Jan 18

Sasquatch hunting a sea lion

Tom Sewid writes “Today I received a report of someone seeing a Sasquatch/Bigfoot hunting a sea lion by running out to it from the bush and breaking it’s neck. Through the years I have received other reports of this as well, but mainly to seals sleeping out on the rocks.

There’s the report from Hooper Bay Beach of a large Sasquatch/Bigfoot harvesting meat from a dead walrus on a beach. Sasquatch Island/Vancouver Island waters are presently overpopulated by seals and the invasive species of sea lion called California Sea Lions. Our region also has numerous stellar sea Lion haul out places right by the forest. This offers numerous rockeries that offer great hunting spots for the creatures. Apex predators always capitalize on easily abundant protein sources.
If bears will take a chance on large marine mammals one would expect them to harvest seals and sea lions throughout Sasquatch Island. One report I heard a number of years ago was a small sea lion being dragged into the woods during an ooligan run in an inlet river. I have seen seals and sea lions in the rivers during ooligan runs and they will travel close to the shore. I am very interested in other reports of the creatures harvesting seals and sea lions.”

This is the Hooper Bay Report:
On July 4, 2014, around 8:30 am, I rode down to the beach on my ATV below Hooper Bay to check for driftwood. Within 20 minutes or so, I got to the big rotten walrus that had beached earlier this spring on the southside of the Nuvuk Spit.

When I was about 300 yards or so away, I saw something bobbing up and down from each side of the super-sized walrus (probably due to the stomach being bloated). The walrus is decaying and rotting. The right arm bone is showing with the meat rolled down from being rotten. About five days earlier, I had seen a raven picking on the walrus and figured that was it until I got closer and realized it wasn’t a raven.

I stopped and spent a half-hour or more waiting to see what it was. Whatever it was, it stayed behind the walrus, with its head bobbing. Maybe it was bobbing its head to see over the walrus to see if I was still there, or maybe it was bobbing his head while it was eating the rotten meat from the walrus. But I could not tell what it was until it finally stood up.

When it did, its left leg came out first and stood up real easily on the right side of the walrus. It was huge, very tall and dark, but its legs seemed somewhat brownish. Its body was very broad and muscular. It stood up with its legs semi-apart and fists clenched and I could see knobby knees. Its hair seemed raised on its upper body. We stared at each other for five long minutes or more. It looked like it was challenging me.

It was unusual for anyone to stand there so long as it did just looking at me. He was standing erect and seemed larger and bigger than any people that I have seen fishing in the area before. If it wore clothing I could have seen colors of his coat or clothes. He finally turned his head to look down at the walrus and started walking northerly along the beach. He took long strides as he walked.

At first I figured he was still a person and was going to his boat, but there wasn’t any boat or ATV nearby. When he got to a big log, he picked it up real easily and started walking back to the walrus. He seemed to walk a little slower with the log.

That’s when I finally remembered I had a camera – I took it out and began to take video of it, even though I was getting terrified and every sense of my body was in a fleeing mode. But I stayed since it didn’t seem to mind me too much of my being there.

Almost right away, I couldn’t take any more video as my card got full, but I watched it a few minutes longer as he reached the walrus and saw him use the log as a lever to try and turn over the walrus. (A live walrus weighs 4,000 pounds, so a dead one must weigh 1,000 to 2,000 pounds.) And I didn’t want to get closer because the ground between me and the creature was really rough and if I had to run away even in my ATV, the ground would slow me down.

One funny thing about this is he didn’t even ask for help or assistance – and I knew that walrus was old and rotten which no human would touch or consume. Only the seagulls and ravens had picked on it. No person would never attempt to salvage very bad meat from long-dead animals as this thing was trying to do.

Then it began to get visibly frustrated being unable to turn the large rotten walrus over with the log, although I didn’t hear any sounds or noises from the creature. I knew the sand was soft and soggy there and the tide was starting to come in. Finally I decided to get out of there seeing his demeanor changing with each unsuccessful try at turning the big walrus over, and I was getting too terrified of it. I didn’t want to stick around no more. I cautiously left the area looking back constantly to be sure I wasn’t followed by it. I could still see him using the log and working on turning that walrus over.

When I got further along and could see it no longer I felt safe enough to pick up some driftwood on the way out. I got a small load of driftwood and went on back home, being glad that everything turned out good even with whatever it was I saw that morning.

The next day on July 5 – this time taking my shotgun along – I went down to the old walrus but the creature was gone. I decided to check the rotten animal and found it to be about 3.7 feet high and the creature was much, much taller than that. I also found a small steak knife stuck into the meat but nobody cuts up seals or walruses with such knives. This creature apparently had found the knife from somewhere and learned how to use it. There was a good-sized piece cut off from the neck area, about a foot and a half by a foot wide. The meat was ruggedly cut with a lot of cut marks. It smelled very terribly – people in Hooper Bay wouldn’t be touching that stuff.

I took the knife and stored it in a ziplock. It’s really smelly and stings your nose due to the odor. I looked for the log the creature had used but had no luck finding it. Maybe it floated back out to the ocean with the tide.

Later that day at the post office, I learned from a cousin and her husband that while clamming in a nearby area they came upon large footprints. Another person told me he had found unusual footprints that had toenail or claw marks and when he compared them with his own size 10 shoes, they were bigger by 5 inches, more or less. He had been fishing for humpies, but when he found the tracks he upped and took off for home.

After the sighting, I told fellow Hooper Bayers about the creature. In hindsight, maybe I should have kept this to myself, but I wanted the community to become aware of other beings and creatures that live with us. There are creatures out there. My grandmother instilled in my mind daily when I started hunting around eight-years-old, saying to me, “Do not ever panic when you encounter something that is strange.” She told me, “One of these days, now that you are traveling to the wilderness, you will meet creatures that live with us, but they don’t trust people”.

(Editor’s Note: Photos are used with the permission of Bosco Olson. The photos of the Bigfoot are still pictures from the video, and were used for measurements on the creature and the walrus. The creature is 2.5 times taller than the walrus – so if the walrus is 3.7 feet according to the witness, then the creature is 9.25 feet tall. Each freeze-frame photo shows a dark creature with a coned head, a broad and muscular body, large feet, and carrying a 15′ x 1′ log that a person would have difficulty carrying, if at all, since it would weigh several hundred pounds. The video has not been offered for public viewing as of this time.)

See full report

7 Responses to “Sasquatch hunting a sea lion”

  1. Martin Z

    A sea lion is so blubbery that I didn’t think it was even possible to break its neck much less a 4000 pound sea lion. Makes me realize just how vulnerable we really are against these creatures and how far down the food chain we are. Wow what an amazing report. Keep’em coming Wes. Thanx.

  2. Martin Z

    Learned how to use a knife? I think sasquatch knows how to do a lot more than people give them credit for. That’s why in my opinion Sasquatch is more human than ape but not all human. The elders of this island seem to be familiar with this creature and say it doesn’t trust humans and with every right too. We humans are destructive and kill what we don’t understand. I still think one needs to be brought in for confirmation.

  3. Glen K

    Well the picture wasn’t that conclusive. Then again, I wasn’t standing a few hundred yards from an angry Sasquatch trying to eat a meal. A rotting walrus. Yumee

  4. Daniel D

    I’d love to see that picture for myself. And why not show the video? I’m not saying this individual doesn’t have a reason, maybe he is afraid of what people will say? I try to put myself in other people’s shoes before I pass judgement and the Sasquatch research community being as judgemental as they are would probably rip this guys video apart. I wish they’d stop doing this to people so that we could all feel more comfortable with sharing great evidence with each other. Yeah that’ll happen when people stop hoaxing, that crap needs to stop also.

Leave a Reply