I know a young Native American man who pastors a church in Talihina OK, on the Choctaw reservation. I was visiting there one weekend and asked him about Bigfoot in the area. His response was, "Wayne, you would be hard-pressed to find anyone around here who has not either seen one, or knows someone who has seen one." He was quite serious.
@gordonmorris7516 ай бұрын
BC and alaska communities also have history dating back over a thousand years
@seanfoltz76456 ай бұрын
Substance abuse is extremely common on reservations - I'm sure they've seen UFOs, chupacabras, lizard people, visited hollow Earth and seen a couple of elder gods to boot.
@primesspct26 ай бұрын
@@gordonmorris751 I would like to hear more of those. That would be very interesting.
@jmcg98226 ай бұрын
@@primesspct2 It’s best to seek out tribal elders of individual tribes to get an accurate portrayal of their oral traditions as not everyone knows or even understands the meaning and context of them and many tribes traditions and mythologies have been appropriated by various persons to promote various agendas and aren’t necessarily accurate or even real. You might encounter “Kushtaka” of the Tlingit as an example of Bigfoot when in reality “Kóoshda Kaa” as it’s actually called is more or less a shapeshifting otter spirit used by our shamans. There’s a bit more to the story than that but in a nut shell it’s a supernatural entity(s) that can take on the form of numerous things, including driftwood logs, which our shamans possess. Then there’s the Gagit of the Haida which is not Bigfoot as bogfooters claim, a Gagit, so,e times described to be a wild like state is actually a psychological/ spiritual state of being that survivors of traumatic experiences like drowning or brain damage sometimes experience and who can recover from but sometimes sadly don’t, so basically it’s a way to describe psychosis or ptsd. Then there is “skookum” from Chinook Jargon which translates to “strong/ powerful” and is used to describe everything from mountains, rivers, bears, to individual people. Basically it’s like saying they’re badass. Some tribes do have legitimate traditions of what could be described as a Bigfoot like creature, others are open to broad interpretation, and some don’t have stories of Bigfoot at all, so back to my original point, if you want an accurate account of native stories it’s best to go to the source, tribal elders.
@jmcg98226 ай бұрын
@@primesspct2 @primesspct2 It’s best to seek out tribal elders of individual tribes to get an accurate portrayal of their oral traditions as not everyone knows or even understands the meaning and context of them and many tribes traditions and mythologies have been appropriated by various persons to promote various agendas and aren’t necessarily accurate or even real. You might encounter “Kushtaka” of the Tlingit as an example of Bigfoot when in reality “Kóoshda Kaa” as it’s actually called is more or less a shapeshifting otter spirit used by our shamans. There’s a bit more to the story than that but in a nut shell it’s a supernatural entity(s) that can take on the form of numerous things, including driftwood logs, which our shamans possess. Then there’s the Gagit of the Haida which is not Bigfoot as bogfooters claim, a Gagit, so,e times described to be a wild like state is actually a psychological/ spiritual state of being that survivors of traumatic experiences like drowning or brain damage sometimes experience and who can recover from but sometimes sadly don’t, so basically it’s a way to describe psychosis or ptsd. Then there is “skookum” from Chinook Jargon which translates to “strong/ powerful” and is used to describe everything from mountains, rivers, bears, to individual people. Basically it’s like saying they’re badss. Some tribes do have legitimate traditions of what could be described as a Bigfoot like creature, others are open to broad interpretation, and some don’t have stories of Bigfoot at all, so back to my original point, if you want an accurate account of native stories it’s best to go to the source, tribal elders.
@Tsiri095 ай бұрын
This is part of my heritage. I'm part Choctaw. Proud of it, too. We lived in Oregon on the edge of a forest. I rode a mustang horse I adopted in Nevada. He was afraid of nothing; we'd seen mountain lions in the desert and bears in the forest- no reaction. We were looking for a camping site on a long ride when he began to react to something. His eyes rolled, his muscles went tight- he was terrified. I looked around, trying my best to see what was scaring him. I didn't see whatever it was. A LARGE rock sailed past my head- now I was scared. I still thought it was high school jerks, but quickly changed my mind when the sound of a large tree branch broke the silence. Then I noticed there was no sound- that branch sounded like it was being torn off the tree and it was sent sailing towards us. A stench that to this day filled the air and I turned my horse and we left at full speed. I didn't turn around- there WAS something pursuing us. Look, it wasn't a bear- bears don't throw rocks the size of cantaloupes or tree branches. Bears smell very different. I heard hoots and howls and what sounded like growls behind us. I NEVER went back. Months later, I talked to a Forest Ranger- he said simply, "so they've come down this far have they?" My blood ran cold- he knew what I was talking about. All he said was not to go back into that area and soon there was a bulletin on local news that the area had a "killer bear" and it would be handled. I didn't see it but I KNOW they're there.
@ncallen95825 ай бұрын
What town in Oregon was this near?
@touchthesun24485 ай бұрын
Great story... sounds like a really good horse.
@theNfl_Esq5 ай бұрын
They are known for throwing everything from pebbles to boulders depending upon their mood..
@tman37785 ай бұрын
Yeah, the ones in the eastern Oregon are a bit more moody than those in the cascade range. I've heard that the ones in the blue mountains are more vocal out of the three bigger groups in Oregon.
@theNfl_Esq5 ай бұрын
@@tman3778 I think the ones in Vancouver are the biggest and most dangerous and like Steve says they don’t want to play marbles with you..I sincerely hope I never run into them
@ianswinford55706 ай бұрын
Here’s an idea for a video: the Giants of Lovelock Cave. Stories tell of local Native Americans going to war against a race of vicious cannibalistic giants that lived in nearby caves. This would be a perfect video on your channel, bro!
@The_ZeroLine6 ай бұрын
That was just a bunch of Dutch people sheltering in a cave.
@turkeysandwich19986 ай бұрын
@@The_ZeroLine😂
@williamcoolhat54386 ай бұрын
It's weird growing up living in lovelock and reno and barely ever hearing this story lol even going to the caves it's not mentioned
@Gruntvc6 ай бұрын
"Cannibalistic giants" you say? Sounds like the stories of the Nephiliam. Interesting how many cultures have stories of these giants.
@supernautacus6 ай бұрын
@@Gruntvc ...That would be the Nephilim-Human hybrids. Like the one killed and recovered in Afghanistan. The Rephaim, far more human than alien (angel).
@sharonwhiteley6510Ай бұрын
My BFF from 1st grade to HS graduation, was half Cherokee. She spent every summer and major holidays with her Dad in NC. She was extremely proud of her heritage. She always told me that her Dad and other family members, would warn her about where she walked, especially around dusk. She was adamant of "something the elders warned about but wouldn't discuss ". She unfortunately passed away following graduation. I am almost 70 yo and still remember her stories after her time with the Cherokee. May she rest quietly and greet me with happiness and tears of joy.
@burtknighten44389 күн бұрын
Hr stopped being half Cherokee after graduation?
@VNV676 ай бұрын
My great grandmother was a full blooded Choctaw. When I was about 6 years old she spoke of this but I can't remember what she called it. She knew the English language but would speak broken English. She told that her older sister by 17 years lost 2 of her children to this Big Hairy Man as she called it. She would speak of her lost family from time to time. I just wish I could speak with her today to dig into her story.
@DS_Honeycutt2 ай бұрын
I'm Cado, My Mammaw told me they would SA women and if they had a baby from that it didn't want to talk, and when it was 6 or7 it would run off..... I don't know if that meant it died or was killed or "they" took it! My Mamaw was the Medicine woman for the area and heard most to all of what happened within 10 miles of us, so I believed her!
@Jeffrey_k966 ай бұрын
Choctaw army vet here from Haskell county, stones throw away from leflore county line. We have many bigfoot tales and signs here in Oklahoma, especially up in the Ouachita mountains and Kiamichi, in a town called Talihina. Thats the halfway point of our nation. Ive seen some things in the Talimena area..
@american_cosmic6 ай бұрын
What are some of the things you've seen?
@johndee29906 ай бұрын
We cut our hunting trips short if we see them, not for danger.. they just steal
@coreychipman6 ай бұрын
Send them in!
@Jeffrey_k966 ай бұрын
Thank you guys for the replies, I've been thinking about sending them in. It isn't necessarily about "war" but they are primarily about camping. I even have a story about my own backyard! I live on several acres by the lake, surrounded by dense woods and hills.
@johndee29906 ай бұрын
@@Jeffrey_k96 You got a Visit from the Nosey Neighbor
@Uh-Cool-Luh6 ай бұрын
My grandfather Walter Amos,full blood choctaw and WW2 vet,raised me most of my life in McAlester Oklahoma where i still live, he passed away two years ago,he was 96...my middle name is in choctaw its "Akallo Poloma" it translates to "strong bow" pronounced (Uh-cool-luh Puh-loma) proud of my chata heritage and my name,i will give my children choctaw names when i have them one day...also loved the video and thank you for showing natives the spotlight
@flashgordon66706 ай бұрын
There’s a drink called Strongbow, cider, it’ll give you headaches. Bigfoot? Big load of bollocks more like. Them injuns been smokin too much wacky baccy and eatin too many magic mushrooms.
@YuckFouTube26 ай бұрын
I know McAlester, OK. Only been pulled over 4 times and ticketed 3 in my life, once in McAlester, OK 😂
@Uh-Cool-Luh6 ай бұрын
@YuckFouTube2 yeah this place is known as a speed trap 😅
@xgensean6 ай бұрын
Out here doing redneck ratchet shit at lake Murray?
@matthewlynch9036 ай бұрын
Must have had stories to tell !.
@hatfieldmccoy03116 ай бұрын
Semper Fi Brother, I am mixed Eastern Band Cherokee and an enroller member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw and Scotts Irish. I have heard this story before from my papaw. I have had an experience night hunting coyotes. I did multiple deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan as an Infantry Rifleman, so I have some issues with sleep at night so I spend alot of nights running the woods and hunting at night. I have run into black bear, bobcats, mountain lions, but this night I was up on a hill over looking a field that hadn't been planted yet, still to early of spring to plant that field butts up s thick woods with a creek that ran through it. I did some rabbit cries calls and started scanning the tree line with the red light on top of my rifle scope looking for eyes to pop up in the tree line. This night I just heard what sounded like trees getting broke over not just branches breaking but actual trees pushed over it was getting closer and I was expecting to see a pregnant doe to pop out of the tree line but what I saw as as I scanned back down that tree line was huge shoulders and moving quick my scope was just full of a big dark furry things and moving fast. I was in shock trying to understand what I was seeing. I knew immediately it was no bear because the muscle tone was to clear and to human like to second guess. Before he took off back into the tree line I was saw these huge shoulders through my scope and I remember his shoulders were just over top of this knot on a tree so I could go back to measure for reference. I went back the next morning trying to make sense of what I saw and this things shoulders were at least 94 inches. 7 foot 10 inches. I know what I saw, and let me tell you, I used to night hunt or fish every night alone and not think a thing about it. Since this happened I have been out night hunting but twice and both those were with a group of at 5 or 6 Buddies with us. I don't tell many people be I am known to be pretty good in the woods and I help people teach wounded deer or help guide deer hunts and don't want to ruin my reputation as a hunter and tracker. But I know what I saw and I wish I would not have
@Chiefqueef915 ай бұрын
Amazing. 🙏
@rexnike16655 ай бұрын
Great story, thanks for sharing. There’s a lot of things that can live without being found in the south of it wanted to
@skunkape59185 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your story. You are a good man. ☦❤🕊
@sartte4 ай бұрын
and just wait until you find out werewolves, dogmen, cat men, fae , reptilians alll exist.
@robbiesdad14 ай бұрын
Why is it the there are some some many of us that are Native and Irish
@jerrykwarner67136 ай бұрын
My grandfather was born, in 1897 on the Choctaw Nation Indian territory. He told me this story around the time the Patterson- Gimbal film came out. I was raised in the Pacific Northwest, graduating high school and college with a Forestry Major and Geology Minor. Ask anyone who spent a lot of time in the woods about 75% will have a story to tell about tree knocks, whistles, howls, and the stence. If they trust you, they will relate their experience. Although, the actual percentage is much higher. Most of these don't like to think about it, much less talk about it. They are real and extremely elusive.
@edwardmorris81415 ай бұрын
so what is your take on why they want to communicate with us?
@skunkape59185 ай бұрын
They probably just want to scare humans out of their forests
@mr.murray2634 ай бұрын
Too many ads
@h91rex1004 ай бұрын
How elusive can they be if 75% of those out in the woods allegedly experience them?
@thetayz722 ай бұрын
Smell like a microwaved diaper, but can never be tracked? I guess no one ever tried a dog?
@South3rnFlow2 ай бұрын
I’m from Talihina. We’re over the mountain from poteau. My mom lives in Tuskahoma (pushmataha county) about 5 miles from The Choctaw Museum (the real capitol). I heard of these stories all my life and I’m a believer. I’ve experienced some unexplained phenomenons in the Honobia mountains (south of talihina) myself. A bigfoot festival is held there every year. Something or things are in them hills. Some relatives of mine have a story, years ago a little girl was in her room at night. She screamed in terror, her father ran in and asked what was wrong. She said somebody was looking in my window so he said draw me a picture of what that somebody looked like. He looked at the picture and grab his gun, he went outside. He shot it, the next day he went to where he shot but it was gone. A trucker was driving that night and he locked up his brakes, he said he seen two creatures (Bigfoots) carrying one that looked dead across the road. That turned out to be the one the father had shot.
@Josh_728Ай бұрын
Objection! Hearsay!
@ryanhummel7714Ай бұрын
Your daughter is scared of a potential danger looking through her window and you have her draw a picture first? "Babygirl, we might be in danger, but go ahead and take 10 minutes to draw a picture. I'm gonna strip down and clean my gun while you do that."
@South3rnFlowАй бұрын
@@ryanhummel7714 not my story or my daughter dumb nuts. Literally says years ago. The story took place in like the 80s maybe later, maybe sooner. If you had any sense you’d know that a story can change through the years with different people telling it unless it’s written down. I’m just telling it how it was told to me. Keyboard warriors will always have something to say. Smh. 🤡
@williambaize6096 ай бұрын
I am of Cherokee descent and spent time with a Choctaw elder when growing up. This story is of a war with the Gugwe not the Shampe as the Choctaw called the Bigfoot. The story correctly told is the evil Gugwe which means face eater had attacked the Choctaw and they found a slaughter field just like here, but couldn't defeat the Gugwe. So their elders told the younger warriors to kill a Shampe and bring it's body to the slaughter ground of the Gugwe. The warriors were able to do this and were chased by the Shampe until they reached the slaughter ground they dropped the body and the Shampe and Gugwe fought and the Shampe defeated the Gugwe. They did this because they said the Shampe kept them safe from the Gugwe in times past. So they provoked the Shampe into a battle with the Gugwe and achieved success.
@Bursar016 ай бұрын
Knowing how folklore works, the facts that there are no accounts of anything remotely this traumatic to the Choctaw community in the mid-19th Century, and nothing to suggest that Joshua LeFlore died in any kind of combat, let alone against cryptids, is not a problem for me. Folklore often happened "a few generations ago" and has a habit of latching onto famous members of the community some time after the last people who might actually remember those people have died. I suspect that if this actually occurred at all, it was probably in Mississippi, and involved completely different people, and weapons. Your story tends to dear that out.
@ben-jam-in69416 ай бұрын
Very strategic way of handling a very dangerous problem. I live in North Alabama and I wondered if they had stories of seeing these type creatures before moving to the west?
@ContessaOrsini6 ай бұрын
Yes exactly. Bigfoot is a good being. He is a protector of the land. He is good to who are good and "bad" to those who are bad. Bigfoot is to be respected.
@AndyDavis-j9p6 ай бұрын
I knew there was something off when the narrator said they had sharp teeth like a predator, also the story you told was very similar to the story of the 'siege of lockette ranch" but that was bigfoot vs dogman.
@risingpower36586 ай бұрын
Sure. They eat people.@@ContessaOrsini
@DavidSpaugh6 ай бұрын
I'm proud to be Choctaw, and this video is so well done. Big fan and follower for a while. Thank you, and God bless you, brother!
@scienceme97946 ай бұрын
So you're the legendary Big Fan? Or do you prefer the term Subscribesquatch?
@ZarlLarlack6 ай бұрын
Had you ever heard this story prior to this upload?
@ryangarrett7256 ай бұрын
Chickasaw>choctaw
@Xiuhticuhtli19956 ай бұрын
Those are old wars let them go, we as a people need to unite if we are to survive the coming years
@somethindarker6 ай бұрын
Greeting's from your distant Apache relative.
@lukethomas.1256 ай бұрын
Alright, Bedtime Stories, now Wartime Stories... perfection
@SergiuGothic6 ай бұрын
What a treat
@andrewpetik20346 ай бұрын
Yessssssss!!
@arod99626 ай бұрын
I’m with you!
@pegallen69836 ай бұрын
You are so right!
@zackatwood28676 ай бұрын
🤝
@ovni22956 ай бұрын
I know of a story that is similar in theme, and occurred not too long ago. The town of Portlock, Alaska was abandoned in 1950 or 1951 after the residents came under attack by something similar to Bigfoot/Sasquatch. I forget the local name for it. The record for the town's existence and abandonment is pretty good - you can see the site of the town on Google Maps in satellite images, the USPS had a post office there that they closed after everybody left, etc. People who have gone back to check things out also report seeing things moving in the tree line. Surprisingly, there's no record of any government investigation. This was the 1950s, you'd think the US government or at least an Alaska state agency would have wondered why the population of an entire town suddenly decided to move.
@juliehealingleaf62113 ай бұрын
Actually haunted but I think natives warning away from that area I think because Alaska has aliens and my beings and probably Bigfoot..
@juliehealingleaf62113 ай бұрын
I believe there's an area that's abandoned in Oregon too. It's like a cavern area in the last person to leave was the post office person.
@Fioneenacockeen4 ай бұрын
Sending best wishes, love and gratitude to the Choctaw people here and your ancestors. Your ancestors helped Ireland during the famine....we haven't forgotten. May God bless you all ❤
@clintm77966 ай бұрын
I'm a member of the Choctaw tribe and a US Army Veteran. Just FWI, the current " seat " of the Choctaw Nation is in Durant Oklahoma in Bryan county.
@Jeffrey_k966 ай бұрын
Same here, choctaw vet, haskell county
@Jeffrey_k966 ай бұрын
Same here, Choctaw vet Haskell county, next door to leflore county
@__prometheus__6 ай бұрын
@@GrandEmporerweirdo
@FighterOperationsGroupFOG6 ай бұрын
Same dude, Marine vet and member of the Choctaw Nation. I've got tons of family in Durant
@jamesjanson61296 ай бұрын
Hello from Ireland to my Choctaw friends and brothers.We in Ireland still remember your nation's kind help in our time of need when we suffered in 1847 or Black 47 during the potato famine, when you sent donations to buy food even though you yourselves were suffering on the trail of tears.If I had it my way the Choctaw nation would be granted Irish citizenship for this help, as we both know suffering. Unfortunately,we can't help you on this one, as we don't have any legends of Big Foot [Feet?] here in Ireland.Banshees, Water Spirits[Kelpies], Ghosts, Leprechauns, the odd large Black Dog, and the "Quare Fellah"[The devil] show up once in a while, but nothing like big foot. Chi pisa la chiq
@colcommissar236 ай бұрын
I'm a member of the Chickasaw tribe but I'm also part Choctaw on my father's side. The two tribes are pretty close to each other in Oklahoma. It's great to hear these stories.
@rickythompson18236 ай бұрын
As a oklahoman born and raised iv allways respected and been interested in the choctaw culture so I'm also glad this vid was so well done
@youbetterwakeup24496 ай бұрын
Have you or your family ever encountered these things?
@Lowe5056 ай бұрын
Do you remember any of this tale? 1st nations people have much untold knowledge of North America that need to be told.
@jerryrice85076 ай бұрын
What about the Canadian bacon tribe?
@ridgefrost6 ай бұрын
then I can't be the only one who had an issue with european colonialists being blamed for the near extinction of your people instead of americans , he kept talking abt european soldiers and european weapons instead of "american" colonialists, yes ik americans are pretty much immigrant british people but at the time they were more or less their own people not europeans
@donaldliverance25976 ай бұрын
Bud I gotta say me and my family wait for these like it's Disney in the 90's... thank you for posting
@Sgt_Joker5 ай бұрын
The flutes, the nature sounds, and the roars of Champe in the background...so serene. Lands vast....and mysterious.
@ze_kangz93213 күн бұрын
Aho. 🔊🦅.....
@Idk-eq1ex3 ай бұрын
I was at a Bigfoot museum somewhere in California, I think Santa Cruz, and the guy who owned the building told me and my family some stories visitors had told. One I that I remember (the only one I remember, as I was 8 or 9 at the time) was about Bigfoot eating one of their chickens. The person the story came from said they had gone to check on their chickens in the morning. (checking the food, collecting eggs, etc.) When they got into the coop, they had found the skeleton of one of the chickens picked clean, and all the feathers were neatly laid out forming a circle around the skeleton. Apparently all the other chickens were just sitting there, frozen, staring at the skeleton. I don’t remember if the door to the coop had signs of a break in or anything, and there may be some other details I forgot (it was 6-7 years ago), but that’s the gist of it. Edit: I have a feeling someone is gonna ask this, but the contents of the museum was mostly just plaster track molds, and some statues. I think it was mostly just a gift shop and a little stop just for fun. Edit 2: just went on google earth. It’s called the Bigfoot Discovery Museum, and is not mostly a gift shop. Mostly just plaster molds, statues, newspaper articles, and skulls.
@juliehealingleaf62113 ай бұрын
It's rumored to be in the Santa Cruz mountains and in gualala the Santa Cruz is in Northern California
@Davido502 ай бұрын
@@juliehealingleaf6211 Avoid the evil entities. Stay blessed always!
@juliehealingleaf62112 ай бұрын
@@Davido50 well as weird as my daughter had a dream of one when she was a pretty young like maybe 12 and so I've been praying about it now
@thesoicybroadcast9384Ай бұрын
weird af. just watched a finding bigfoot episode where a guy said he killed a snake and buried it, and the next morning it was dug up and stretched out pointing at his door.
@Idk-eq1exАй бұрын
@@thesoicybroadcast9384 that is spooky as hell.
@TheDukeOfDallas6 ай бұрын
Makes me think of the Man-Eating giants/big foot of Lovelock Cave. They were massive, red-headed, viciously warlike, monsters that preyed upon the tribes and peoples of the area. After suffering under their constant murderous raids, the tribe(s) put together a huge war-party and pursued the monsters to this cave where the giants incorrectly thought they could evade and hide inside the cave long enough until the war-party would just give up and leave. Instead, the fed-up warriors blockaded the entrance so that there would be no chance of the monsters escaping, stacked large amounts of burnable fuel that would create massive amounts of thick smoke around the former entrance. Upon lighting this they sat down and waited as they listened to the monstrous wheezing and coughing from inside loudly begin, and patiently they kept their vigils until the last horrible gasp for air turned into a death rattle that signaled their reign of terror finally coming to its end.
@thetruthchannel3496 ай бұрын
My great grandmother was a Cherokee Indian. The Cherokee have old stories of red-haired giants as well. Some very creepy.
@lisaellis25936 ай бұрын
@@thetruthchannel349Same.
@MikeHoncho-cj5hv6 ай бұрын
I still don’t believe these stories. Not a single bone. If natives took down giants or big foot the bones would be an absolute treasure to them. Which then would have most likely been stolen by settlers, which then would have ended up in a museum. I just don’t believe it.
@RadagastBrown4206 ай бұрын
It's just a made up story.😂
@MikeHoncho-cj5hv6 ай бұрын
@@RadagastBrown420 yeah not a single bone has been preserved by natives ever.
@PsilliPig6 ай бұрын
Actually, in 1846 an ancestor of a friend of mine in Southern California testified in an affidavit stating that he had encountered a female Sasquatch who wandered into his farm yard, went to the well and got herself a drink, and just sat for a bit before leaving. These Bigfoot are referred to in sixty different native American languages. Now I live in the Pacific Northwest and yes, they've been here longer than that the local First Nation people can remember.
@eliasdskill50086 ай бұрын
Ha the pnw has a million tourist all over olympia and the cascades .
@johnassal58386 ай бұрын
They may have been there, even untill quite recently but I'd guess they were reduced to mostly small inbred bands by 1900 at the latest. Most likely all died by now.
@johnassal58386 ай бұрын
@@eliasdskill5008 I agree it's unlikely but most of that country isn't terribly accessible. If illegal growers can hide out there without the tourists impacting them much a small number of small groups may still do so too. Unfortunately they were probably pushed to the margins even out there when modern humans came in and I mean native Americans, 15,000 or more years ago. There range and numbers could only have reduced since. Whatever might be left running around to find (IF anything) is going to be the Bigfoot equivalent of Deliverance.
@deitchj0036 ай бұрын
Did he fuck it
@sking34926 ай бұрын
😶😶😶
@ZeroXSEED6 ай бұрын
Absolutely chilling. I watch both, but I'll be honest, i prefer Wartime Stories over Bedtime stories. Your delivery is both impersonal yet very immersive and emotionally-rousing.
@jpvielleux6 ай бұрын
+1
@bulldogsbob6 ай бұрын
Ditto
@Crazycoyote-we7ey6 ай бұрын
Im Navajo and one time i heard a story from an old Salish man he told me a long time ago That his tribe get into a war with Stone Giants They were men not animals that covered themselves in clay that clay would harden so no arrow or spear would penetrate their skin They were Cannibalistic and killing people The old salish told me they had to burn the forest down to kill those things
@thepassman5 ай бұрын
This account is reminiscent of the battles that the Paiute tribe in Nevada have had and passed down orally regarding fighting red headed giants. These giants would raid the Paiute settlements at night stealing anyone they could to cannibalize. After a lengthy period of fighting this conflict reached its culmination in Lovelock cave in Nevada. The Paiutes had chased the last of these giants into this cave and lit fires at the mouth of the cave to suffocate the giants. I can't imagine with all of the challenges to surviving day to day and then to have to deal with "Monsters" like this. These were definitely tough people.
@lkball006 ай бұрын
I’m Choctaw, my grandmother and her brother grew up in an orphanage because their mother died and their father re-married not keeping the children. My grandmother married a white man and had 12 children, my father was proud of his heritage as a Choctaw. I miss him dearly. He taught me to be the hard worker I am today. The only stories I ever heard, the tornadoes he experienced as a child and some stuff he and his brother used to sneak into a cellar to smoke (he never told me, my uncle did…lol) I like to think of myself as an Indian Princess. Thanks for listening. 😂😂😂
@redcloudshaman25096 ай бұрын
Many blessings to you my friend!!!
@TrumpIsrael20246 ай бұрын
So are you Pocahontas? 🤣
@nottsork6 ай бұрын
do you know what Croatoan means , The Souix do but they wont tell outsiders ......i think it means slaughtered , or half breeds, but i dont know for certain, itrs "something they do not talk about"
@rickythompson18236 ай бұрын
As an oklahoman I felt the tornadoes and seeking around to smoke 🤣🤣
@chickensandwich88086 ай бұрын
Greeting from Ireland. Much love to you and your family.
@juggernaut65446 ай бұрын
I’m a member of the Choctaw and we have a ton of stories like this one of my favorite is the story of the story of the Nalusa Falaya it is a shadow monster that lurks at the edge of the light and depending on who is telling the story it either takes you away or it would poses you and make you do evil things
@TimeCircleBlue6 ай бұрын
I have just heard this story at this moment, and suddenly I feel both unsettled understood about the suspicious feeling I get whenever my pets stare at a shadowed corner for longer than they should.
@juggernaut65446 ай бұрын
@@TimeCircleBlue I know how you feel my grandma told me this story when I was little it took me longer than I’d like to admit to go into a dark room or out in the dark lol
@flashgordon66706 ай бұрын
Bigfoot? Big load of bollocks more like. Them injuns been smokin too much wacky baccy and eatin too many magic mushrooms.
@honorableundead22736 ай бұрын
Actually I want to know more about this one. Mainly because of certain events my family experiences as farmers. Since then it seems the family has gone mad if they hadn't been already
@juggernaut65446 ай бұрын
@@honorableundead2273 hello I’m not one of the tribal story tellers, so I don’t know much more than what my grandma would tell me, what I do know is that it is described as a humanoid with the head of a coyote, it has glowing yellow eyes, it is usually described as being darker than the darkness around it and is usually found in the darkest part of the forest, just at the edge of the light waiting for someone foolish enough to wonder away from the safety of the light, it will also lure people away into the darkness by mimicking, the sound of a crying child, it’s voice is described as a whisper.
@durandjensen59296 ай бұрын
It's been a long time, and I'm a bit vague on details, but one time a guy pulled out a map of California. He looked for all the places on the map named after Sasquatch, mostly named because of sightings, encounters, and other "incidents", and plotted them. What he discovered amazed him. There was a line that followed the tops of the mountain ridges; that is, there was a _trail_ along the tops of the mountains that basically followed all the place names. IOW, Sasquatch tend to travel along the mountain tops. Not saying they aren't seen other places, just that they've been seen so much along the higher reaches, that places up there are _named_ after them.
@JohnnyRFrias5 ай бұрын
Awesome, that's the first time I heard a story of Native Americans fighting BigFoot.🦍
@Momo_Kawashima6 ай бұрын
Monke: haha am stronk The boys unleashing a volley of .50 cal:
@RobertStewart-i3m4 ай бұрын
Yeah when I heard they used Buffalo rifles I knew those things would bite it
@Nturner8226 ай бұрын
Love how your content can stay grounded while exploring this stuff - there’s so much we’ll never know past and present. The world is still very big…especially for an Aussie. I’ve been solo hiking weeks from the nearest trail, people, etc, and I can’t explain some of the noises I’ve heard at night. It’s humbling
@spiritchanger6 ай бұрын
"You eat babies" "WE EAT BERRIES AND MUSHROOMS YOU FOOL"
@jeromeheramis29326 ай бұрын
Nice to hear that RDR reference
@SpiderManpeterxxxparker6 ай бұрын
"YOU EAT BABIES!"
@wild_burn6 ай бұрын
“YOU EAT BABIES!”
@srulyquittner64886 ай бұрын
this is from gta@@jeromeheramis2932
@gdiaz88276 ай бұрын
The babies are a delicacy
@FastHouseGaming6 ай бұрын
Man, i dont listen to a lot of story channels, but your illustrations and music is what keeps it engaging, and you have litterally interesting stories.
@joebenzz6 ай бұрын
It takes a special kind of badassery to being at war with something that's not even yet proven to the rest of the world.
Or a special load of bollocks more like. Bigfoot? Big load of bollocks more likely. Them injuns been smokin too much wacky baccy and eatin too many magic mushrooms.
@canadianmmaguy75116 ай бұрын
@@flashgordon6670 have you ever read any books or watched any videos of them? "Les stroud bigfoot romania Bob gymlan" You're welcome
@joebenzz6 ай бұрын
@@canadianmmaguy7511 He won't. People like that do not want to go that way and in all fairness it's cool to each his own. But why go to a video on the subject in this case?
@canadianmmaguy75116 ай бұрын
@joebenzz I challenge any disbelievers to spend a few hours actually looking into it. If it's not real they have nothing to be scared of, right?
@plaguedoctor40096 ай бұрын
i grew up in the choctaw nation in oklahoma, and had many friends who were apart of choctaw families and such and i remember one of them at a family dinner started to tell how they have encountered a reak big foot in their backyard said how he saw it stalking him or something. Bigfoot is very popular in the 3 towns i grew up in and bigfoot was a major part of my life. Trying to hunt him with a .22 rifle at age 9 with my younger brother
@Eidolon1andOnly6 ай бұрын
Yet never heard this particular storg passed down? I wonder why.
@billhicks45376 ай бұрын
I would probably say it's a good thing that you never found him 😉
@eerieforest91886 ай бұрын
I grew up in the Blue Ridge of VA where they were called 'wild people'. We were told as kids to stay away from them , that it was bad luck to shoot at one, and that they would seek revenge even many years later.
@colcommissar236 ай бұрын
What three towns? My dad was Choctaw and grew up around Prague/Stroud Oklahoma and the Choctaw newspaper would print these types of stories.
@plaguedoctor40096 ай бұрын
I grew up around broken bow, hotchtown, and Idable. The story I heard from my friend never went public, he didn’t really tell anyone because he thought people would think he was crazy@@colcommissar23
@bloodyirishman57586 ай бұрын
You have such an immeasurable gift for storytelling. In my opinion you are quite frankly unmatched! Thank you.
@Appalachian_Hunger6 ай бұрын
One of my favorite channels. Best narration and story telling on KZbin.
@grubshmumber21126 ай бұрын
Him and Mr.Ballen
@ezsmith37656 ай бұрын
Beyond Creepy wants you to hold this 🍺
@Lost-go6im6 ай бұрын
Take a look at missing enigma it’s kind of the same style but he goes over missing people in national forests and the weird story’s
@commissaryarrick96706 ай бұрын
Too many advertisements to be honest
@Appalachian_Hunger6 ай бұрын
@@commissaryarrick9670 wouldn't know I pay for KZbin premium so I never hear commercials
@Major_Pipps6 ай бұрын
This really angers and frustrates me... Just in the Americas alone, over 100,000 complete skeletons of giants have been unearthed, logged, weighed and measured. The local papers write about it. Then EVERY time a government body comes and collects the bones, the bones come up missing... And then we have to hear "There's little to no proof of the existence of said thing". This has been the case for giants, various monsters, groups of people... It makes you sick. It happens so often that they have a term for it called Out of Place Artifacts or "Ooparts" for short. ANYTIME something is found that doesn't fit Darwins theory or established history, the standing orders are to destroy it. Why you ask? So they can continue to says "Where's your proof?" Or "There's little to no proof". Why, WHY are they so scared to have something challenge their delicate, fragile little theories??!
@OloRishaCreole5046 ай бұрын
Yes..rumor has it..they dumped alot of those bones in the ocean
@chrisbowman669814 күн бұрын
Because the Bible is true and they dont want you to believe it.
@snokey11534 күн бұрын
What
@MrReddevil24204 ай бұрын
Imagine that... Hearing an old story I haven't heard in forever. My big granny was Choctaw, full blood. She told me this story when she still spoke English. But that was when I was about three years old. The last time she told me about it, she spoke in Choctaw. Still remember her telling me to keep my eyes open and not to follow the sounds in the woods. Wrong time for my first night trip into the woods with the big kids. Made it about a hundred yards. When I got scared, I had to run back to the porch by myself. Glad there was a full moon that night,lmao
@lazarussolomon35416 ай бұрын
I grew up around the mowah-choctaw back in alabama, i even asked about this once. Wish i could say something cool, but the old lady responsible for telling us choctaw stories just laughed patted my head and sent me on my way
@sneakyviewing43916 ай бұрын
I would unfortunately advise rather than asking, knowing or experienceing. Those who don't know will never be told. Then instead of directly talking about it, beat around the bush. It's how I talk about any secret topics on various reservations. If they don't have the right medicine or experience with a certain people then they aren't to be trusted. Nobody who truly knows wants the unworthy to hijack and steal power. I get the most details that way but it's less exciting and feels more like I'm counting cards in Black Jack. Just kind of how it always goes on this continent. 😉 ...It's important to remember that indigenous peoples of Oklahoma more than likely are there because of American foreign/domestic policies such as The Trail of Tears and other forced relocation strategies. The people living here for 200 or so years may very well be as clueless as the European settlers in such a case. European religion and culture are more similar in such cases than most would realize. Often times it's Christians who say to never bring up the name of certain demons so as not to pro/invoke them. Many times this is the case with 'cryptids' and other super natural types of creatures in North American religion and lore. So even if you're allowed 'inside' it still may not be discussed for safety/superstition. That's the concept this creator missed out on explaining how much of history is lost. There is lost history. Some things though, we just don't talk about.
@npatil856 ай бұрын
@@sneakyviewing4391I am Indian from India ( himalayas. Yetis etc.) and we have many lost truths not being shared which is a problem because people are going missing in national parks missing 411 Indians.and native Americans aren't helping by keeping things to themselves .. it's effing frustrating
@bigchedds83896 ай бұрын
Of course that's the response you got. If there was any truth/stories it died off with the native genocide while the remaining indigenous were sent to reeducation camps. What we know for fact is the Smithsonian made it a habit to collect giant human skeletons in the 19th and 20th century.
@bigchedds83896 ай бұрын
Don't forget about those reeducation camps the indigenous had to attend after the G***cide. Also don't forget the Smithsonian was working overtime collecting large human bones in the 19th and 20th century.
@flashgordon66706 ай бұрын
Bigfoot? Big load of bollocks more like. Them injuns been smokin too much wacky baccy and eatin too many magic mushrooms.
@sneakyviewing43916 ай бұрын
As an Archaeologist, I wish more people knew about the 1527 Narváez Expedition where lost and shipwrecked Spaniards landed in Florida and were taken as slaves. Only 4 men survived. Those of which were sold and resold and escaped as slaves, eventually walking almost the entire Gulf Coast region in order to make it to Mexico City. One of the best tales of American exploration, because they saw the continent as is, without massive destruction and depopulation yet from disease.
@bluefordpickup6 ай бұрын
What does this have to do with Bigfoot?
@Novabunny_6 ай бұрын
All that yapping and it’s not a spooky story…
@drewfologist27556 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣@@bluefordpickup
@oldjaguar6 ай бұрын
I’m reading this like oh crap this is sounding pretty good and then…..nothing but disappointment. at least make it relevant 😒
@drewfologist27556 ай бұрын
I wish the analysis was more concrete. However, I’m one of those “show me the evidence” people. I await the snarky replies.
@batboylives6 ай бұрын
My Great Aunt Scotty, Grandpa's (RIP) Sister was the storyteller in our Family and she told us some scary ones. My Grandpa's Uncle went to WW1, Rank: Sapper. I am Cree from the Moose Cree First Nation, from Moose Factory, ON Canada on...the Moose River. (I know, that's a lot of Moose just mentioned, lol and yes there are Moose here) Located at the mouth of the James Bay Coast. Peace to all and love.
@larrygoodyear68756 ай бұрын
At least you're not repeatedly referencing beaver. A Native fellow on TV did that, only to discover the audience wouldn't take him seriously!
@batboylives6 ай бұрын
@@larrygoodyear6875 Just mentioned where I was from and I was Cree, Moose Cree because we live on a island on the Moose River so we were called Moose Cree . But all Good brother, Peace and Take care. Love and peace to all.
@Mojo-Beans2 ай бұрын
This was my favorite Wartime Stories video yet. Keep up the good work!
@andrewhall71764 ай бұрын
At the scene where the Choctaw discover the remains of their stolen relatives, I think you meant "gluttonous flies" (as in greedy and gorging themselves) rather than "glutinous flies" (which would be flies having a slimy, gloopy consistency). Just thought I should mention this. Great video! As always! I love these stories.
@juliehealingleaf62113 ай бұрын
We speak typo we know what he meant
@andrewhall71763 ай бұрын
@@juliehealingleaf6211 Hey, you would be surprised at clueless some people out there are. Someone might genuinely watch this and start using "glutinous" instead of "gluttonous", and there is a distinct chance it would be someone whose mother-tongue is English as well. Teenagers these days hardly read, and many can hardly write.
@GASAT46 ай бұрын
Wartime and Mrballen are top tier on KZbin for story telling, wish you'd post more✌.
@TheLordcyrus6 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite stories you’ve made. I would love to have more of the native stories if possible. Love it.
@danjohnson8876 ай бұрын
I've made this comment a bunch of times on this channel. This man has the BEST voice for narration I've ever heard.
@Phlowermom3 күн бұрын
I appreciate your diction, clear voice and excellent pronunciation!!! You have no idea how much more relaxing it is to listen/watch when there are no jarring mispronunciations, strange hesitations and uneven pacing!! This is wonderful!! New Subscriber!! Glad to be here!!
@annien.17276 ай бұрын
Man, I honestly had no idea that the Choctaw would have history with Bigfoot.😲 It's so fascinating! I love this!
@Eidolon1andOnly6 ай бұрын
Too bad this is a fictional story that was loosely based off the equally fictional movie of Bone Tomahawk. The story told in this video doesn't date back farther than 2015.
@JOrtiz-gc2dl6 ай бұрын
Bone Tomahawk, man was that movie brutal to watch. I bet the people behind the predator movie Prey got their idea from this story of bigfoot vs Choctaw. @@Eidolon1andOnly
@annien.17276 ай бұрын
@@Eidolon1andOnly Huh?! It's fiction?! I thought it was a true story!😢
@Eidolon1andOnly6 ай бұрын
@@annien.1727 That title at 1:47 _The Fog of War_ stories are always fictional.
@annien.17276 ай бұрын
@@Eidolon1andOnly Oh, I see. Got it.
@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go6 ай бұрын
You knocked another one out of the park Luke. I can't sleep with out my dose of wartime stories. God bless you Luke
@ifoundjesusbehindthecouch62616 ай бұрын
My in laws live in eastern TN along the Blue Ridge mountains. Many years ago (before smartphones) I was hiking along their spring branch and came across a HUGE barefoot print in the sand/mud. My size 12 boot was dwarfed on all sides by the print. I ran back down to the property and tried to show others the spot but couldn’t find it again
@YuNherd5 ай бұрын
i love these mini dialogues, adds more depth to these stories
@StephenP-pu8fv6 ай бұрын
You have a great channel. Not to take anything away from your success, but I feel like you’re extremely underrated in the story telling game. One of the best on KZbin for sure.
@sqw33k6 ай бұрын
One of the absolute best things about this channel is: No. Fucking. Jumpscares. Thank you so much for this and I hope to see great success for your channel in the future!
@forrestgumball6 ай бұрын
The Dark Magic Marines video has 2 jump scares
@mrman-eo4mr6 ай бұрын
i am a Choctaw and i've never hear this story before thank you
@Eidolon1andOnly6 ай бұрын
Because it was made up and based on the movie Bone Tomahawk from 9 years ago.
@Eidolon1andOnly6 ай бұрын
@@mazz7834 Bob Gymlan did a video debunking this story. There's no record anywhere of this Choctaw myth prior to 2015, and only after when Bone Tomahawk came out.
@mazz78346 ай бұрын
sorry ! I"ve been around twice as long as him and i'm not about to take the word of a snot nosed kid! excuse the expression of my generation! if your think youtube and the on line internet dosen't scrub information to keep you dumb, your nieve!
@mazz78346 ай бұрын
@@Eidolon1andOnly sorry juutube censorship won!t allow me to enlighten you with anymore comments! you must remain ignorant!
@mazz78346 ай бұрын
@@Eidolon1andOnly the comment section of googlejootube heavily cencered, you must remain ignorent!
@juliehobbs6656 ай бұрын
Yaaaaaaay! So glad you have some help to lighten your workload! The artwork was amazing! I could tell it wasn't your work, (which is always spectacular!) but I was really impressed. Looking forward to seeing him bring the stories to life in the future! The writing for the story was equally stunning! Looks like you've got a great team going! Congrats! 🎉😊
@MGK90074 ай бұрын
I'm 1/8th Choctaw , I live in Colorado with my Daughter... We've narrowly escaped them many times in the past 14 years... Had over 15 sightings... We've been chased down mountain passes in our vehicle... That's when I knew they could run 45 miles per hour keeping up running beside my SUV ... These creatures are real and no joke ....
@happycoaster8083 ай бұрын
Real enemys od humans
@patriot17764th3 ай бұрын
Dang!!!!!!
@micvili75276 ай бұрын
The stench seems to be a theme with these giants
@luziferj27896 ай бұрын
I watched the Roy videos again yesterday, today a new one, how nice! Edit: I love that you took the natives for this story, they had alot to tell and there are so few stories for the amount of (mysterious) history of the native americans. Edit 2: Get well soon with your voice
@brentmckenzie27936 ай бұрын
Love me some squatch stories , the fact that you're covering one is double the fun
@redme84736 ай бұрын
Filipinos and Native American share similar beliefs. I was born in a US Naval base in the Philippines , subic to be precise and grew up there and stationed many parts of Asia. I am half Filipino and white. O boy do I have many stories to share during my childhood and my time as a serviceman . Regarding witchcraft, aswang aka shape shifters /skin walkers, ghost etc.... now I am based in Dallas TX, chowtaw is 1 hour away from ME
@sharonrigs79996 ай бұрын
Subic was the best place ever. I loved it. I loved the gorgeous Philippino women the most.
@redme84736 ай бұрын
@@sharonrigs7999 hahaha same here brother, the former hospital is the most haunted place. But olongapo bar has amazing ladies 😁😁😁
@flashgordon66706 ай бұрын
Why don’t you get some actual real tangible physical evidence then? Smoke enough wacky baccy, take magic mushrooms and get drunk and you’ll see leprechauns riding flying pink unicorns.
@BigFists20246 ай бұрын
Evil is everywhere
@PunchBuggyDreams6 ай бұрын
Kamusta Ka Guapo?
@samueldodge80776 ай бұрын
This is probably the coolest Bigfoot story I've ever heard.
@naturalbornpatriot63696 ай бұрын
Check out Michael Crichtons “Eaters of the Dead”. There’s a fun adventure action film adaptation called “The 13th Warrior”, however the book is based on actual historical account. It is said that this group of humanoids these warriors came across were some lost Neanderthals. Would make a great video, and bring a lot more attention to such an incredible story.
@letsdothis90636 ай бұрын
I live in a town valled Greenwood, in Leflore County, MS Greenwood Leflore was my great great great grandfathers arch enemy. Lol Greenwood wanted the Choctaws to be more white, and Mushulatubee was the last full blood chief in MS at the time of removal. Mushulatubbee gets a bad wrap in history, but he very much wanted to continue the traditional ways. Greenwood Leflore stayed at his massive mansion called Malmaison (his dad was french). Mushulartubbee led his people to Oklahoma on the trail of tears.
@ted__ryan6 ай бұрын
Letting us Natives shine! Fuck yeah! 🤘🏽
@sasha1mama6 ай бұрын
The People deserve to be known. 🤝
@AnnHollowell-l1v6 ай бұрын
❤❤
@davidschroeder32726 ай бұрын
I couldn't stop watching and listening, it was so riveting! My twin brother back in the 80's may have had a bigfoot encounter at an apartment complex in Marlborough, Massachusetts. He had gotten home from work and parked his car. As he exited his vehicle he was accosted by a horribly putrid stench coming from the vicinity of the dumpster, used by the apartment residents, and set back into a wooded area. He assumed it was rotten meat that had been tossed into the dumpster, when suddenly there was tremendous pounding from the woods behind the dumpster, that was so powerful that he described it like Clydesdale horses beating the ground in unison. In terror, he fled to the 3rd floor apartment he and his wife shared. He then called the police. They came out and scanned the woods with a spotlight but didn't see anything.
@KidTitan6 ай бұрын
My great grandma was Choctaw. I enjoyed listening to this Choctaw legend.
@danielarevalo7013Ай бұрын
I greatly appreciate and value this style of storytelling, as it evokes memories of my youth when I would purchase audio cassettes to listen to. Thank you for sharing these narratives-they truly enhance my day
@kats97556 ай бұрын
After hearing many stories of men frantically fighting groups of bigfoot with their guns making hardly a dent, hearing that one guy just fkn ended one with a knife??? Dude had some BALLS. I know the bigfoot was already wounded but a wounded bigfoot is still a damn bigfoot 😅 I tip my cap to that guy. Fantastic video, by the way!!!!
@flashgordon66706 ай бұрын
Bigfoot? Big load of bollocks more like. Them injuns been smokin too much wacky baccy and eatin too many magic mushrooms.
@neft54496 ай бұрын
@@flashgordon6670hey British troll, get out of my comment section!
@biggieyorke84156 ай бұрын
Great video.Compelling to watch.Delightful artwork semi animated making it exquisite.I have heard of this account before. If I’m not mistaken this actually happened.Good to see the attempt at the end to tie up loose ends,and establish fact from fiction.Easy to watch and listen to so enjoyable almost addictive.
@mcbrians.85085 ай бұрын
That's a genowska not a bigfoot. A genowska have fangs and are cannibals. bigfoots are peaceful and keep to themselves
@janicec19484 ай бұрын
They not Bigfoot's Bigfoot's have never been know to kill are mess with nobody..these creatures are descendants of the Nephilim...from the bible!
@PistonHeaven6 ай бұрын
Wow I am honoured to be able to listen to this, by far my favourite stories channel
@buckhunt68326 ай бұрын
On the west coast, in California in the northern bay area, the Pomo natives have a similar story about creatures known as "wallopers." The legends are real enough to this day that I don't know anyone who would go walking through those woods.
@AlexanderOsias6 ай бұрын
Which woods?
@juliehealingleaf62113 ай бұрын
@@AlexanderOsiasprobably humbolt
@juliehealingleaf62113 ай бұрын
@@AlexanderOsiasprobably humbolt I got a kind of a strange feeling while driving through there
@MosioB5 ай бұрын
This was in my opinion an absolute masterclass in story telling! The pacing, the voice acting, the music, and the visuals all culminated in what i think is your best video yet! Keep it up
@oklahomaoff-roadadventure6 ай бұрын
I saw one not 40 miles from this location in the kiamichi mountains of pushmataha county. It was green eyed and not aggressive at all. It liked fruits, berries , deer corn and oats. The hair was not matted but groomed nice shiny black hair with blueish black skin. Flat wide nose with big wide lips. They were very nice and gifted me several thing as well as antlers. If you wondered too close they would snap branches in warning but never howled or got aggressive. It was an enlightening 3 months that I spent studying them. I will be back there soon to continue my research, I cant wait…
@leejennifercorlewayres91935 ай бұрын
Did it have a copper color stripe? There's a family of them that we're friends of some humans so a bit tame.
@Tsiri095 ай бұрын
Like different species or types of wolves, I think there are different species of "bigfoots." The stories are oral history, not just legends. There are far too many historical stories for me not to believe it.
@flintliddon5 ай бұрын
And why haven’t you taken even one photo
@ashtonjohnson57276 ай бұрын
I used to have land in Leflore county Oklahoma. One night while I was camping I swear one ran right by my tent. The footsteps were very heavy sounding on the rock. There is no doubt in my mind it was something running on two legs. I always thought bigfoot may be out there, but after my experience I have no doubts whatsoever. It's not something you ever want to run into in the woods I'll tell you that much.
@classicgunstoday19726 ай бұрын
Do you realize that right across the state line from where this took place in Miller County, Arkansas is where the Fouke Monster (aka Boggy Creek Monster, aka Skunk Ape) had been reported for decades not just there but all over South Arkansas, North Louisiana, southeast Oklahoma and East Texas. Made into a popular docudrama in the 1970s called “The Legend of Boggy Creek.” I live in the region and have heard stories over the years. I’ve visited Fouke, AR twice and those people believe it. Musician Lyle Blackburn has done a lot of more recent research on the subject. The Choctaw also lived in northeast Louisiana and southeast Arkansas as well.
@intelex6916 ай бұрын
I am a native of NW Louisiana I have spent 64 years living 56 miles from Fouke and roaming these woods along the Red and Sabine rivers. Family was here for 200 years, I can tell you from experience these things exist.
@classicgunstoday19726 ай бұрын
@@intelex691 I live in northeast Louisiana not far from the Arkansas line east of the Quachita River. I have heard stories from various ordinary down to earth people first and second hand. I know, as few people do (because so many live in urban environments), just how much raw untamed wilderness there is that is rarely set foot on by man.
@Jerry000g6 ай бұрын
They are out there, my mothers family had seen them in the Sabine River basin near where toledo bend is now for hundreds of years. I saw 1 for the first time in the early 70s in NW La just a mile or so from the exact location near the Texas state line where the GCBRO claim to have shot and wounded 1 in Feb 2002
@classicgunstoday19726 ай бұрын
@@Jerry000g I don’t doubt you saw something. Nature is a bigger thing than we think it is. Wildlife $ Fisheries claim constantly there are no panther in Louisiana, but people see them all the time. You ever see the 1976 movie “Creature From Black Lake”? A fictional movie but based on the boggy creek monster. Low budget but very well done and spooky for atmosphere and cinematography. Filmed and takes place in Oil City and Caddo Lake. The producer and director is from Mansfield and Shreveport area. You can find a cleaned up HD version for free on youtube or just about any streaming service.
@kurtgandenberger61394 ай бұрын
in florida they are known as skunk apes as well. i think ours are a bit smaller.
@natecampbell64266 ай бұрын
*new Wartime Stories video drops* *clocks out for lunch and starts watching*
@jimhorton29966 ай бұрын
Wow. I've heard this story about a dozen times but this rendition was the best by far so bravo to this channel!!!!!!
@SamtheIrishexan6 ай бұрын
This was very well produced, narrated, and illustrated good job!
@troygroomes1046 ай бұрын
Proud Cherokee & Choctaw tribal member here & i never heard of this
@flashgordon66706 ай бұрын
Bc it’s fiction. Even if some people did go missing, they were taken into slavery. Perhaps there’s some feral rapist cannibals, like the film the Hills have Eyes. I’d be more surprised if that never happened, given the amount of psychos and serial killers there are. Human cannibalism is a real thing, naturally in olden days without electricity and flashlights, things get exaggerated and embellished by Chinese whispers.
@charmcrackermusic42506 ай бұрын
Well that took the air out of the story Good story though , But it doesn’t mean they don’t exist thanks for keeping it honest but if you ever do find out let us know thanks
@janicec19484 ай бұрын
Because all the old ppl are dead ! So no stories are being told
@prasantabehera74616 ай бұрын
I was constantly checking my timeline to see if wartime stories had uploaded a video ? Mr Ballen, Bedtime Stories and Wartime stories are the best youtube channels.
@Uh-Cool-Luh6 ай бұрын
It's cool knowing im not the only one 😅
@erichinkle73476 ай бұрын
I first read of this account in Lyle Blackburn's book Beyond Boggy Creek, which is worth buying for monster fans. I never did think I'd see it adapted to YT by you folks. It's a fine piece of work and I enjoyed seeing it.
@classicgunstoday19726 ай бұрын
Finally, another viewer that made the Fouke Monster connection. The Legend of Boggy Creek. I have been to Fouke twice and have Blackburn’s book and people have been seeing this animal for decades in North Louisiana, South Arkansas and East Texas and Louisiana. The wild wooded wilderness in this region is vast.
@321homewrecker6 ай бұрын
My buddy lives in these mountains and has major issues with the Sabe people on the daily, they steal his bales of hay and do alot of other strange stuff. He's a veteran of war and is a no bs dude. These stories of these war are very much true and still happen present day
@christiancampos10986 ай бұрын
Just wanna say from a fellow Marine, your channel is awesome dude! It's really well produced and i can tell you really put a lot of passion into these videos, I love them. Rah!
@Fuhrious6 ай бұрын
Opened KZbin and saw a War Stories video drop. I said "Oh yeah, good one right off the rip”
@davidd.barton24886 ай бұрын
Thanks for the new video... I've seen all of the others twice lol.
@ianmacfarlane12416 ай бұрын
Outstanding episode - edge of the seat storytelling and wonderful artwork, just as expected on Wartime Stories. Out of all cryptids, Bigfoot is easily the most plausible IMHO. I hope your recovery goes well - take things easy. I had dreadful fatigue after having Covid - wouldn't wish it on anyone.
@logang65836 ай бұрын
I was JUST thinking i hadn't seen a new post from you in a while, and bam, here it is! Thank you 🙏
@joshuataft55416 ай бұрын
Great story.. As a boy i thought my name was dorky but as i grew and realized we all have a name with a personality..im proud to be a joshua..as shoukd you alk for your unique name.. ❤🙏👍🫡
@royalcreations39706 ай бұрын
Excellent. This is a good starting point for anyone interested in looking deeper into these accounts.
@That_Guy55756 ай бұрын
Ngl I was hoping you were sponsored by Dr. Squatch lmao, woulda been so fitting. But seriously, I LOVE this channel. Your narration style and voice is so satisfying. I eagerly eat up every video you put out
@makyshii6 ай бұрын
thanks for bringing us these incredible stories!❤
@andrewpetik20346 ай бұрын
Bedtime Stories AND Wartime Stories within 24 hours?!?!?!!! That is exciting!!!
@GCKMimi6 ай бұрын
Ooooh I love the differing participants in war, modern and historic. Keep up the good work, Luke!
@UFOSPACEMAN6 ай бұрын
A people who can take out these things is a people that can do amazing things
@brianslink51305 ай бұрын
You guys at wartime stories are awesome! Was driving through Oklahoma while listening to this, so perfect! Thanks
@glendanison30646 ай бұрын
Thank you. I've been hoping you would do this story. And I wasn't disappointed
@lethemusikplay6 ай бұрын
Awesome story telling . Not to mention the story illustration and voice changes to give the viewer a much better visualization of the story being told. Great job definitely see this channel getting more views and subs , it's well deserved to say the least
@michaelendres65536 ай бұрын
I'm creek and Seminole from Oklahoma Im glad yall covered this Bigfoot story
@karenroot4506 ай бұрын
This was a great rendition of the encounters. Great voice. Made me subscribe. Thanks. You are so right the Artwork for this is amazing and chilling at times.
@robbiesdad16 ай бұрын
I grew up with friends who were Choctaw and Irish , my Best friend Dad was Choctaw, and treated me as if I was his Son (I am of Navajo and Irish) any This Man who I Grew to love like a father, would tell me stories of the Choctaw People. He was a very good man.
@Izzy1022.6 ай бұрын
I got so excited seeing a new video pop up thank you for all you do love the content