‘I SAW BIGFOOT ATTACK A HIKER’ Hunter’s Terrifying 
You know how some stories settle into your bones and never really leave? This is one of those. I’m not telling it to be believed. I’m telling it because I’ve carried it alone for years, and because there’s a family somewhere still waiting for answers that will never come.
It was the third week of November, peak hunting season in the mountains of northern Oregon. I’d hunted those woods for over fifteen years. I knew every ridge, every creek, every game trail worn into the earth by generations of deer and elk. That forest felt like home—familiar, predictable, safe.
That illusion died before sunrise.
I parked my truck just as the sky began to pale, slung my rifle over my shoulder, and started the forty-five-minute hike to my tree stand. The air was cold and clean, the kind that makes every breath feel sharp and alive. Wind whispered through the firs. Somewhere, a raven called. Everything felt normal.
By first light, I was settled twenty-eight feet up in my stand, waiting. Hunting is mostly patience. Hours of stillness broken by seconds of adrenaline. I had become very good at being invisible.
Around 7:30, I saw movement along the ridge to my left.
At first, I thought it was a deer. Then I realized it was standing upright.
I raised my binoculars, and my stomach dropped.
The thing walking through the trees was not human. It stood at least eight feet tall, covered head to toe in dark, matted hair. Its shoulders were impossibly broad, its arms so long they hung past its knees. It moved with a confidence that stopped my breath—not rushed, not cautious, but deliberate.
Then I saw what it was carrying.
Slung over its shoulder like a sack of grain was a human body.
The person wore a red jacket and dark pants. Hiking clothes. Their arms and legs dangled limply, swaying with each step. There was no struggle. No movement. I’d field-dressed enough animals in my life to know what dead weight looks like.
That hiker was dead.
I watched, frozen, as the creature walked along the ridge toward a series of limestone caves deeper in the mountains. Caves I’d explored years before and sworn never to enter again. Places that swallowed light and sound and felt wrong in ways I couldn’t explain.
Every instinct screamed at me to stay put. To climb down later, hike out, and tell myself I’d imagined the whole thing. But another thought cut through the fear: someone’s family was going to be wondering why their son never came home.
If there was even the smallest chance… I had to try.
I waited until the creature vanished into the trees, then climbed down. My legs shook as my boots hit the ground. I followed the ridge slowly, painfully aware of every snapped twig, every loose stone. The forest grew unnaturally quiet, like it was holding its breath.
Halfway there, I found a footprint in soft mud by a stream.
It was enormous—eighteen inches long, deep enough to make my own boot look like a child’s shoe beside it. Five distinct toes. No claw marks. I took a photo, already knowing it wouldn’t matter.
The closer I got to the caves, the stronger the smell became.
Wet fur. Rotting meat. Something old and predatory.
I hid behind a fallen log about thirty yards from the cave entrance and waited. Ten minutes later, heavy footsteps echoed from inside. The creature emerged into the light, even larger up close—eight and a half feet tall, muscles rolling beneath thick black hair.
Its face was horrifyingly intelligent.
Not animal. Not human. Something in between.
It scanned the forest, its ears moving independently, listening. When its gaze passed over my hiding place, my heart nearly stopped. Somehow, it turned away and disappeared back into the woods.
I waited. Then I entered the cave.
Bones littered the floor.
Animal bones—yes—but human ones too. Skulls. Rib cages. Fresh and old mixed together. My flashlight beam trembled as it fell on the hiker in the red jacket, lying fifteen feet inside. A young man. Early twenties. Cold. Stiff.
Dead.
I had just begun to back away when the sound came from deeper in the cave.
Fast. Heavy. Angry.
The creature was coming back.
I killed my light and wedged myself between two boulders, barely breathing. Its eyes glowed faintly in the darkness as it approached the body. I watched it press a massive hand against the man’s chest, checking. Confirming.
Then it lifted the body and carried it deeper into the earth.
I kicked a rock as I fled.
The roar that followed shook the cave.
I ran. Through the forest. Through pain. Through terror so complete it felt like my heart might burst. The creature chased me with impossible speed, roaring, crashing through brush like it didn’t exist.
I fired my rifle. Hit it. Twice. It barely slowed.
At the edge of a cliff above a raging river, I made a choice no one should have to make.
I jumped.
By some miracle, I lived.
I reported what I could. No cave was ever found. No hiker was recovered. They told me trauma had scrambled my memory.
Maybe.
But my shoulder still aches when the weather turns. And sometimes, when the wind shifts just right, I smell wet fur and rot.
I know what I saw.
And I know that somewhere in those mountains, something still hunts.
Watching.
Waiting.