Les is not a Bigfoot researcher. He’s not even a Sasquatch enthusiast. He’s an outdoor adventurer and survival specialist.
But, he’s had experiences when surviving alone out in the wilderness that he simply can’t explain. And now, he’s determined to separate fact from fiction, truth from hoax. In this episode, Les is going for broke. He plants multiple hidden cameras, prepares DNA traps, hangs pheromone chips, hand bells and chimes with camouflaged sound recorders, all in an effort to coax an interaction out of the alleged Sasquatch.
Whoops and strange noises from the forest interior leave Les unsettled yet skeptical. Taking casts of animal footprints to compare with possible Sasquatch tracks, Les finds grizzly prints bigger than his hand. He scales the most remote and dangerous Grizzly Bear territory of the Canadian Rockies alone in his search for the truth. Les has to think like an animal – go slow and take breaks often. In this vast-reaching untouched forest, anything could yet survive.
KY I
Did anyone see where Joe Rogan called les a sellout. Said it made him sad to see him stoop to such levels…
Colleen B
Yep, I saw that this week.
Cynthia H
Sorry to say but I have pretty much zero respect for Joe and a lot of respect for Les. Maybe if Joe would bother to go outside at some point, his opinion might change.
Colleen B
The trail cam picture’s at the end were very interesting. And the dream he had; was it a dream?
Sharon K
Joe Rogan Blah Blah Blah, who cares what he thinks, he’s a drool dribbler…Les is awesome and has has put himself out there to help bring facts and truths to this subject…right, wrong, good, bad or indifferent. Joe Rogan can kick rocks.