Creepy experiences in the backcountry

Joined
Oct 5, 2018
Messages
2,129
Location
Colorado
If you're going to bump this thread you better be adding a creepy story. Don't just bump it hoping for spooky handouts. I'm tired of seeing this thread near the top without new material.

In order to not be a hypocrite I'll add a story from a long time ago, May of 2003 I believe . I can't remember what my two idiot friends and I were trying to accomplish that day but we attempted to hike into the backcountry and it was one of those days where we made it a few miles just walking on top of the snow drifts but once it warmed up we were post-holing and it became a bad scenario for teenagers wearing skate shoes or whatever and generally being unprepared. Instead of going back the way we came due to our predicament we decided to drop straight downhill to get out of the deeper snow and just planned to hitchhike back to the car from whatever road we came to first. Great plan! After slogging down this steep north facing mountain for at least an hour or two we unexpectedly ended up at an old cabin on the edge of the wilderness which we were not expecting. I've since looked at the map on my onx and this is literally the only dwelling within many miles and seems to be a private inholding that pre-dates the wilderness designation. I remember hoping that it was an unoccupied summer cabin but we saw smoke coming from the chimney and knew someone was home and we were suddenly aware that we were trespassing. The road leading to the cabin was unplowed with no vehicle tracks leading in or out which we all though was strange given the isolated location. I remember some type of quick discussion taking place amongst us. Something akin to "hey let's get the hell out of here". As we start walking down the road out of nowhere is just this old man with a long white beard wearing a tattered grey robe and carrying what I can best describe as a long sicle like the grim reaper carries. For a minute we all thought we were about to be murdered. Turns out the guy lived on his own up there and didn't own a vehicle. He said he rides his bike into town once every couple of weeks during the summer and stocks up on supplies for winter. He said we were the first people he had seen or talked to since November (it was early May). We apologized for trespassing but he clearly didn't care. It took us several hours of walking down his road and then finally getting a ride from someone back to our car. Looking back on this I actually really admire the guy. He's probably passed away by now but there can't be too many people left like him living alone at 10,000 ft all winter.
 

ztc92

WKR
Joined
May 8, 2022
Messages
402
Looking back on this I actually really admire the guy. He's probably passed away by now but there can't be too many people left like him living alone at 10,000 ft all winter.

I work in healthcare and had a patient that lived above 9000 feet all by herself in the mountains of Montana. Wood heat, no electric or plumbing. She was in her 60’s when I met her in the hospital due to low oxygen and COPD. One of the toughest women I’ve ever met. We discussed the risks of going back to her mountain home with COPD and low oxygen and she said she’d rather die up there than live in the city connected to an oxygen tank. Can’t say I blame her.

She lived in her cabin and rarely saw annyone else from roughly October - May every year due to getting snowed in. In the winter months, I would coordinate her prescription pick up with her neighbor who would then bring her inhalers and medications to her by snowmobile. In the later years she would spend her winters in town with a friend but always went back to her cabin as soon as the snow melted.
 

Loggerdude

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 30, 2017
Messages
152
Location
Oregon
A weird shrine in a spot no one would ever go, no memorial.
Bear running right under my feet from a den, holly crap.
 
Joined
Jan 22, 2025
Messages
1
Not a backcountry story but it’s a creepy one. I was young at the time but I remember fishing with my father in Southern California. While out fishing we heard a lady screaming for help, we cruised over to her row boat and apparently her boyfriend jumped in the water after the oars. Dude never re surfaced. They found his body about 4 days later. This happened in Southern California in the late 90s.
 
Joined
Feb 4, 2014
Messages
554
Location
Colorado
My buddy and I hiked in on our first elk hunt, going in about 5 miles. We got off course navigating in. Wound up in a dark part of an aspen grove with a ton of animal skulls and bones. We continued on down, as we didn't want to camp in a bear/cat neighborhood. The rain started up and we decided camp would be where we are. The trail we were on was somewhat overgrown and not used much. We decided to go 100 yards off to setup the tent. I fell asleep to rain, followed by snow. Around 2am I awoke to a bright light from outside the tent. I woke my buddy and said "you see that light" he said " that is the moon you dumbass". I agreed and went back to sleep. We woke up at 5am to start a hike to a glassing spot. As I opened the tent, i noticed there were boot prints off the trail and up to our tent in the fresh snow. As we hiked up the prints went back to the trail and then up some nasty oak brush off trail. The visibilty was low and it was super quiet. Never heard anything crashing through the oak brush. We hunted the next seven days and never saw another person. We did move our tent the next afternoon.....😀
 
Joined
Apr 9, 2023
Messages
401
My buddy and I hiked in on our first elk hunt, going in about 5 miles. We got off course navigating in. Wound up in a dark part of an aspen grove with a ton of animal skulls and bones. We continued on down, as we didn't want to camp in a bear/cat neighborhood. The rain started up and we decided camp would be where we are. The trail we were on was somewhat overgrown and not used much. We decided to go 100 yards off to setup the tent. I fell asleep to rain, followed by snow. Around 2am I awoke to a bright light from outside the tent. I woke my buddy and said "you see that light" he said " that is the moon you dumbass". I agreed and went back to sleep. We woke up at 5am to start a hike to a glassing spot. As I opened the tent, i noticed there were boot prints off the trail and up to our tent in the fresh snow. As we hiked up the prints went back to the trail and then up some nasty oak brush off trail. The visibilty was low and it was super quiet. Never heard anything crashing through the oak brush. We hunted the next seven days and never saw another person. We did move our tent the next afternoon.....😀
Must be something about elk hunting ( probably has more to do with where it’s done ) that lends itself to creepiness!
 

BigBelle

FNG
Joined
Mar 2, 2022
Messages
52
Location
FL
I would have to say my worst and scariest backcountry experience was in Pine Creek.

The last rappel in Pine Creek, notorious for injury due to lack of judgement and skill, decided to give me a run for my money. Luckily I a slight idea of what I was doing so I had safeties in place and didn't get seriously injured and now one below was injured.

I was rigged up, ready to rappel the drop first and the group that was ahead of us had moved on down the canyon.

If you don't know what the last rappel is like in Pine Creek then here ya go. It's a 100ft rappel and about 80 ft of it is free hanging. To get onto the rappel you have to be rigged up on the rope, feet dangling over the edge, and swing out over the 100ft drop before you are actually on the rope. There is no walking onto this rappel or easing into it. Just swing your butt over this 100ft void and then you're good to go.

It's not unusual to have weird starts like this in canyoneering, and this one isn't really that weird as I've gone into bigger and more advanced canyons.

Well I was all set up to go and I started to work my courage up (first time I had been in Pine Creek) to swing out over the void. As I was getting ready I realized there was a ledge I could stand up on and that would help me be more comfortable. Great Idea!

I stood up and got all my weight on this ledge.

Immediately after I stood up the whole ledge gave out from under my feet.

I fell about 4 feet before my self belay stopped me. I'm pretty I kept my brake hand firm, but I know the self belay worked because I had to get it lose before continuing.

I was fine, but I remember looking at my friend and his facing looking like, "Keith is dead!" Just sheer terror.

I felt it too. I was like, "Get me the F off this rock."

It was terrifying and I'm so glad I learned all the techniques I had learned, because they kept me safe.
 
Joined
Dec 6, 2017
Messages
54
Location
MT
great thread so far!

In the late '80's my dad and a friend with mules got a forest service contract to cut out 18 miles of trail with several lakes along the way.
It must have been May because it was a warm, sunny T-shirt day going in. We stopped and a lake about half way for the night.
Dad found a small tree broke off about 5 feet high but still attached. This made a perfect lean-to, he threw a sheet of plastic over it making a open ended shelter just big enough for both of us. his friend slept with the mules maybe 100 yards away.
we woke up to 6" of snow and a BIG set of cougar tracks that came down the trail, circled our open tent within arms reach and on down the trail...


Several years later, my dad, brother and myself were hiking up a bermed road in about 12" of snow. we had about a mile to go to get to a clear-cut we wanted to hunt. we hadn't gone far when I got the feeling we we're being followed on our right side. I kept looking back, stopping and watching for movement and listening but never caught anything.
at the top of the incline, the road splits. We went left, glassed the cut, looped up in some timber and back out the way we came. at the split in the road, over our tracks was big set of lion tracks came out of the trees and was forced to cross the road to continue in the direction we went.

When that 6th sense goes off it's unnerving! When you get confirmation it's REALLY unnerving!!

I'm not scared of cats, I carry a pistol out of respect though!
 

go_deep

DWKR
Joined
Jan 7, 2021
Messages
2,137
"I'm not scared of cats, I carry a pistol out of respect though!"

That's one of the funniest damn quotes I've ever heard, but the most truest statement ever made!
 
Joined
Dec 6, 2017
Messages
54
Location
MT
"I'm not scared of cats, I carry a pistol out of respect though!"

That's one of the funniest damn quotes I've ever heard, but the most truest statement ever made!
lol
I just want to have the upper hand if I can help it.
shot this one at 70 yds following my wife and I deer hunting down a gated road last November.
 

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Tegr0429

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jun 18, 2021
Messages
203
Not scary per se, but the most scared I’ve ever been hands down. It was around November of 2000-2001. I was about 7 or so at the time. We were at a deer camp off of lake blackshear in GA. There were several older broken down cars that were scattered around the property on higher ground. The cars were parked there during the flood of ‘94 so they wouldn’t ruin and just left for whatever reason. The cars were over grown with briars and old grapevines (you get the picture, real creepy looking to a 7 year old). The old guys at camp always joked to us kids that an old man lived in those cars.

Fast forward to around lunch after a morning hunt we would ride side by sides around on the roads and just look at the property (huge piece of land 8k acres) so it’s easy to get turned around as kids. My uncle was driving my cousin and I around with the plan of maybe killing a doe or that’s what they told us. We came around the bend to a small food plot and there is the creepiest looking old car parked off in the woods on an old fire break. We drove past the car and I didn’t even look into it for fear of seeing the “old man” who lived in there. We made it about 50 yards past the car when the Polaris ranger started “stalling out”. We came to a stand still and the ranger wouldn’t start. I looked back and the car door was open. My heart hit my toes. My uncle made the statement “wasnt the door closed when we went by” to make myself feel better I stated that I thought it was, my cousin said the same. We were both white as a ghost. I then turned around and looked back at the car to see the most horrifying image I have ever seen. A man dressed in a huge black sheet stumbling his was toward the ranger. We both screamed at my uncle to start the ranger. As the man approached my uncle started the ranger and sped away. Back at camp we told the story to the older guys with tears streaming down our faces. Seriously terrified. The old guys laughed and confessed the prank they played on us.it was the land owner dressed up in a old black sheet.
Alot of the older guys are no longer with us at camp anymore but my papa loves to tell that story everytime we go to that camp. He especially loves to tell the part about how I was sound asleep on the way home in the passenger seat with tears rolling down my face. I’ll never forget that.
 
Joined
Apr 9, 2023
Messages
401
Not scary per se, but the most scared I’ve ever been hands down. It was around November of 2000-2001. I was about 7 or so at the time. We were at a deer camp off of lake blackshear in GA. There were several older broken down cars that were scattered around the property on higher ground. The cars were parked there during the flood of ‘94 so they wouldn’t ruin and just left for whatever reason. The cars were over grown with briars and old grapevines (you get the picture, real creepy looking to a 7 year old). The old guys at camp always joked to us kids that an old man lived in those cars.

Fast forward to around lunch after a morning hunt we would ride side by sides around on the roads and just look at the property (huge piece of land 8k acres) so it’s easy to get turned around as kids. My uncle was driving my cousin and I around with the plan of maybe killing a doe or that’s what they told us. We came around the bend to a small food plot and there is the creepiest looking old car parked off in the woods on an old fire break. We drove past the car and I didn’t even look into it for fear of seeing the “old man” who lived in there. We made it about 50 yards past the car when the Polaris ranger started “stalling out”. We came to a stand still and the ranger wouldn’t start. I looked back and the car door was open. My heart hit my toes. My uncle made the statement “wasnt the door closed when we went by” to make myself feel better I stated that I thought it was, my cousin said the same. We were both white as a ghost. I then turned around and looked back at the car to see the most horrifying image I have ever seen. A man dressed in a huge black sheet stumbling his was toward the ranger. We both screamed at my uncle to start the ranger. As the man approached my uncle started the ranger and sped away. Back at camp we told the story to the older guys with tears streaming down our faces. Seriously terrified. The old guys laughed and confessed the prank they played on us.it was the land owner dressed up in a old black sheet.
Alot of the older guys are no longer with us at camp anymore but my papa loves to tell that story everytime we go to that camp. He especially loves to tell the part about how I was sound asleep on the way home in the passenger seat with tears rolling down my face. I’ll never forget that.
That is great!! Those are the kinds of memories you will carry with you all your days!
 
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