Quote Originally Posted by Kurando View Post
Well, good point, but everything else on the lake must have been hullicinating simultainously, because when that thing let out it's call you could have heard a pin drop.
That is a good point.

Quote Originally Posted by Kurando View Post
But a few years ago, after I heard it, I was up on the north end of the lake in (the most wild part) and there is a small native settlement up there called Port Douglas. I was just pulling my kayak into a cove to camp for the night and I saw three rough lookin native guys loading firewood into a small motorboat and I figured I didn't want any trouble with them so I got out of my kayak and gave them a hand.

I played it dumb and after the work was done I said "Hey, I'm not from around here, when I was driving through town and noticed all these signs saying 'sasquatch this-and-that'; so what's-up? That things not really real is it?"

The two younger guys laughed but the older guy shot them a look and he said "you know..." "...one time when I was a kid I was hunting nearby at Chehalis Lake with my uncle and suddenly we heard what we thought was a swarm of bees coming at us..." He imitated the noise "Buzzzzz Buzzzzz Buzzzzz" and then he said "we saw some steam rising from behind the trees and my uncle told me 'that's a sasquatch' so we turned around and got the hell out of there."

I thought it was very interesting the he discribed the same type of buzzing sound.
That's scary. Now I will be afraid when I make a wilderness trip there.

How can you go kayaking there when you really think there's a sasquatch somewhere, and especially if you think it's so dangerous that even hunters (with guns) run away? And why should an ape produce steam? Or can it even make fire?