Captain Watson's Gang
The Moorings Lyrics


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Friendship This story started off on a glorious day of fall When…


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Comments from YouTube:

@tunasandwichts

No matter if you believe in bigfoot or not, these videos are simply well made.
The hunters genuenly get invested in any little detail, any clue they can find, and manage to hype you up. They focus on the nature and history of this creature, and its supposed habitat. An exploration into untouched wildernis, provoking the question of "what if", that really makes this exiting. All of it paired with the beautiful scenery of all these remote places, untouched by other humans. It really feels cinematic, doesnt it.
Despite this, I personally am quite sceptical, given no bigfoot has been killed, or has been documented by a more official source, yet one has to acknoledge the sheer amount of sightings and history surrounding it. If you break it down, a tall, rare kind of ape, having developed a bipedal walking style along us humans is not the most absurd thing in the world.

@robertbeck8585

I live on the Kenai Peninsula. In 2019 we had devastating forest fires. The Funny River fire in particular was close to my house. It burned an estimated 30,000 acres of dense forests. It also pushed a ton of wildlife out, along with something I’ve yet to fully understand. I got a quick glimpse of it while I was driving down my gravel road. It stood over 7ft on two legs. It had broad shoulders and had long stringy hair. At first my mind was trying to see a moose or a bear. My brain could not comprehend what I was looking at. Once I stopped the truck to take a better look. The animal made three quick steps. But these weren’t normal steps. They were like leaps. And then it was gone. I couldn’t see it through the woods. I stayed parked for about 20 mins waiting to see if I could clap an eye on it again. But it was gone. I had the window down. But didn’t get a distinct smell or hear anything breaking in the woods from the animal walking.

The next night I was working in my detached shop. I had been working for a few hrs fixing some yard equipment. Then I heard a loud bang. It sounded like something ran full speed into the side of the building. I went outside expecting to find an animal or a fallen tree branch. Instead I found a piece of spruce I had split for firewood. It looked like it came from my woodpile about 30 yards away. When I picked it up to go put it back on the pile I heard something crashing through the woods behind the shop. I immediately thought it was a bull moose or a scared bear. But when I looked into the woods there wasn’t anything that I could see.
Later I started to piece together the previous day and how a chunk of spruce could make it from the wood pile 30 yards to the shop. I probably couldn’t throw it 15 yards. And I used to play ball in college. It began to start making sense I guess. What I saw that day is probably what most people call Bigfoot or something like that.
Makes me take a step back and wonder sometimes.

@11bravo18

Thanks for the fiction piece, Bud.
Were the creepy dubbed in noises your idea?

@obelus5985

Thank you for sharing your experience. They've thrown pebbles or acorns at my house and once banged on it twice in the middle of the night. We've experienced them for 2 years on and off (mostly in the summer...we think they go somewhere else in winter). Don't let anyone tell you they're not real I saw one once with my own eyes. The one I saw didn't seem particularly tall and it was painfully slim.

We heard them for months. I'm high functioning autistic and many of us suffer insomnia. I would go out with coffee and sit on my back porch in the dark and listen to cicadas and tree frogs (very peaceful). I heard lots of whoops and woos in the night. We've heard all the other stuff too, rarely tree knocks, once a whistle, once a chorus of screams and the "ninja" talk. I thought it was teenagers for long time. But wondered why people would be running around the thick woods at 2-4 am almost every night even after weeks of heavy rain. Don't they have jobs or school? Then I figured it out.

First Nations people say when they bang on your house it means they're trying to get you to come out so they can look at you. If you consistently ignore them they'll eventually lose interest and move on. I hope so.

@TheDrumscum

​@@11bravo18 the funny river fires did scare up a lot of unexplained incidents. I live on the KPEN too and is far more wild than you can imagine.

@censorthis-uu6cc

@@11bravo18 - thou dost protest too much.

@zetterburger

@@11bravo18 My favorite part about this comment is a douche like this gets eaten first.

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@RaeC5280

Regardless of what they were able to document, this is worth a watch for the absolutely stunning beauty of the land!

@davidpeightal4918

Breathtaking scenery. Your drone footage of the whale is second to none. You put a tremendous amount of thought, money, effort and calories into the making of this video. Thank you so much.

@thelthrythquezada8397

Alaska was my favorite place to live in! Once you get over the cold, the all day dark, or all night days... I loved it!

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