 👣👣🌲🌲🎅
Just out of curiosity, what is the "Hawaiian Fur Company" at app. 32:31 of your narration?
What I meant was "Scottish, French-Canadian, and Hawaiian fur company employees." The Pacific Fur Company, the North West Company, and the Hudson's Bay Company all hired Hawaiian voyageurs, as well as voyageurs of Scottish, French-Canadian, and Iroquois extraction.
@@HammersonPeters I'm baffled. Why Hawaiian? To me, it jut seems a strange fit.
@@briancowan528 Before the construction of the Panama Railroad in the mid-19th Century (which bridged the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in the longitudinal centre of the Americas), fur trade enterprises which had a presence on the West Coast of the Americas could only realistically supply their westernmost outposts by either massive overland journeys across the continent, or by long voyages around South America and up the west coast. Because of the ocean currents, Hawaii became a natural stopping place for the shipments by sea. Hawaii had a lot of strong and industrious men who wanted to work, so various fur trading enterprises hired them as voyageurs on the West Coast.
Interesting. Thanks. Were they paid any better than the Chinese or Indians (India) working on the railroad.@@HammersonPeters
@@briancowan528 I don't know how much they were paid.
Hey howdy hey y’all from Northeast Florida. 👋🏻
What about Sooke BC that next to Humboldt county had the most Sasquatch sightings back in the 60's.
Lytton fire natural? I trust the dude that saw the train sparking on fire into town and the fact the railway tried to offer up a settlement. So sad the artifacts lost in the historic centre.
I live in the Similkamen and I met a guy who says he was attacked getting into his logging truck by a Sasquatch, he got time off work and everything and everyone else seems to back him up but idk man. I thought I heard Sasquatch twice before but it's probably just buck rutting. It sounded like something smacking two heavy stones together, once at the river and oncce out in the bush