A listener writes “My dad and I were skeptics when it came to Bigfoot, until today. While up in the hills near Wenatchee, he came across tracks that left no doubt in his mind. Each stride measured nearly 7 feet apart, heading uphill through steep, snowy terrain.
The tracks were pressed about 2 feet deep into the snow. My dad is no stranger to the woods and he’s spent years navigating those hills and identifying all types of tracks of different animals. But these were different. The tracks were fresh, in untouched snow, in a place where no snowmobiles or people had been. They were massive, unmistakably Bigfoot and clearly made by something running uphill. This changed everything for us.
Location.. So, you head up Wenatchee Heights.. you take a left so you don’t go up toward Mission Ridge, and it’s not at the top by the snow park. Keep heading all the way to the top near the Clockum, stopping right before the powerlines in the open prairies.

My Dad dropped down to the right to get a better view of Wenatchee under the fog since they were sitting on top of it. As he started dropping down, he saw footprints coming up the hill. It immediately took his breath away because he had been seeing elk tracks all day, but these were different.
When he got off his sled and looked down in the hole, he couldn’t believe his eyes. Even from the snowmobile, seeing those strides and that track gave him an eerie, goosebumps kind of feeling. The more he looked into it, the more certain he became of exactly what it was.
Knobby
That’s similar or the tracks BF researcher Paul Graves found, also in Washington several years back. Some were six feet apart. This was a big boy leaving these tracks. 15′ long prints left by those in the 7 to 8 foot range are usually about 4 feet apart.