CaribooBC
FNG
Even the scream was an attention getter…..Ya gotta admit, it's an attention getter!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Even the scream was an attention getter…..Ya gotta admit, it's an attention getter!
Just started watching it. Very interestingRecently watched a movie available on Amazon Prime Video called Missing 411-The Hunted. It is about a series of unexplained missing hunter stories from different areas in the US. It was actually pretty good...and a little creepy. Based on a book from a series of missing person stories by investigative author Dave Paulides. He is a former police detective and has researched hundreds and hundreds of missing person cases in depth. I was googling each of the missing hunter stories as I was watching the movie and they are all bona fide unsolved cases. If you’re a twitchy person when it comes to stuff like this, I don’t recommend watching it until after your upcoming solo hunt...
This story is similar to quite a few that were posted on here a few years back.
I was in the backcountry elk hunting with a friend. It was late and and the sun had gone down about an hour before. We had shot a couple of grouse during the day, and he was talking to me as I built a fire to cook them. He pauses mid-sentence and says "WHAT THE F--- IS THAT?"
My friend does not curse often, and that combined with the fear I heard in his voice instantly sent my mind spiraling; coyote, bear, mountain lion, bigfoot, etc....
I turn and see him pointing up in the sky at a string of lights that was moving vertically from the horizon. This was shortly after the Star Link satellites started getting launched and luckily I had seen some videos online to be able to identify it quickly. My friend had not seen such videos and I can only imagine what went through his mind; UFOs, aliens, an attack.
We still get a good laugh about it.
Well…don’t leave us hanging!I read every post on this thread over the last couple of weeks, and found it very entertaining. I have a few stories of my own that have varying levels of creepiness.
I have a few stories about a suburban house I used to live in, but I am not sure if I should tell them here or on a different thread.
Fixed it for ya!Bump for more stories. One of the “best” threads on the forum.
Yeah the handgun laws are absolutely stupid in Canada (I'm in Ontario). Concealed in a city is another conversation (and I have no problem with it) but how is open carry in a rural or wild area different from carrying a rifle? Target practice with a centre fire rifle on Crown land is generally legal if done in safe circumstances, but having even a 22 pistol for plinking would land you in jail. The former takes a lot more care to do safely.After reading the many stories from down south….. I really wish we had the opportunity to wilderness carry our handguns. There have been a couple of times I would have felt much more at ease with my 10 mm at my side. Too bad we only get to shoot and carry handguns at approved ranges. Even my 9 mm Jericho would make me feel better some days. Maybe Trump is right…… we need to become the 51st state…. Did I really just type that….LOL.
As Troy says…….ChootemBeen hearing weird noises around camp at night, so I put out a trail camera.
Wish I wouldn't have...
View attachment 1014284
I would love to use my Ruger Mk IV for grouse hunting.Yeah the handgun laws are absolutely stupid in Canada (I'm in Ontario). Concealed in a city is another conversation (and I have no problem with it) but how is open carry in a rural or wild area different from carrying a rifle? Target practice with a centre fire rifle on Crown land is generally legal if done in safe circumstances, but having even a 22 pistol for plinking would land you in jail. The former takes a lot more care to do safely.
Damn…. Another pic of my ex. She is really putting herself out there on the dating sites.Been hearing weird noises around camp at night, so I put out a trail camera.
Wish I wouldn't have...
View attachment 1014284
Damn…. Another pic of my ex. She is really putting herself out there on the dating sites.
Man that’s a dinger. Well written too!New member here saying howdy and to tell one of the weirdest things to happen while out hunting.
I’ve been reading and lurking and want to say thank you all for the tips and advice that’s helping me plan a hunt with my son and decide to register and tell one of my experiences as another way of thanks.
A bit about me first: I came to the USA full-time in 1991 after being raised in Poland due to my parents' careers. I'm a dual citizen with passports for both countries, but I consider myself 110% American. We visited the States often growing up to see family and buy things that weren't available back home.
In 1998, as soon as I was old enough, I joined the Marines and served 20 years—half enlisted, then commissioned as an officer. I retired as a Captain, then worked a few years as a contractor. I've been deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan, parts of Africa, and Haiti (literally hell on earth). I have creepy stories from all those places, but they're not for this thread.
I've hunted all over the U.S. (including Alaska), way up north in Canada for moose, boars in Europe, and more. At 15, my father and I hiked the entire Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine. I'd take leave to disappear into the mountains or high desert for a week at a time. The backcountry and outdoors don't faze me much—it's the two-legged predators that worry me most, as others here have said.
With that out of the way, here's the creepy part:
After one deployment, I took leave and went hunting in Montana with a buddy who lives there. We used Zortman, MT, as our base and headed into the Missouri River Breaks (outside the national park, about 50+ miles from anything resembling a town) for a week of antelope hunting.
We set up our first camp, took care of the horses and the one mule his family loaned us, and sat around the fire with cigars, planning the week. We talked about a promising draw on the maps that looked like a good day's ride. To supplement our food, we brought 12-gauge shotguns (one side-by-side, one over/under) for birds or small game.
Our firearms: I had a 25-06 rifle, he had an old 30-06. We both carried .44 Magnum wheelguns, plus a Ruger SP101 in .357 and a lever-action in the same caliber packed in a blanket roll on the mule (his dad insisted on sneaking that in).
The first few days were peaceful—great wind, endless views, no one shooting at us (lol), plenty of sign, and antelope in the distance. We weren't in a rush, so we just relaxed and enjoyed decompressing.
Day four started normally. We loaded up, shot a bearing from the maps, and rode out to where we'd picket the animals and walk in.
As we got close, we noticed signs of an old ranch: low stone wall remnants, posts, bits of a cabin. We love history, so we decided the mile or two difference in campsite wouldn't matter (famous last words).
We dismounted and spent the morning exploring: corral, more stone fencing, another outbuilding, lots of charred wood. Digging around, we found .44-40 shell casings and a few arrowheads (slightly larger than bird points).
That afternoon, we both filled our tags and hiked back to camp. We'd been so caught up in the old site that we hadn't set up the tent or unpacked the cook kit. Under a full moon with wind howling, we struggled to get everything sorted. We were exhausted, secured the meat, and crashed hard.
At sunrise the next morning, we woke to what sounded like the end of the world: screaming, gunfire, thundering horses about to trample us.
We bolted out of the tent, guns ready, crouched defensively, and rushed to the horses. Nothing. No dust, no people, no horses—only the wind rustling the grass.
The horses and mule were freaking out—snorting, stomping in the brush corral we'd made. We calmed them down, looked at each other, and just said, "WTF?!"
We did a grid search around camp for tracks, marks, anything. Zilch.
The rest of the trip was uneventful. Back in civilization, we told an old local rancher (born and raised there, probably a year or two younger than dirt) what we'd heard. He said when he was young, he heard stories about a homestead in that area attacked by the Sioux back when the land was still wild. The Sioux didn't like white encroachment and hit at sunrise—believing if you're killed at night, your spirit wanders lost forever.
They took scalps, burned the buildings, and stole the animals. It was a family of six plus a few hands and a circuit-riding preacher. After missed services, others rode out and found the scene. The family was buried on a cliff overlooking the river (we never found any graves).
Was it a residual replay of that event? An auditory hallucination we both shared (including the animals reacting)? No idea. But it was the craziest thing I've experienced while hunting stateside.
I've had other wild stuff overseas (possible djinn encounters, etc.) and while camping, but this one stands out.
Anyone else had similar experiences in the Breaks or old homestead sites?
Thank youMan that’s a dinger. Well written too!