Bigfoot Tracks Discovered And Recorded In The Woods Following Snowstorm In Maine

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Recent video taken in York County, Maine shows a trail of footprints following a snowstorm. After viewing and analyzing the footage, investigators believe they were left behind by Bigfoot.

Last month, a man named Stephen Bartlett submitted the video evidence to the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO). He reported seeing “a series of very strange tracks in the woods behind my home. Took a video. Not moose or deer… in deep snow.”

“On Sunday, February 16th this area north of Kenyon Hill Preserve had been receiving heavy snow and wind for about 24 hours, totaling approximately 7” of now,” BFRO investigator Ontario Richardson wrote in her report . “There was a standing 12”, which had turned into a thick crust. The land owner was walking through his property looking at deer tracks and beds when he noticed a very narrow path of large foot prints in the snow. They cut through several deer beds. The tracks were approximately 7’ – 8’ apart, totaling about two strides of the landowner. He followed them for approximately 150’ until they became unrecognizable.

“There was only a very thin layer of snow filling the tracks, leading to the idea that the creator had recently passed through the area but leaving out enough detail to unequivocally say what left them behind.

“The family owns approximately 30 acres of hemlock forest, surrounded by 500 acres of trust land, apple orchards and crop fields, which undoubtedly provide food for the resident animals. Deer, coyote, bobcat and bear are abundant in the area, with the occasional moose. The family had recently built a house on the land. A brook cuts through the property, providing water. It is near several conservation areas and wildlife refuges.”

Investigator Matt Moneymaker, founder of the BFRO, followed up with his own notes on the video taken near the Kenyon Hills Preserve in Maine. “These are definitely not moose tracks,” he wrote. “These tracks were made by a very tall bipedal creature — much taller than an average human.

“There have been other instances of Bigfoot snow tracks found in other parts country during snowstorms. It seems Bigfoots are aware that falling snow will soon cover their tracks so they will not go out of their way to take routes where humans are less likely to notice their tracks. They will walk right along trails or roads with no care.

“If the snow is not falling and they want to avoid leaving tracks they can walk among trees and step over trails or hop across roads. You can see from these tracks how this very tall Bigfoot would easily be able to step over this if it wanted to.”

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Douglas Charles is a Senior Editor for BroBible with two decades of expertise writing about sports, science, and pop culture with a particular focus on the weird news and events that capture the internet's attention. He is a graduate from the University of Iowa.