My wife’s family lives in the Athens area, quite a ways outside town. I’ve spent a lot of time in the National Forest down there (Wayne National Forest, Athens Unit), and thank God I was always armed.
When I camp, I set up trip wires a distance from my tent. They’re tied to chemlights and small poppers—if anything (or anyone) trips one, the light pops on and the noise hopefully scares them off.
Some spots down there give off serious “The Hills Have Eyes” vibes. I’m pretty convinced I crossed paths with a family that’s actually living in one of the old coal mine adits.
I was tracking a deer and came down a ridge. My map showed an adit (mine entrance) at the base. I love local history and the old mines in the region—my in-laws even have a couple on their property that I’ve explored. In one, I added some timber supports and hauled out dozens of buckets of coal. So I wanted to check this one out, document it, match it to Ohio’s mine database, and maybe find the original hand-drawn map.
(Ohio has a great website through ODNR that shows all known mines with scans of the old maps.)
As I worked my way down the ridge, I caught a whiff of wood smoke. Through the brambles, I saw a rough shack built right onto the front of the mine entrance. Smoke was coming out of a stone-and-metal chimney, and there were men’s and women’s clothes hanging on a line out front.
The buck I was tracking suddenly veered hard left, away from the mine, crashing through the brush and making a ton of noise.
That noise made the door open. Out stepped one of the biggest men I’ve ever seen—like a white Shaq (and I’ve actually met Shaq at a gun range). He stepped out slowly and started scanning the whole hillside.
I froze next to a big blowdown oak, praying he didn’t spot me. While he was looking around, two little kids ran outside, also looking around curiously.
He called the kids back in. I waited a minute, then slowly crawled back up to the ridge top. Once I was over the other side, I booked it like the devil was chasing me.
I’ve been in combat, but this scared me more than anything I’ve ever experienced. I felt seriously undergunned even with a 45-70 rifle and a 10mm Glock on my chest rig.
I got back to the main road, drove straight to the Forest Service HQ (great spot—nice place for a picnic too), and talked to a ranger. They knew there was a group living back there somewhere, but not the exact location. There had been break-ins at houses and cabins nearby, plus hikers and hunters reporting glimpses of them. A few people even said shots were fired in their direction.
What stuck with me most: everyone I saw looked surprisingly healthy and clean—not dirty or ragged like you’d expect from people squatting in the woods.
I live up near Cleveland now and drive through rough areas often. I’ve seen drive-bys and worse up here, but nothing has ever put me more on edge than that day in the forest.
Anyone else had weird encounters out there? Or know more about folks living off-grid in the old mines? Stay safe out there.