A Sasquatch Story - Empowered Filmmaker Malahat 2024
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- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- This film was made as a part of the Empowered Filmmaker in the Malahat Nation.
Participants were mentored through the production of a short film which they created within just 5 days of instruction by filmmaker and educator Farhan Umedaly @vovoproductions
More Information:
www.empoweredfilmmaker.com
www.vovoproductions.com
Thank you for telling your encounter. 😊
Thank you for sharing
Everyone wants to see Bigfoot....until they see Bigfoot.
True 👍
After years of doubting some of the Native American wisdom, I’ve come to understand, that I was wrong. And not just about Sasquatch..
Thank you 🙏
Thank you Elder for sharing your story.
I've seen them 3 times in my life, had rocks thrown at my mother and I. Had screams in the early morning hours, tree knocks, and found hairs and prints that were 18" long near the house.
Always find the native perspective on Sasquatch very interesting, especially when they’re just seen as another entity that lives in the wilderness.
My tribe's oral tradition says we thought of them as another type of people with a language of their own, and how they would visit during the fall harvesting for trade.
That sounds the more believable to me, they must be another form of human primate for them stay hidden as well as they do. I do believe the stories of them chattering and speaking also. I’m envious of anybody who’s encountered them.
God bless you elder, I am a Warm Springs Chiricahua Apache from NM. We have families of them here on our reservation. They talk, they are curious, throw rocks, hits trees, knock trees over, bother people but we leave them alone.
Just the fact that you are a Chiricahua Apache is awesome to me. Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺
@chrissamuel495 I went to school with a girl that was half Laguna Pueblo and half Australian, she was raised in Australia, and she had an awesome accent. I'm glad you know of the Chiricahua Apache, I'm a direct descendant of Warm Springs Chiricahua Apache chief's Victorio, Mangas Coloradas and Loco, and am descended from 2 Chiricahua Apache US Scouts Charles Martine Sr and Paul Guydelkon Sr, my grandmother Evelyn Martine was the last Chiricahua Apache born as a US prisoner of war born in 1912 in Ft. Sill, Oklahoma.
@@ewellfossum Thanks for the reply. You have a great history. Maybe you could write a book so it doesn't get forgotten!
@chrissamuel495 There's a book titled, " Apache Mothers and Daughters ", by Ruth Boyer and Narcissus Gayton, it's a book about my family's history. Narcissus was my mothers aunt and my grandmother Evelyn is the baby on the cover, check it out....
@@ewellfossum I will thankyou very much. Blessings to you!
We lived with a sasquatch on our property back in the 80's and early 90's. I saw in one night when I was on my front porch around sundown. Because we had had our house raised, it put me eye level with it. I'd say I was no more than 30 feet from it. It looked at me and I looked at it while continuing to smoke my cigarette. When I was done, I slowly went back into my house. I guess it realized I wasn't a threat or afraid of it and it left all our pets and big animals alone. It did like to jump on our porch after that just to let me know it was here. After it built up where we live, it left and years later, we found where it had made a nest with some youpons. I always felt safe with it living on the property and to this day, I still miss it.
Where is your property?
Having a Sasquatch on your property is as good as security gets
@@Good-Dog70 Texas in the woods.
wow 🎉you were lucky 🍀
@marilynamy3823: Awwww. Wonderful.
🎉 Thank you ✨ love hearing the different stories across the land Turtle Island about the Elder Brothers .
I had a similar experience a hour drive away from this place.
I have always listened carefully to the Elders. Their wisdom is priceless. Thank you for this.
I miss my Grandpa very dearly and his lectures/teachings about life. He liked to lecture during holiday events, because that's when the entire family tree would be around. I would always be the last one sitting and listening to my grandpa; as everyone else left one at a time.
#LoveAndMissYouGrandpa
My tribe's oral tradition states that we thought of the sasquatch's as another type of people. They had language and would come visit for trade. I've never seen one or heard one. In fact, my tribe now says they don't believe they exist anymore, but if they do. They are prob. pushed to the PNW. Thank You for this!
Good account.
Many Thx Elder for sharing. 👣 Mahsi choo
Glad he's around to tell his stories .
Lovely film! Good job!!!!!
Glad to hear your story and your mothers thanks .
Nice story, music too much.
I actually enjoyed the music
Thank you
The only true situational account I've learned of, was a 'familial' one; where the Sabae' was part of everyday life. No big deal, unless you MADE one out of it, then disturbances would occur, in kind. Dunno, nothing 'spooky' about that. Awesome validation all those years ago. ❤😊. Be intuitive, very valuable skill to develop your intuition, lifesaver, literally. And very much appreciated by all beings. Honor the Source.
Thank you, l loved hearing your words, good story to pass on
3:30 seen them and no them to thanks for saring😊
True
Thank you
Show me the bones.
🖖
Haven’t you seen harry and the Hendersons? Big foot loves pets 😂
I got scared just listening to you Describe it.😊
❤❤❤
A youpon is??
It's a evasive tree with a root system that spread out And produces more evasive Trees. Cleaning a fence row is no fun.
Here in the south it's pronounced YO- PON
@@lonesomecowboy4659
Evasive means difficult to find or locate, from the root word evade. Invasive means something that invades or encroaches on something. 😉
There is no such thing. Show me one and then we can talk
Wow, amazing account - i love it