Unexpectedly running into my ex-wife at a restaurant a few miles from camp!
very trueYou were lucky to have escaped with your wallet! Your house, truck, dog!
I've been in the Thorofare on 7 elk hunts and a couple deer hunts. When I lived in Cody, we did some horseback fishing trips in that country and hiked up the South Fork and North fork more times than I can recall. I've had my share of grizz experiences, but they weren't daily experiences...That typically is a daily experience in the Thorofare. Every trip and it has been quite a few there has always been Griz encounters.
I was wondering why my sleep went to Hades!I just spent the last half hour reading though a bunch of the posts on this thread…just want to say thank you all for the nightmare fuel.
In the mid '70's my Podna Joey, my little brother by 5 yrs, and myself, were out one morning before daylight walking to a favorite hunting spot that was 3.5 miles from Joey's house. We all had our shotguns, walking down the blacktop road. Joey and I were 14 or so, he had a 12 gauge pump, I had a 20 gauge pump, and my brother a .410 gauge pump. We reached the turn- off "road" which was an old, rutted logging road to the bayou 2 miles in. We would go thru open or logged areas, then there'd be woods, open area etc. We were going thru an open area when we saw something coming from the next wooded area. We knew there were wild horses in there, and that's what we thought it was. It's DARK and the only light we had was the moon, and we could hear something but couldn't make out what it was. It turned out to be 2 guys and a half naked girl that had been scared by something and were trying to get to a town about 10 miles down the road. We told them they had 5 miles of walking before they reached the highway. We laughed and kept walking, then WE heard it. It sounded like a woman screaming bloody murder! We'd walk a ways, stop and it was following us and screaming. Nope, no flashlights and we didn't have enough matches to waste either. We made it through the hunt, and got back and was told it was "Panthers." That's what the Old Timers called mountain lions in Louisiana back then. My Dads Dad was a trapper all of his life and he told us how fortunate we were that we didn't make the menu. I didn't hear that sound again until I heard it on the internet. This was in Lacombe, Louisiana
Yeah, Grandpa told me "There are things you're not old enough to know about just yet, but you'll find out soon enough." I sure did!Ya gotta watch out in those louisiana swamps. One never knows what creatures are stalking about. There the Hidebehind, wampus cat, Big foot, and the legendary Rougarou
And the most feared……the Boudreaux and Thibadeaux.Yeah, Grandpa told me "There are things you're not old enough to know about just yet, but you'll find out soon enough." I sure did!
That is interesting that the bayou dwellers differentiate between Rougarou and Big Foot. Though the word Rougaru from French, in some references, does translate to wolfman, there is not complete agreement on its derivation. And if you read below, a "wolfman" (Rugaroo) could just as well be simply a "hairy man" versus a man figure with a wolf head. In the Lousiana swamps, though, I could believe both could be there.Ya gotta watch out in those louisiana swamps. One never knows what creatures are stalking about. There the Hidebehind, wampus cat, Big foot, and the legendary Rougarou