Survivorman Bigfoot | Episode 3 | Klemtu BC | Les Stroud

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In the largely unexplored wilderness of Klemtu, a Native Reserve on the coast of Canada’s beautiful British Columbia, local residents have been telling stories for generations about Bigfoot. Klemtu Hill is an old volcano, it’s a sacred area and the Bigfoot reports here are in the hundreds. Something that is supposed to weigh 900 pounds has to leave a trail – whatever is there, it leaves tracks, makes sounds in the night, makes friends and helps people, abducts and even kills people. Les Stroud’s approach is to place himself in the hot spots, in the firing line, wherever there have been reports of sightings or strange happenings, in a tent, outside of a tent, with fire, without fire, inside of a cabin, walking on lonely roads, whatever it takes to provoke an encounter. Les’s quest is to make contact and in this wild place of abundance, where large animals could exist indefinitely, it is the unknown that keeps him coming back for more.

Directed By Les Stroud
Starring Les Stroud

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Survivorman Bigfoot was the coolest show EVER.

cliffcurtistruth
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I stopped watching television when my daughter was born so i missed this and your new series. I've been a fan since that first episode, 20 years ago. You inspired me to learn survival. Been a great life.

timothy
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Native Americans are the best resource we have!
Thx

kimanderson
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I’m from port hardy and I was talking to two Klemtu residents the other day and they talked like it everyone from there knows it’s there, believes in it and have even seen it come right into the village

randiseriss
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Les is one of the most credible outdoors men in the world. I love how his passion for being out in nature opened the doorway for him to believe and research Sasquatch!!

tarawho
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These Survivorman Bigfoot episodes are thoroughly keeping me going

andreabais
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My encounter was in 1978 in Olympic NP. Some friends and I skipped school, drove south of Forks to the Hoh Rainforest. We parked, then grabbed our day packs and hiked a little way up the Hoh River Trail. We left the trail on the north side, and hiked through some small, mossy meadows until we were half a mile into the rainforest... a strange hike. First thing we noticed was something so weird that it took awhile to identify it... the utter silence... no bird or insect sounds at all. As we hiked further in, we noticed a smell that I can only describe as a foul combination of skunk, sulfur, and a garbage dump on a very hot day.
We sat on thick moss in a circle, in the middle of a small meadow surrounded by giant trees. Someone started handing out beers, and I started rolling a joint, which took a while since I had to remove seeds first. I loaded the cleaned and crumbled weed into the paper, and as I was licking the glue I looked up from my lap and into the forest.
My friend John, who was sitting next to me, whispered, "Jesus, what the hell..." About 10-12 feet high, peering out from behind a giant cedar, was the head of a sasquatch. It was looking at us.
It seemed to exude intelligence and wisdom. I didn't feel threatened. I could see that it was simply watching us.
John said, "There's bigfoot watching us." I looked over at Eve, who is a member of the Quilleyute Nation, to see her reaction. She didn't appear distressed, but only said, "We need to leave. Don't panic. Stay calm. We just have to go somewhere else." The sasquatch wasn't there when I glanced back, and I did feel a moment of panic. The face was gone. Where did it go?
I put the joint in the baggy, stuffed it into my shirt pocket, we grabbed our beers and left. On the way back to the trail, it was hard keeping that panic at bay and to walk slowly and calmly.
Part of my panic, I think, is because my worldview had just been shattered. I had rolled my eyes too many times when listening to other people's bigfoot stories in the past. And around Forks, WA, you can hear plenty of those stories. Now, I don't merely believe, I actually KNOW.
In my opinion, formulated after copious reading and discussions with other witnesses, if you want to meet sasquatch, head to the rainforests (Hoh, Queets, & Quinault) of WA's Olympic Peninsula. That's sasquatch central. Just be casual about it, because if finding bigfoot is foremost on your mind, you probably won't see it. It's like other wild creatures who can sense your intentions (threat assessment) in that regard.

alanhyt
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Les is my hero.If I was ever to get lost on this planet I'd want Survivor Man with me .

Christine-jznk
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I would’ve never imagined in my wildest dreams that I would be watching anything about Bigfoot, but… here comes mr Less and makes it freaking interesting!!!

АлександрГодзиковский-ьр
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By far, the most legitimate series to bring Bigfoot to a digestible level for all. Great stuff Les, keep it coming.

Mcgregor
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Survivor man Bigfoot is absolutely gold. Whoever came up with this is genius!

missy
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Les, it's interesting you should mention clam digging. One of the more interesting sasquatch stories I heard was actually embedded in an indigenous ecology and human-environmental relations video as part of an enviro policy degree program. The video was about clam gardens, arrangements of rocks along the shoreline that have developed over the millennia with human (and, according to the natives, sasquatch) assistance, where more nutrients catch and pool up and make for rich clam beds, as you describe. Most of the video, though, was this elder talking about Sasquatch and how much they love clams, and especially snails. Apparently, according to this guy, their favorite food on the coastlines is turban snails. Thanks for doing this series, survivorman has helped me in many ways in my life, and the totem of (and obsession with) sasquatch has been with me since I was a little kid and read Greene's books from the school library when I was 7. I didn't live anywhere near sasquatch then, but as an adult I've moved to the PNW, on the Olympic Peninsula, where I've had many sasquatch encounters personally and have talked to countless people here who have had experiences, one gal who is very close to my family who has a family of them that comes through her property sometimes. If you ever do another survivorman: bigfoot series, you owe it to yourself to do it on the Olympic Peninsula, where the macaw people sometimes affectionately call them 'silverbacks' because of the way the dew forms on their backs in the morning light.

brendosapien
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I'm a Footer from North Dakota but I've been all over the place. Maine, Oregon, and Idaho, is where I've had my own encounters and experiences. 3 good sightings, wood knocks, boulder and rock throwing, tracks 👣, buck snort with running heavy and rock throwing. I've camped from Alaska, Maine, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Texas, Oregon, Idaho, Utah, California, Wyoming, Montana, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, New York, Illinois, New Mexico, and Washington. Korea, Yukon Territory, and British Columbia. A dozen lakes, rivers, and streams and no drinking problems. I love being outside, even when I'm home. Love you Les!

JohnMelland
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I really like the fact that Les can get scared and just honestly say so.

bigDbigDbigD
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I'm only a few minutes in but man these are really well put together. I've been on a sasquatch binge the last couple of months, I can't get enough 🤣

sctte-
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Hands down the best bigfoot documentary ever

codm-theend
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I always think his intro is saying tickle tickle tickle and that makes my day better

Mr.BonezGo
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I’m am from a north eastern tribe in Australia, what we once called paradise as you could drink from any water hole . I hope they never get hold of the big fellas because only bad can come of it . Just let them be, they keep the bush land clear of things much worse, including us . Cheers

silverbackanimal
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Love this series! Thank you Les. I love living in Sasquatch territory, and respect the wise beings of the forest.

Rymorin
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I'm a Mohawk from Akwesasne Mohawk Territory, I've seen and heard multiple times a family of Wood Walkers...I truly hope they're never fully discovered by the mainstream scientific community, they'll want to do nothing but experiments and dissection and such, leave the Walkers be

TJs_Mobile_Welding