wildlife biologist finds trackway in mountain area

Three of us were scouting for tracks. We happened to meet a retired wildlife biologist with the Forest Service who directed us to an area that he thought might be worth checking out for Sasquatch activity. He owned some cabins on the river and said he had experienced Sasquatch sightings on his property.

The road to the remote area was extremely rough. For two days we neither saw nor heard anyone else. On Sunday the driver stopped at a spot where the jeep trail skirted what had been a muddy stretch, now dried. We had made many similar stops that weekend to look for tracks in places not covered by rocks and thick vegetation.

I noticed a concentration of dead leaves in the midst of the smooth dry mud; I moved the leaves to reveal a depression that the leaves had filled. It was a sixteen-inch track. One of the other guys, an experienced local hunter, announced the discovery of another track, then another. Four tracks were found, deeply impressed in the mud, paralleling the jeep trail. It had not rained for months, so the tracks could have been made the previous May or June.

Alongside the huge tracks was a series of black bear tracks, an adult and a cub. There was no mistaking that the huge tracks we were looking at were NOT bear tracks.

In a spot where the abandoned stretch of jeep trail had a raised center, a left foot registered what looked like a series of marks from a flat nail of a big toe. The tracks were about seven inches wide across the ball, with a heel about four inches wide; depth varied, but they were up to 1.5 inches deep. The average heel-to-heel distance was about 57 inches for the first two steps. The last step, the one where the big toe left the nail marks, was about 80 inches, leading us to speculate that the animal may have slightly stumbled when its foot hit the high center of the road.

It appeared that the track maker had been walking alongside the road, not in it. Rather than walk around the abandoned short muddy curve, it looked like the animal just kept to its straight course. We took pictures, but I was later informed “none of the pictures turned out.”

This article is from the NAWAC website NAWAC

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8 thoughts on “wildlife biologist finds trackway in mountain area

  1. Wildlife biology jobs like marine biology deals with the research of animals and they do alot of work in laboratories. They also do research for organizations. If a wildlife biologist says it is true then it is.

  2. Hello! bigfootforest.com

    Footprints of the Bigfoot have measured 17 inches in length and their depth implied a creature of tremendous weight , perhaps in excess of 600 pounds. They are human like but display no arch, and the first three toes seem to be a similar length.

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  4. I just spoke with Big Foot over the phone, He said: “Why ya’ll gotta blame Me for everyone in the woods.”

  5. The creature that I had risked my life from certain death on the side of a hill on a logging road, was made of wood and old brown carpet.

    ”Somebody stole his mask,” said Fremstadt. “His face was an old gorilla mask.”

  6. Any credible biologist or anyone who has a science background/degree would know that personal eye witness testimony is unreliable and lowest form of scientific evidence.

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