Missing 411 | The Feral People Theory | Into Thin Air

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 มิ.ย. 2024
  • From folklore to conspiracy theory, feral people have appeared in stories across the continent, and even across the sea. Some believe the idea is nonsensical, while some believe it's the cause of the Missing 411 phenomenon. So how plausible is it? How do media portrayals affect our beliefs regarding the topic? Most importantly, could it be true? What would drive a few people, let alone an entire tribe, to abandon society and go feral? Welcome back to The Lore Lodge...
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    0:00 - Intro
    1:50 - Morgan & Morgan
    2:35 - Feral People Overview
    4:04 - Ferals in Media
    13:33 Ferals in Folklore
    25:43 - Wildmen in Britain
    33:29 - Sawney Bean
    40:25 - Cannibalism in the Donner Party
    42:52 - Conclusion & Outro
  • บันเทิง

ความคิดเห็น • 3.3K

  • @ryanclay959
    @ryanclay959 ปีที่แล้ว +7737

    As for feral people who are crazy cannibal who eat other people who cross their path, in America we call them Politicians.

    • @propakindustries22
      @propakindustries22 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Careful bro, you'll end up suspiciously ending your own life...

    • @somedegreeofsundown2338
      @somedegreeofsundown2338 ปีที่แล้ว +121

      will ferrell?

    • @ryanclay959
      @ryanclay959 ปีที่แล้ว +99

      @@somedegreeofsundown2338 I had spelled Feral incorrectly. I did edit it and now it is spelled the right way.

    • @kevinpruett6424
      @kevinpruett6424 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Roast

    • @jkishhabi
      @jkishhabi ปีที่แล้ว +30

      And political commentators

  • @emskalicky8275
    @emskalicky8275 ปีที่แล้ว +2667

    About 8/9 years ago there was a real case of a “feral” family of about 40 people in the Blue Mountains in Australia - genuinely a very tragic case of abuse, incest, neglect over several generations. I remember it really struck me how a family and especially their children, grandchildren, etc can fall through the cracks like that.

    • @Clin7Walker
      @Clin7Walker ปีที่แล้ว +180

      I heard that story when I was 15 I'm 22 now hearing you bring it up sent chills down my spine I thought I could forget that horror forever but I guess not that truly is one of the most depressing/ scary stories I've ever heard

    • @drened8502
      @drened8502 ปีที่แล้ว +99

      @@Clin7Walker Can you please send a link to this? I live close to that area and I never heard of this

    • @Clin7Walker
      @Clin7Walker ปีที่แล้ว

      @@drened8502 en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colt_clan_incest_case#:~:text=The%20Colt%20family%20incest%20case,near%20Boorowa%2C%20New%20South%20Wales.

    • @TheSonicdruid72
      @TheSonicdruid72 ปีที่แล้ว +141

      They were named by the Courts as the COLT family… google that. Cheers

    • @drened8502
      @drened8502 ปีที่แล้ว +97

      @@TheSonicdruid72 Holy shit just read the Wikipedia articles. Unbelievable

  • @tacticalsquirrelnutz
    @tacticalsquirrelnutz 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +254

    I like how the British cryptids are called like Diddly Doo and the American ones are like "Murder the Death Raper"

    • @benjadryl_7393
      @benjadryl_7393 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      this is a fantastic observation thank you

    • @spectrophobic
      @spectrophobic หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      ..😐

    • @mikewlazlinski4309
      @mikewlazlinski4309 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      It's cause in Britain a murderer gets caught faster than a diddly doo.

    • @AlexP12526
      @AlexP12526 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      ​@@mikewlazlinski4309 when they can drag themselves away from harassing people,who write "controversial" things on Twitter, Facebook etc

    • @UglyMugs-3962.
      @UglyMugs-3962. 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Hahahahahahaha

  • @Milkman4279
    @Milkman4279 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +167

    "Saskettes" always makes me think they're Bigfoot's backup singers.

    • @TheRealRusDaddy
      @TheRealRusDaddy หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Squatch and the Saskettes

    • @DollySantana
      @DollySantana 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      😂😂😂😂

  • @sierras.4592
    @sierras.4592 ปีที่แล้ว +710

    I live in the Appalachian mountains, and one time I did see a wild looking naked man run out of the woods along the side of the road and scream. But I think he was just an unfortunate person experiencing meth psychosis.

    • @kacieogle513
      @kacieogle513 ปีที่แล้ว +80

      For sure meth. I live in the Appalachia too.. seen some wild looking people in the back woods, usually always tweakers...

    • @ElektriKfaUN
      @ElektriKfaUN ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Squeal like a Piggg

    • @stevepalpatine2828
      @stevepalpatine2828 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      That was probably Donny.
      That boy gets a little wild when he's been drinking, he's mostly harmless.

    • @undoubtedcrow8010
      @undoubtedcrow8010 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Sorry, I didn't mean to scare you.

    • @Joey-me1mn
      @Joey-me1mn 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@kacieogle513 zoomers tweaking

  • @jamesparrott5554
    @jamesparrott5554 ปีที่แล้ว +1426

    it would be weird for our government to commit genocide against indigenous Americans but leave a population of "feral" people untaxed and undisturbed

    • @HadrianGuardiola
      @HadrianGuardiola 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

      So you mean that this current government ought to revert to the governement of colonial american in order to remain consistant?

    • @adamconner9302
      @adamconner9302 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Now to be fair I don't exactly spend much time thinking about roaming bands of feral folk in the hills, but this has to be the most logical answer against their existence i've ever heard. As an American you can run to the far ends of the planet, but if you happen to make a dollar there Uncle Sam will chase you down for his cut. The only method of escape is literally renouncing your citizenship. The preposterousness that that same infernal machine would allow untaxed Americans in its backyard is pretty far-fetched.

    • @arthurgodwin6571
      @arthurgodwin6571 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Well they had to catch em first.

    • @adamconner9302
      @adamconner9302 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +99

      @@arthurgodwin6571 Human beings are so savage that we were bringing down giant game 10s of thousands of years ago with nothing but sticks and rocks. Imagine fighting an elephant with sticks and rocks except it's twice the size of an elephant because it's a wooly mammoth. Now do you really think Uncle Sam with all his guns and drones and satellites seriously can't find some people out in the woods if he really wants to? I'm not buying what you're selling lol

    • @joeydrew528
      @joeydrew528 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

      @@HadrianGuardiolaMore saying that it would have already happened. If these feral people as described here exist in such a large degree they would not be left undisturbed. Not that any evidence of these feral people is concrete but if they did exist the government would have already killed them or force them on reservations.

  • @gargoyle38
    @gargoyle38 ปีที่แล้ว +176

    My mom once asked my paternal great-grandfather , "Acil, were you ever lost in the forest?'' Acil, old countryman that he was, paused a minute and replied "No, I can't say I was. But I was bewildered a time or two.'' An around the barn way of saying: it is easy to get disoriented, and even very experienced outdoors people can get lost.

    • @maxuli21
      @maxuli21 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      It only takes a minute, you stop thinking about your surroundings, wander off a bit and ta-da, nothing looks familiar and you can't remember the way you came from.

    • @gargoyle38
      @gargoyle38 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@maxuli21 Reminds me a group of us were exploring an old farm and orchard [which later became a subdivision, of course] and suddenly everyone admitting they didn't know the way back to the car.

    • @maxuli21
      @maxuli21 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@gargoyle38 There's a folk tale in my country, that when you are in the woods the forest spirits can pull you into another dimension, so that even if people walk right past you they can't see or hear you, no matter what you do. And there's tricks to escape this dimension, like turning all your clothes upside down and other stuff 😂
      I remember as a kid we were picking mushrooms, there were a ton of them so naturally I just went from one spot to another. Then at some point I looked up and didn't see my family anywhere. Just stood there for a while until I think my grandmother appeared somewhere. The woods are a strange place to be in, but very pleasant aswell.

    • @gargoyle38
      @gargoyle38 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@maxuli21 I've seen some very very strange things in the forest, with the easier to understand although most magical the great stag's harem circling around him three times before the does gracefully pranced away ...

  • @winry2357
    @winry2357 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +116

    I love Tucker and Dale vs Evil specifically because it turns the “evil hillbilly” trope on its head. Fantastic horror comedy.

    • @BeetleBuns
      @BeetleBuns 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I watched that movie for the first time just a couple months ago, it's so good

    • @winry2357
      @winry2357 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@BeetleBuns it really is a fun time.

    • @monabonejakon2797
      @monabonejakon2797 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Cabin Fever is fun like that.

  • @sasqwatch
    @sasqwatch ปีที่แล้ว +2262

    I don't discount the existence of feral people. But as an explanation for missing people, I don't buy it. And have you seen some of the people in urban areas? Some folks there are more feral than anyone you're likely to meet in the forest.

    • @rythania7686
      @rythania7686 ปีที่แล้ว +177

      Exactly. People are more feral in the streets of large cities then in the boonies.

    • @wizard_of_poz4413
      @wizard_of_poz4413 ปีที่แล้ว

      Crackheads

    • @weskintime4177
      @weskintime4177 ปีที่แล้ว +157

      Bros talking about the homeless people in California and the average Florida man

    • @Alex_in_Wonderland111
      @Alex_in_Wonderland111 ปีที่แล้ว +137

      I think people also forget just how easy it is to get lost in the woods. I don’t have explanations for the weird things left behind, like severed feet in shoes, but for those who go missing without a trace, let’s just say there’s a reason I’m scared of the woods

    • @rolfanderson3925
      @rolfanderson3925 ปีที่แล้ว +49

      Seriously, go to a homeless camp in a major city. Talk about feral people.

  • @finnhoff2655
    @finnhoff2655 ปีที่แล้ว +998

    The forest people are really just the friends we made along the way

    • @fruckles
      @fruckles ปีที่แล้ว +35

      I read that with Wendigoon in mind.
      ☕😅🇺🇸

    • @faxenmacher4633
      @faxenmacher4633 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      I haven't made any friends.
      Does this imply that that forest people aren't real or that friendship eludes me like forest people?
      Gah.
      Existentialism.

    • @collinb.8542
      @collinb.8542 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@fruckles wendigoon is dope

    • @greyveteran7007
      @greyveteran7007 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      LOL!!. Cityit!

    • @Born-Again-Warrior
      @Born-Again-Warrior ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh wait, I forgot we didn't take our psyche meds. We were just hallucinating, we don't have friends, only our imagination! *sad schizophrenia moments*

  • @in_the_vortex
    @in_the_vortex 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    As someone who lives on the edge of the Appalachian mountains, the wrong turn movies, maybe not the murders, but actually turning on a random road out here WILL get you lost

  • @ovni2295
    @ovni2295 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +389

    My theory on why people go missing, particularly in national parks, is that they are falling into caves. This comes from a map I saw once that showed where wilderness disappearances happen and where cave networks are, and the two maps matched up startlingly well. Unmapped caves, particularly small ones, could easily swallow a person who steps off a trail and doesn't know there's a 2 foot wide hole in the ground under a bush.
    We know about uncontacted peoples in the Amazon. We've photographed them from helicopters. We've said hi and asked how they are doing. Some have even approached modern civilization for help against illegal poaching and loggers in their territories. There would be no reason to keep similar groups in the US a secret when the ones in the Amazon are out in the open.
    EDIT: There is at least one national park where the Caves Eat People thing is a known problem. Craters of the Moon National Park. The park strongly suggests you stay on the trails because the old lava tubes under the park can cave in at any time, and if you're on a trail when this happens... well they know where the trails are, so there's a better chance of finding you.

    • @scottishadonis
      @scottishadonis 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Did two old woman not go missing there and only one was found?

    • @brandenbeair1909
      @brandenbeair1909 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@scottishadonisOctober 2013, a 63 and 70 year old woman went missing for about a month, both found deceased

    • @scottishadonis
      @scottishadonis 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thanks, I knew it was something like what I’d said but your description makes more sense now I’ve read it. Cheers!

    • @annakofron7059
      @annakofron7059 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      That, and any sort of mining activity. I went to college in southern Appalachia and I'd go hiking when I had the time. I remember seeing these large unmarked slabs of wood in the ground. I thought they were apart of some herpetological study, so I flipped one. It was just a pit, straight down. After doing some research, it turns out people just went out and built mineshafts looking for coal, and never reported them or marked them on any map.

    • @DollyTheLlama
      @DollyTheLlama 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      @@annakofron7059 Old water wells too.

  • @coteezy86
    @coteezy86 ปีที่แล้ว +1039

    My father bought a newly built lake house in a new development in shady shores Texas on lake Lewisville in 1977..he met a 91 year old man living and fishing with very rudimentary scavenged items in some thick army Corp land behind his new development..he approached him and started a discussion and said this guy clearly hadn't spoke to anyone in some time..he was dirty and disheveled but started speaking well though and said he just wanted to be left alone..my father was 21 and was fishing a few weeks later and noticed him and brought him some fish he'd caught..he noticed he had been digging this hole with a scavenged piece of old barn tin..my father asked if he needed a shovel and brought him one..he dug him a hole covered it and made him a shelter and stayed through the winter...he got to talking with him about his story and turned out he was very mentally sound..his wife had died 7 years before and they were married like 62 years..he just kinda gave up and dug a house on the army Corp land because he had served in ww1 and felt he was obliged to do so..the developers had ran him off and filled in his home to build the little developement...my father offered numerous times to come stay in his house but he refused..he did come walking up after an apparent confrontation of some sort..he asked if he could dig a hole on some of my dad's land..he helped him dig it and he stayed there for about 6 months..he was busy working in the defense industry and one day the few possessions he had were gone and so was he..he said he was completly mentally sound and in realy goodshape for his age..he just had been living alone and wanted to be left alone..not exactly ferril but thought it was interesting espicaly given this was 12 miles north of downtown dallas..imagine what could be possible out in rural Appalachia

    • @ieldore
      @ieldore 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      Thank you for sharing this :)

    • @starstrudel8417
      @starstrudel8417 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      I really enjoyed reading this account, thank you for sharing

    • @ericf.9865
      @ericf.9865 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      That was a nice story

    • @cjboyo
      @cjboyo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      I doubt he was completely mentally well, but it sounds like he knew what he needed to do to care for himself. I could 100% see myself doing this if I lost my wife.

    • @mrconfusion87
      @mrconfusion87 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      ​@@cjboyoYup! But the fact he can still care for himself shows he has not totally "lost it"...

  • @justinbabin209
    @justinbabin209 ปีที่แล้ว +1837

    The fact that he had to distinguish between downtrodden people and feral makes me think there's more stupid people out there then it'd like to think 🤣

    • @wizard_of_poz4413
      @wizard_of_poz4413 ปีที่แล้ว +70

      Liberals

    • @dalpaengi
      @dalpaengi ปีที่แล้ว +97

      @@wizard_of_poz4413 Liberals? Explain.

    • @weskintime4177
      @weskintime4177 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@dalpaengiTwitter bots pretending to be Liberals as well as extremists have just out of the blue insulted Southern White people regardless of political side calling them cavemen and retards and other stupid shit. But, once again, it’s TWITTER. Twitter is full of idiots and this guy claiming that it’s all Liberals is just stupid. THEY (the commenter that said “Liberals”) are the stereotype that is projected onto people from the South.

    • @greyfells2829
      @greyfells2829 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      Movies make people dumber, usually

    • @wizard_of_poz4413
      @wizard_of_poz4413 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@dalpaengi the kind that think people outside their high priced subdivision are all cavemen

  • @SoulSoundMuisc
    @SoulSoundMuisc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +98

    I grew up in Northern Maine. Two things.
    1) the area i used to live had small stone plinths further out in the woods. Many were missing, nobody really knew who made them (natives or pioneers?). The "rule" of those plinths was that search parties didnt go past them when looking for missing persons. Too dangerous for such a small community back then. If you went past those things, nobody was coming for you.
    2) Maine had a *lot* of "Bush Vets". Veterans from the Vietnam War that came back and decided to just live out in the forest rather than rejoin society. They could be anything from a hermit minding their own business wanting no trouble to a dangerous individual with untreated psychological problems. The vast majority were completely harmless and you just respected them and left them alone and gave them "right of way".

    • @dlpatrie8466
      @dlpatrie8466 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I've never experienced anything more remote and isolating than Northern Maine.

    • @thephilosophyroom5587
      @thephilosophyroom5587 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I’m from Aroostook too (a bit north of Presque Isle) and when I was a child, my best friend’s brother was lost on his family’s hundred acres or so for two nights. I spent my whole childhood in those woods and I fully believe he could have died out there and never been found if he wasn’t as smart as he was.
      There are few things as wild as the Great North Woods. You could die out there, alone, afraid, and entirely unreachable, and like as not, your bones would crumble to dust before another human being set foot within 10 feet of your grave

    • @SoulSoundMuisc
      @SoulSoundMuisc 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@thephilosophyroom5587 Oh, you were waaaay up there, yup! It doesn't get much more remote than Aroostook! I was in Penobscot and Piscataquis. Been up to Presque Isle a time or two in my work.
      You're not wrong, either! That boy could have just vanished without a trace. Even SAR dogs can't always find people, and not for lack of trying. That's some primeval wilderness up there; people just don't realize, it's not like the movies. Not at all.

    • @thephilosophyroom5587
      @thephilosophyroom5587 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@SoulSoundMuisc Cool that you've been up there! I've got some family down Portland, Gray way, but I grew up in the Swedish colony north of Caribou (a bit north of PI) and the woods out there, the Irving logging roads, were some truly deep stuff. Always nice to find another Mainer out there.
      Word of advice, one northerner to another, particularly watching videos like this - don't drive Route 11 at night, no matter how much of a shortcut people say it is. The interstate is perfectly fine if you're doing night driving.

    • @SoulSoundMuisc
      @SoulSoundMuisc 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@thephilosophyroom5587 Had a Great Uncle who worked those logging roads! Got to ride with him once in the jumper seat.
      Me: "Where are we?"
      Him in his Heavy French Canadian Accent: "I don know, mebbe we be in Maine, mebbe we be in Quebec? You wan me get out an ask?"
      Him: "...We haff to get owt of he'a be-fo eet gets dark."
      Me: O.O; "Are there monsters?!"
      Him: "Non! I haff no lights! Ees much worse!"
      Heard the horror stories about Rout 11 as well. I don't travel up that way anymore and don't live in Maine anymore, either. Unfortunately.
      On the one hand, I miss it terribly. On the other hand, when I was a kid, it was... well, maybe not *the* poorest State in the union, but it was pretty darn bad.
      Went to school with these two boys, twins, their shoes were made out of old tire, leather, and rivets. Little girls wearing their fathers old Caterpillar sweatshirt as a 'dress'. Went to school with a boy whose family lived in an honest to goodness tarpaper shack. Cash was for gas and absolute essentials, everything else was bartered for. Everything. Kids coming up, not a lot of options back then: you went to work for Dexter Shoe, the Logging Industry, or joined the Military and that was about it. Poor-poor. Appalachia Poor.
      We used to have a saying: "If food stamps could buy bus tickets, wouldn't be nobody here." Bad times.
      But I still miss it. Deeply.

  • @kathyrawlings8614
    @kathyrawlings8614 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +195

    My Dad was stationed in the Philippine Islands in WWII and he used to tell me this gruesome story about some Japanese soldiers that were trapped there. Dad said these Japanese soldiers were hiding out and killing American soldiers. When they found them and realized what they were doing it was unbelievable. They were eating the America soldiers. One of them was a Japanese general and he told the men that captured them that there was nothing better tasting than human flesh. Dad talked about the pile of bones and the dog tags. It was a horrible story and it messed up my Dad. I remember when I was a kid how he used to jump out of bed and I could hear him running through the house. He would get in his truck and drive all night. But he saw a lot of messed up things. But yes I believe that kind of sick stuff happens.

    • @missdebbie8131
      @missdebbie8131 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      George W Bush Sr has an interesting story from WW2...you may want to look into it.
      Sorry for your Dad...it must have been difficult not only for him, but you also, as it is hard to see someone you love hurting.

    • @kathyrawlings8614
      @kathyrawlings8614 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      @@missdebbie8131 yes it was. All those years ago when I was young nobody talked about PTSD but a lot of people like my Dad suffered w it. They drank heavy and had lots of problems. My Dad was very verbally abusive to my Mother and me and my siblings. I can hardly remember a day that he didn’t curse us all out over nothing. We walked on eggshells around him. My cousin’s Father was a actual survivor of D-Day and she went through living heck w him. He would beat her so bad that she finally ran away from home when she was a young teenager and walked like a hundred miles to her Moms house. She never talked to her Father again until she was like in her 30s and that was only because her husband wanted her to reconcile with him. I don’t think that they ever really became close but she forgave him bc of what he went through in the war.

    • @gargoyle38
      @gargoyle38 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      My dad used to talk about a great grand uncle who would grab a rifle at night and fire out a window apparently at the ghosts of men he had killed in the American civil war. He was nicknamed ''Shooting Bob.''

    • @michaeldoran4367
      @michaeldoran4367 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Peenuses dangling down like a rain forest. Hundreds of dangling peenuses. Monkey runs and jumps off a cliff and grabs a peenus! The monkey swings and jumps from peenus to peenus and goes across the whole forest off flaccid peenuses

    • @michaeldoran4367
      @michaeldoran4367 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@gargoyle38Man named Jonah runs across the street naked in flip flops. Weiner flops side to side. 16 inch flaccid girthy kok flops up and down, side to side. Jonah runs naked across the street

  • @meepmoopiethe3rd
    @meepmoopiethe3rd ปีที่แล้ว +1539

    Having lived in Appalachia for almost 20 years now, I'm convinced the feral people thing stems from some overly dramatic city folk who came to the mountains and didn't understand that Bubba, with his 3 teeth and mouth full of dip, wasn't trying to attack them when he sauntered up and asked if they were having car trouble on a road in the middle of nowhere, but was being kind.
    If you've been in the area any length of time, you'll know it's incredibly karst. It's all limestone. There are stories all the time of people walking into cave entrances that are just big enough for their foot to get caught in them and snap their ankle. I know I've found entrances like this going off trail (which is why it's a good idea to stay on the marked path, but I digress). It is not implausible that people are just stumbling into cave entrances that no one knows are there because you literally can't see them unless you know they're there. Human remains are found in unexplored cave systems all the time. They're very easy to end up dead in. Especially with any missing children, it would be easy to get sucked into a cave entrance that's very small.

    • @bobbykagreene1844
      @bobbykagreene1844 ปีที่แล้ว +73

      Eek don't like the mental image of a person being "sucked" into a cave and I like caves lol

    • @frankharrington4881
      @frankharrington4881 ปีที่แล้ว

      As I posted I grew up in WNC Asheville and back in the mountains feral people exist!!!! My Dad invested in real estate and bought a lot in Madison co and some of the locals were the ones that told us about feral people
      Ones grandfather and great uncles were paid by the government to eradicate these people and yes they are cannibalistic! The locals told us what hollows to avoid! So before you make comments about paranoid city folks I suggest you do a little research!!!! Patricia Gambino Harrington

    • @robertoburkes817
      @robertoburkes817 ปีที่แล้ว +45

      I'm from Virginia n every fall we'd go visit blue ridge mountains or Shanendoah n one time we got lost off the trail. Im not sure if it's even considered Appalachian but it was scary sitting on the side of a mountain it's almost dark n we saw a momma bear n her cubs not too long before we got lost lol. Choosing to spend the night on the mountain or walk in the dark we chose to walk. Thankfully nobody snapped their ankle lol. I was like 8 yrs old at the time n I was scared not even going to lie.

    • @bass7100
      @bass7100 ปีที่แล้ว +48

      I remember hiking pretty deep into some forest in winter alone one time with quite a bit of snow on the ground. I was young and stupid and all of a sudden it dawned on me that if I take a bad step and fall through some ditch or hole and happened to break my leg or get stuck that I would most likely die out there.

    • @Mutiny960
      @Mutiny960 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Ever think that it might come from a-holes that look like Bubba who treat people like sh** just cause they know they can? Their Half-Uncle's cousin is the local deputy, and he lives on the other side of the mountain 40 min away. These outsides have no chance whatsoever. Who they gonna call? Not the Ghostbusters and not the Police either. Being even able to call someone assumes that they have a working phone nearby lol. These stories go way back before cell phones, way back.

  • @user-bc9tt7tr7t
    @user-bc9tt7tr7t ปีที่แล้ว +724

    As someone who has thought about leaving "society" or "civilization" for the woods I could totally see like minded people being seen out there instead of a cryptid.

    • @ElektriKfaUN
      @ElektriKfaUN ปีที่แล้ว

      Yup and when the shtf and electricities is a thing of the past these “wild feral peeps” are gonna go from the very bottom of the human filth pyramid to the very top , and if in this day n age your one of those snobby schmoozer name dropping gold digger judging everyone around you type of person just imagine how it’s gonna be when you got to go asking these people you used to judge so hard to now please take you under their wing as they know how to be wild and you don’t

    • @JoeyisDREADful
      @JoeyisDREADful ปีที่แล้ว +63

      It's just some weird hermit dude going "you kids stay off my dirt!"

    • @jamestaylor3805
      @jamestaylor3805 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Read the story of the "North Pond Hermit"

    • @nathanblizzard5371
      @nathanblizzard5371 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Old Vikings dawg

    • @healthiswealth1452
      @healthiswealth1452 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why don't u go

  • @lesliefish4753
    @lesliefish4753 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +139

    The sad part about the Donner party is that they were stranded at the head of Donner Lake -- which is full of fish, even in the dead of winter. Had those people only known, they could have chopped holes in the ice, used bits of fur for bait, and caught enough fish to sustain themselves until spring.

    • @lynxelmore5364
      @lynxelmore5364 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      They wouldn't have been able to last on just fish, vitamin C would have been necessary to prevent scurvy, you can also starve from eating only protein, look up 'rabbit starvation' (does not involve actual starving rabbits)

    • @stargatis
      @stargatis 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      You think they would have at least tried

    • @bluesonicstreak7317
      @bluesonicstreak7317 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@lynxelmore5364 Fresh meat contains small amounts of vitamin C. And if your diet does not include carbs, the dietary requirement for vitamin C drops dramatically. (Glucose competes with vitamin C for uptake.) On a meat-only diet, you need only a fraction of the vitamin C you do on an omnivorous diet. You're right about rabbit starvation, but fish might have enough fat depending on the type of fish.
      There have been many examples throughout history of tribes of people surviving for long periods of time on only meat or only fish. Some people today eat meat-only diets, especially to help with autoimmune diseases. (Google the "carnivore diet.") They totally would have survived a few months if they had fished.

    • @Opener73
      @Opener73 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      @@lynxelmore5364 You can still last a long time on just fish. Fish do have some fat. Idk if there were pine trees but put some pine needles in hot water and there you go, vitamin c.

    • @lesliefish4753
      @lesliefish4753 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      It need only have sustained them for three months, until spring arrived.

  • @8ullfrog
    @8ullfrog 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +49

    I have family in rural areas, and they would absolutely warn me about "hill people". I had not heard of Sawney bean before, thank you for that story.

    • @BeetleBuns
      @BeetleBuns 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      there's even legends in NJ about the Pineys, supposedly feral people that live in the Pine Barrens. Wild shit, and those woods can get creepy af, so I wouldn't be overly surprised if there was some truth to it

    • @MetroCop2077
      @MetroCop2077 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@@BeetleBunsbro , bobby from sopranos mention wild people in pine barrens 😂😂😂

    • @BeetleBuns
      @BeetleBuns 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@MetroCop2077 yea Piney legends have been around since the 1800s, and probably earlier

  • @KyleLyre13
    @KyleLyre13 ปีที่แล้ว +833

    I grew up in this tiny little town with like 300 people, a bar, and a soda machine out in the middle of the woods. Lived in the woods all my life, and only the dozen or so kids my age ever went in the woods that late. Me and a few friends would venture out and just watch and listen to the forest or wander around quietly.
    Once in a while, the moonlight was strong enough to break the canopy of trees, and a few times we'd see people moving around. Keyword being SEE, because the only time I ever heard one was when my friend had broken a stick under his foot. Whoever or whatever I saw took off, but its footsteps were like thunder. I still get chills, because something that heavy could move so quietly.

    • @jairoaguilar3838
      @jairoaguilar3838 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      SKINWALKER

    • @smokymountains5249
      @smokymountains5249 ปีที่แล้ว +150

      They're employing a method of walking called the "fox step". Many hunters and military personnel use this method to silently traverse different terrain. I'm 6'3", and was raised deep in the Appalachians. Many friends have remarked that I move like a ghost in the woods. IDK, it's just how I was taught to walk in the woods.

    • @elitecoder955
      @elitecoder955 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Discovering them would be easier with drones now

    • @Clo_Dub
      @Clo_Dub ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Tell me more tell me more!

    • @justyeeeeeetit
      @justyeeeeeetit ปีที่แล้ว +26

      Methheads 😅

  • @gangster_spunhbop9709
    @gangster_spunhbop9709 ปีที่แล้ว +856

    As a feral man eating person myself i can confirm this video as 100% true

    • @johnnicholas1488
      @johnnicholas1488 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Yavoh, nothing like a barbecue.

    • @evangelineaudet7242
      @evangelineaudet7242 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      Either your a feral man who eats people or your a person who eats feral men.
      Either is equally strange

    • @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen
      @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      ​@@evangelineaudet7242the latter is funnier
      Bro's on a diet 💀💀💀

    • @kylecoburn8896
      @kylecoburn8896 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@evangelineaudet7242 😂 comma's man..... they're important

    • @mikemcchesney2555
      @mikemcchesney2555 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      MMMMMMMMMm! Its been so long since I've had a good feral stew or "F-Pie", or Feral Haggis (fer yeh Scottsmen)!

  • @grimmmickey5125
    @grimmmickey5125 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +82

    Alot of people don't realize that parts of the Celtic culture practiced head hunting in a pretty casual manner. They would use tree sap along with other methods to preserve the heads. Some kept the preserved heads of those they killed in combat while in some cases the head could have belonged to a loved one or someone who they revered. They would often be used as decoration or kept as a treasured keep sake that would only be brought out for a special occasion or to show a special guest. It freaked the Romans out hahaha.

    • @jameslave98
      @jameslave98 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Lol. Bullshit

    • @user-cf2vo8sc1n
      @user-cf2vo8sc1n หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Yes!!! The Gauls were famous for this!

    • @fixabitsystem-ti9fu
      @fixabitsystem-ti9fu หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Which clans specifically? If you know cuz I'm just curious

    • @TheRealRusDaddy
      @TheRealRusDaddy หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sounds completely made up and 100% real gotta love the celts and their wacky antics

  • @wisteriawolf5443
    @wisteriawolf5443 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Based off the video Ask A Mortician did, it seems to me that slowly starving for months in the dead of winter is not a small push to eating people, rather a large and primal one.

  • @MSW_Skule
    @MSW_Skule ปีที่แล้ว +172

    In Appalachia there are still tiny communities that no roads lead to. You gotta walk a long ways to find 'em. People living out there ain't exactly friendly, but I never met one that was a cannibal.

    • @abandonedtownexplorations8736
      @abandonedtownexplorations8736 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Makes sense the parties gotta b fun out there lol

    • @NoneOfyourbusiness-wi1iy
      @NoneOfyourbusiness-wi1iy 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      ​@@abandonedtownexplorations8736Maybe, but you're not invited. I've lived in the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee for 20 years and I'm only kinda able to understand the local dialect. Don't ever talk to a drunk hillbilly if you can't understand him sober, he's only going to get angry. Won't likely eat you in anger, but could well swing the moonshine jar.

    • @Wangootango
      @Wangootango 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@NoneOfyourbusiness-wi1iy😂seriously? He didnt even say he wanted to be invited to ur lame ass party like seriously u sound like a real loser

    • @Wangootango
      @Wangootango 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@abandonedtownexplorations8736No i think i’d rather stay in hong kong or ho chi minh miss me wit dat bs😂😂😂havw it

    • @RanchKings
      @RanchKings 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yet

  • @TheJoshman01
    @TheJoshman01 ปีที่แล้ว +664

    Yeah I'm a Tennessean, and I used to travel into the Appalachians fairly often. You'd come across really, really small communities, like 3 homes, a gas station, and a general store sized "towns".
    Often the locals weren't super friendly and somewhat strange.
    I can just imagine a family living a few dozen miles further into the Appalachian Hills who haven't had wider contact with the nation for decades.
    Edit: I want to clarify that I never had any problems in these communities, if I had to stop, I understood by tone/body language that they weren't particularly interested in conversation, a rarity in my neck of the southern woods, and moved on.
    Southern hospitality is a thing, and it was often lacking in those towns in my anecdotal opinion.

    • @jelkel25
      @jelkel25 ปีที่แล้ว +62

      Grew up in the Canadian Rockies and you got isolated little communities there, usually just out of easy reach of the outside of small towns. They were usually just people who wanted to be left alone and for some reason wouldn't fit in living in town. Some were heavy drinkers but most not. These people in my locality lived at the end of the valley where most of the Grizzlies hung out. The way I saw it, if these people were so determined to be alone they were willing to live there, good luck to them. If one or two of them went bad they were unlikely to get caught, but they never did. It does happen though, there was the pig farmer over in Vancouver and there's supposed to be one or two serial killers on the highway of tears never caught. This is no excuse to paint all of a group of people with the same brush though.

    • @Greywolfgrafix
      @Greywolfgrafix ปีที่แล้ว +49

      Yup, and some of those folks probably still use Confederate money. Lots of folks like that in East TN. Dad took a wrong turn onto old 116 west of Oak Ridge in the 70's which leads right to the front gate of Brushy Mountain state penitentiary. There were folks along that road that looked like they were from the 1850's.

    • @karak962
      @karak962 ปีที่แล้ว +63

      @@Skinfaxi me and my Dad used to hang out in unusual spots he found, and at some point met some people like this! and yeah exactly, if someone floats through town it's going to feel weird to locals. The only reason nobody reacted is because my dad went there regularly and so people recognized him as just that dude who likes to visit sometimes but has completely neutral motives, just likes to go to rural places haha. but I can't imagine how weird it would feel for them, it's like if someone just walked into your house bc of how intimately small the communities are.

    • @karak962
      @karak962 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      my dad is a super quiet guy, very kept to himself. so he doesn't tend to bother people the same way most people would with a louder presence. I feel lucky he taught me how to be an observer because it's just nice to keep to yourself in some situations

    • @ants.446
      @ants.446 ปีที่แล้ว

      Playing duelling banjos and sucking each other off without any teeth

  • @naverich4603
    @naverich4603 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    The Descent is seriously one of the best horror movies I have ever seen. So overlooked despite its brilliance. It is claustrophobia inducing, it's playing with your head, it's beautifully and realistically lit despite taking place in a dark cave, and some of the kills are perfect. I remember watching it as a kid for the first time, being absolutely horrified by it, so I gave it a rewatch long after I started studying film at university and it's a small, unknown hidden gem. The kind of horror movie I'd like to make one day.

    • @healthiswealth1452
      @healthiswealth1452 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Probably one of the best horror movies ever made,

    • @mustbetuesday3982
      @mustbetuesday3982 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep. Great movie!

    • @RanchKings
      @RanchKings 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi

    • @michaelwolfe9496
      @michaelwolfe9496 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My only complaint with The Descent is they cut the ending short in the American release. I much prefer the original extended version

    • @somenothin608
      @somenothin608 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes it is an underground classic literally !

  • @TheLocalTower
    @TheLocalTower ปีที่แล้ว +137

    With the theory of why havent we found these people, you never stop to think how goddamn good people are at hiding. Like some serial killers have hidden for decades after committing their crimes, with NO trace of themselves ever being where they supposedly were. Then this especially brings into account that, if they are real, they have been doing this for tens of thousands of years, without fail. So they obviously would have evolved or adapted to hiding.

    • @averysspookshowspectacular6205
      @averysspookshowspectacular6205 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      This is like my thoughts on paranormal and cryptids, stop and think about how easy it is to just LIE. Same with just hiding and not wanting to be found. There isn't always a sinister otherworldly twist going on.

    • @coolmanplayz438
      @coolmanplayz438 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Think too about tribes like the one on north sentinel island, we know they're there now, but think of how many other types of tribes like that there could be. Especially if ones that live in the mainland united states are real, they would be masters at hiding. Think of instances like the axman of New Orleans, Jack the Ripper, and other famous unsolved murder sprees. People can hide incredibly well. The thing that terrifies me the most is how terrifying it is to know you're being hunted by another human.

    • @Bloodclatburner
      @Bloodclatburner 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      There is always cases of homeless people living in peoples houses without their knowledge, so humans hiding in the wilderness is very likely to me 😂

    • @californiacombativesclub202
      @californiacombativesclub202 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No

  • @alanhorton7300
    @alanhorton7300 ปีที่แล้ว +600

    In the original book that The Descent is based on, the cave people actually have a massive population living in an extended cave network that stretches all the way around the world. Before any human civilization, they had cities above ground, and they long to return to their ancient glory. They've been kidnapping live humans and making them teach them how to speak modern languages and use modern technology, specifically weapons. They have telepathic abilities, and they have an immortal king who has been keeping himself alive by transferring his consciousness into another body every time he gets old. They always use human bodies for this, and so the king can go into the top-world and influence government and corporate policies in a way that is conducive to the global cave people agenda.

    • @Huxtee7
      @Huxtee7 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Kinda sounds like DUMBS and the DULCE BASE in New MExico.

    • @almishti
      @almishti ปีที่แล้ว +119

      that sounds like it's getting into all kinds of hollow earth and illuminati-type conspiracy stuff. Imaginative, but i feel like the movie version is more...plausible. As far as it goes.

    • @alanhorton7300
      @alanhorton7300 ปีที่แล้ว +73

      @@almishti The earth isn't hollow in the book, there are interconnected cave networks that have openings to the surface all over the world, which is way more plausible than a hollow earth. Also the immortal king part is a reveal near the end of the book, where it's revealed that one of the main characters is actually the immortal king.

    • @almishti
      @almishti ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@alanhorton7300 is the book called The Descent too? It sounds interesting.

    • @Ben-ex1kv
      @Ben-ex1kv ปีที่แล้ว +43

      Well shit now I've gotta read the book. Sounds similar to Lovecraft's "the mound" which is one of my favorites of his. Standard content warning for Lovecraft racism, it's got similar characterization of natives that a lot of these modern stories have for rural folks which I find kinda interesting.

  • @mothiestman4995
    @mothiestman4995 ปีที่แล้ว +303

    I've never heard someone refer to the results of the Donner Party ordeal as "rather soon" before. They had a small army of kids to feed and a pile of frozen, preserved corpses. Didn't exactly have a better option.

    • @Northwoods90
      @Northwoods90 ปีที่แล้ว +146

      Exactly, I was baffled when he acted like “only a few months” without food wasn’t a big deal.

    • @athiefinthenight6894
      @athiefinthenight6894 ปีที่แล้ว +66

      yeah lol bro was tripping on that one

    • @TheCastleUser
      @TheCastleUser ปีที่แล้ว +20

      @@athiefinthenight6894 i was thinking the same thing.

    • @registeredjopper
      @registeredjopper 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      well no, some of them also killed people in order to eat them, and I distinctly remember that one man actually killed at least one of the children to eat. so

    • @Charmux
      @Charmux 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      ​@@Northwoods90yeah, seems like he doesn't really understand what Hunger is or does to a person

  • @Zer-db1bp
    @Zer-db1bp 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    I’ve heard countless stories of people living out in the woods by themselves and definitely looking pretty feral. I know a dude who personally ran into a very rough looking dude wearing nothing but ripped up cargo shorts in the middle of no where in northern maine. There’s been plenty of folks who just got tired of society and went to be a hermit.

  • @gooba2790
    @gooba2790 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I'm Irish and can speak Irish and the Celtic Bigfoot they spoke about , well it's name translates to The Big Grey Man , in case you were wondering

  • @Arrusoh
    @Arrusoh ปีที่แล้ว +183

    I feel that missing 411 isn't just one single thing. I think it's many different things causing it to appear to be a singular widespead phenomenon. It seems to me that many people want just one thing to be the cause

    • @Princess_Celestia_
      @Princess_Celestia_ ปีที่แล้ว

      It is, in that it's a hoax that uses missing person cases that have had the details altered or left out completely by a man with a history of lying to people to enrich himself.

    • @stealthwarrior5768
      @stealthwarrior5768 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Agree. A lot of tge cases are murders in my opinion but some are really weird because we don't have enough information on them.

    • @cerebralm
      @cerebralm ปีที่แล้ว +12

      This always happens with phenomena around the edges of our understanding ... we're arrogant enough to assume that there's only one mystery left. Whether it's UFOs or chronic fatigue syndrome, the craving for a single explanation for all cases leads to many good explanations that could work for some cases being thrown away.

    • @44H44
      @44H44 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Native folklore of evil creatures have been around for thousands of years with thousands of stories unique to each tribe just saying

    • @victory8928
      @victory8928 ปีที่แล้ว

      a good chunk of the cases are probably just people getting lost and dying from that, actual murders, fabrications and the like. Sure there is some good mystery but most is just nonsense for what it is offering.

  • @ald7282
    @ald7282 ปีที่แล้ว +259

    thank you for not just saying "rural people are weird." i grew up in a pretty isolated community in the plains, and while my area was hostile and rude to outsiders, it's for a good reason. real estate developers, lumber companies, people trying to buy out our cooperative industries (ag and textiles), and people from cities who want the "small town aesthetic" without actually being community driven have really warped our area and no one is happy about it. the people pushing for it were always outsiders, and always looked down on us for how we lived our lives.
    my home area has become less isolated for the better over time, especially our education system, but at the beginning it really sucked and cost a lot of us jobs and farm land.

    • @JROD082384
      @JROD082384 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Rural people DO tend to be a bit weird.
      As someone who lives in a semi-rural town surrounded by dozens of little hick towns, I can PROMISE you that the generalization isn’t far off the mark…

    • @boneman-calciumenjoyer8290
      @boneman-calciumenjoyer8290 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@JROD082384 yeah stereotypes are almost always based on reality.
      Doesn't mean that they apply 100% of the time, but they're true more often than not.

  • @junkequation
    @junkequation 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I live in South Texas. There is extremely thick brush in any place that's not developed and mowed regularly, to the point that it's difficult to walk into any wooded area. It provides very good visual cover--like if someone walked a few feet into the brush,they wouldn't be visible to a person on the road. Any time I've ever gone in and explored this stuff, I find little camps everywhere: mattresses, car cushions, hammocks, places where someone was obviously sleeping, including when I went into the brush across the street from where I was renting a house. I've also seen some rough looking people emerge from the woods while I was on a morning jog on a rural road near my current house.
    That has made me think that these undeveloped areas are quite possibly infested with bums. They could enter and leave at night, and we'd never know any better.
    I got really stressed when I was in college. I was so overwhelmed that, every day when I made the 30 minute drive to class, I constantly fantasized about putting together a backpack and moving in to the brush. If I'd have failed out, who knows, maybe I would have done it. There could be a whole different, covert society living invisibly just a few feet from our brick houses and picket fences.

    • @Scientist_Salarian
      @Scientist_Salarian 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I live in California, where we have one-third of the nation's homeless. This is exactly what homeless camps look like in the rural areas. Right off the beaten path or road, but completely hidden by the brush and woods. It's kind of scary how hidden they are so close to functional society.

  • @4eva123
    @4eva123 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I grew up in rural Wales, and my family live in rural Wales, and we have sightings of big black cats all the time. My friends cat was killed from a very large scratch across it's tummy after a sighting near their village, shortly before a neighbours dog went missing. And two years ago my extended family were talking about a big cat sighting at a friends farm.

    • @Eggyfart83
      @Eggyfart83 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I live in rural SW Scotland, never saw a big cat myself but heard loads of stories from credible people seeing them. My mate used to work on a local farm and he said the farmers would just talk about the big cats as if it was normal

  • @limbo8497
    @limbo8497 ปีที่แล้ว +223

    To me, I think "Feral" people exist. People who have the knowledge, drive, and ability to live entirely off the land could very easily walk into the forest and never be seen from again. I've friends from rural areas who tell me this exact thing. What I mean by "Feral" is people who are so incredibly isolationist they're willing to do anything to keep their solitude.

    • @anndriggers6660
      @anndriggers6660 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      I'm growing more and more unwilling to mingle with townies, even though I am one, and might be considered a hermit at this point if I had the ability or inclination to grown/hunt my own food. Unfortunately I'm just very reclusive, not self sustaining.😂😭

    • @sengsavanghansana8374
      @sengsavanghansana8374 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      As a city slicker myself, I too am most comfortable and at ease when I'm outdoors. "Feral" is a wrong term to describe someone as they're comfortable to live one's lifestyle. Think about the native Americans from the old days, they get looked at differently when they come into town to visit as well. It goes both ways when we visit unknown places in the world, we all have choices to make how we live our lives.

    • @mixedmediaartgirl300
      @mixedmediaartgirl300 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      ME.

    • @bromisovalum8417
      @bromisovalum8417 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Truth is, you're always dependent on other people for survival, to a certain degree. And don't forget that farming, hunting and fishing are full time jobs when survival is at stake. Supermarket-grown people are clueless, there's nothing romantic about bare survival in nature.

    • @goddammitalana
      @goddammitalana ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Then your definition of "feral people" is incorrect.

  • @whitemagus2000
    @whitemagus2000 ปีที่แล้ว +229

    I've done a considerable amount of hiking and camping in the pacific northwest. Had several encounters with predators, people, and something that was stalking me that i never saw.
    My fears are as follows:
    1) humans
    2) mt. lions
    3) bears
    4) bigfoot
    Had several times that big critters entered my camp at night. Once a black bear and a couple of times people. I was was more nervous about the middle of the night forest people than i was the bear.
    Oh yeah. Turned out that the people across the creak from us later all got busted for a meth lab. These were almost certainly the source of our midnight intruders.

    • @karak962
      @karak962 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      gosh yeah, nothing is scarier to me than other humans

    • @GorillaCookies
      @GorillaCookies ปีที่แล้ว +27

      I live in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in Northern California and have my entire life. There are a lot of very dense woods here that go on for 100s of square miles. There are plenty of predators here and many of them are human. I think the biggest danger here today are the Cartels growing marijuana miles out into the forest on public land. I've ran across more than a few grow operations up here while going out into the back woods
      I always make sure I am well armed and I always take my dog " Rock " who's part German Shepherd and Part Rottweiler. He doesn't bark when he's out there. Something he does naturally for whatever reason. He doesn't shut up at home being very verbal but he doesn't bark. He just makes weird sounds like he's trying to talk. But he's been more than a best friend and alerted me twice about people nearby. Both times I witnessed grow operations manned by gun toting Spanish speaking individuals. I've came across a couple places where operations had already ceased but the evidence of the operation was still in place.

    • @chewy99.
      @chewy99. ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@GorillaCookies And you never report any of that to the police? That’s basically a civic duty.

    • @garydiggins1836
      @garydiggins1836 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      For some strange reason that area has many many people creeping around everywhere. They seem to enjoy skulking around at night especially. Peeping around in the dark while it's raining is a local sport for many. I lived there for many years and never trusted anyone from there. It's the creepy mf...er capitol of the world. I'll take bears and cougars over the people anyday. The animals out there have better manners.

    • @crisptomato9495
      @crisptomato9495 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Dude you’re brave as hell I would shit myself.

  • @hardcorehunter7162
    @hardcorehunter7162 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    "Only a few months of near starvation" I like how casual that is said, like oh only a few months of being in the mountains hiking in a blizzard with canvas shelters, and drinking impure water. If people around you are dying of the elements, and they're of similar shape you're in. It may be a good indicator to start eating the dead.

  • @knighthart5068
    @knighthart5068 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I hiked part of the Appalachian trail in 2014 solo, the wildlife didn't bother me but there were some really creepy weird people on and off the trail, my advise never hike alone and go unarmed.

    • @xgtwb6473
      @xgtwb6473 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nuts how everyone seems to say that, tf is wrong with the USA 😂😂

  • @bldos5362
    @bldos5362 ปีที่แล้ว +347

    my father used to take multiple hiking trips throughout the year in the smokies. he came back from one of the trips with a story of a wild man, or maybe just a societal dropout. they met 2 women who were terrified on the trail. they said they had encountered the guy and were so scared that they had grabbed whatever defensive weapon they could muster, which was a couple of Swiss army knives, scared that they would be attacked during the night. they described the guy as wearing a tatered suit with no shoes and wild hair and a beard. my father and his group eventually encountered the fellow. it ended up that he was some kind of hippy dropout and that he appeared to be harmless. however, he was out in the back country, with no pack, no gear, or anything. he really scared the 2 women, and they ended up completing their hike with my father and his group. I guess my point is that freaky sh!t happens out in the back country of the Appalachian mountains, so be careful. you are not supposed to, but we never hiked out there without a pistol.

    • @xkidgey
      @xkidgey ปีที่แล้ว +25

      I've had similar experience with a guy wearing a grey suit. He hit us up for food and he didn't have the appropriate gear to be a couple days' hike into a back country trail. He was still loitering in the same area when we were hiking out

    • @Mutiny960
      @Mutiny960 ปีที่แล้ว +43

      ​@@xkidgey We had a guy on the AT just last year 2022 that did a similar thing. No gear, No water, wearing jeans and a heavy coat, but was somehow hanging around a shelter 12 miles from the nearest roadcrossing on either side. He scared people on multiple occasions by sitting inside the shelter when they walked up, staring, and saying nothing. When 3 or more showed up he'd leave and disappear into the woods. Park rangers finally came out after about a dozen people called in, but he was gone of course. Where to? No one knew. No one had seen him hiking on the trail on either side, and this was the top of a mountain. He can't hike down at night without some sort of light, and there is no "safe" way down besides the trail.
      Our best guess was that he had some sort of camp nearby hidden in the woods and was looking to prey upon thru-hikers. Sad part of that theory is, he didn't have to prey, he could have just asked for food and any thru-hiker would have happily shared. The other theory is that food wasn't the thing he was looking for......☹

    • @xandercrews4729
      @xandercrews4729 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@xkidgey sounds like a drifter, not a feral human

    • @bioemiliano
      @bioemiliano ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Mutiny960 Prob mentally ill guy

    • @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen
      @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@xandercrews4729what does drifter mean in that context

  • @hauntedbarbiedoll
    @hauntedbarbiedoll ปีที่แล้ว +41

    Theres a really good theory about the donner party that states that we, as knowledgeable people of the future, mistakenly assume that the donner party also knew you could survive a really long time without food. The theory further states that as folks succumbed to exposure, it was mistaken for starvation, and it threw the survivors into a hysteria that made them choose cannibalism.

    • @blemisheddiscgaming6464
      @blemisheddiscgaming6464 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Name checks out.

    • @maximedaunis8292
      @maximedaunis8292 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Maybe that depending on the situation you are in, you could starve sooner than "months"?

    • @bluesonicstreak7317
      @bluesonicstreak7317 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@maximedaunis8292 Definitely. When people say you can survive months without food, that's under ideal conditions. You will starve faster if you are under physical strain that burns more calories, e.g. being cold, being exhausted, etc.

  • @joeaquilino19
    @joeaquilino19 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Let alone feral people we grew up with this kid from the Bronx who used to lift water buckets on a stick as a kid he was solid muscle not that tall but the feats of strength and stories that came from this kid let alone his basic virtuosity in everything he put his mind to was unreal. We all one time was trying to dig up this rock for like a week he came over and just ripped it out of the ground like a savage the rock was so much bigger then any of us could have imagined like an iceburg it was so crazy that thing must have been there 100 years. Then one day we was all tossing rocks 🪨 and sticks out on a lake just fooling around when all of a sudden the hair on you neck just stands up as he tossed a fallen tree over all our heads onto the lake 😀 it was like some thing from Sampson. Also the crazy thing was he wasnt all bulky like a lifter matter of fact he didnt much care for traditional weights so you would never expect this kinda strength from him it was righteous, so yea i understand 👍 what afew pounds can do.

  • @soupster857
    @soupster857 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    I live in the area of the Sawney Bean story, and I can tell you that for such a small country, it's super isolated down here.
    In Scotland, most people are concentrated in what is called the "Central Belt" - from Greenock and Glasgow to Edinburgh - and in cities/towns. The Southwest doesn't have great farming land, so is sparsely populated in places. I've been to areas in the hills that have three houses and nothing else, miles away from anywhere. Sometimes there's only one person living there. I live near a village of under 100 people, about 20 miles from a supermarket or petrol station and that's enough to drive me a wee bit bonkers. I can't imagine what it's like living that rural.
    There's a loneliness epidemic in rural Scotland, and I think there's been one for centuries.
    It wouldn't surprise me if there was feral people that the isolation just got to. Sending love!

    • @NoneOfyourbusiness-wi1iy
      @NoneOfyourbusiness-wi1iy 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hell, even the traditions of them are probably..... interesting

    • @soupster857
      @soupster857 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@NoneOfyourbusiness-wi1iy from my personal experience, most people practice an odd combination of English + Scottish tradition but nothing uncanny, just unique. Any really freaky/unacceptable traditions have aged out of use - the only people who remember them are too dementia-ridden to practice them and the young people to "continue tradition" have long since moved away.
      Basically, from all I know any unnatural traditions have long left the maindtream even in *rural* rural areas

    • @Eggyfart83
      @Eggyfart83 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Bellsbank is full of sawney beans

  • @Nyctophora
    @Nyctophora ปีที่แล้ว +158

    With regard to cannibalism, starvation can cause mental imbalances that really mess with your ability to think as you otherwise would. Some people are better at resisting than others, yes, but basically put it can drive you insane. Thankfully, most of us haven't felt that level of hunger - I can't imagine it, not really. Combine it with the sheer drive to survive and still some people resist (there were those in the Andes crash who chose not to participate, for example). The idea that people will start chowing down on the nearest human body at the first rumbling tum is not really how it goes for anyone with a normal amount of sanity.
    I agree though that once the taboo is broken, it's probably easier the second time.

    • @Libbathegreat
      @Libbathegreat ปีที่แล้ว +38

      He talked about the Donner party going *months* without a reliable source of food as if it's a short amount of time. I don't know anyone willing to put that assertion to the test.
      I don't get the condemnation of cannibalism in a survival situation, especially if the people are dead already. That taboo came along very recently in the human story. Cannibalism was common among early humans and Neanderthals that existed around the same time, either for ritual purposes or for sustenance.

    • @The_Custos
      @The_Custos ปีที่แล้ว +6

      The second time you make a soup!

    • @warmsoda9690
      @warmsoda9690 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      ​@@Libbathegreat just want it to be known that one of the last surviving men found from the Donner party actually let the left over beef spoil because he had "come to favor" the human meat better 💀💀

    • @katherineheasley6196
      @katherineheasley6196 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@Libbathegreat yeah, that struck me, too. Most people can't fast for a week, even. Starvation is a cruel way to go.

    • @Libbathegreat
      @Libbathegreat ปีที่แล้ว +16

      @@warmsoda9690 I've heard that story too and, tantalizing as it is, it's not credibly sourced. Just one of the many bits of mythos that have attached themselves to this event over the years.

  • @tsulong
    @tsulong ปีที่แล้ว +336

    Have you looked into tales of the "moon-eyed people" at all? Said to be inhabitants of the southern Appalachians before the Cherokee moved in and drove into living underground.
    There's a statue/carving of them (if you Google image search moon eyed people it shows up multiple times) that I just find terrifying to look at.

    • @somedegreeofsundown2338
      @somedegreeofsundown2338 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      why files just did that

    • @eviesmith6761
      @eviesmith6761 ปีที่แล้ว +32

      This! Fort Mountain has a plaque commemorated to this. My brother went there and it’s been a while, but I think there’s mention of them being violent, and the local tribes using the area of fort mountain as a battle station of sorts

    • @nouhorni3229
      @nouhorni3229 ปีที่แล้ว +82

      Bearded, white skinned, small with big eyes (compared to the natives), came from "across the great water", built forts.
      Idk but my compass is telling me norse.

    • @jesuspabon5238
      @jesuspabon5238 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      Reminds me of the devil monkey videos done by hammerson peters where they lived in caves and would come out and eat people b4 they were wiped out

    • @affnt
      @affnt ปีที่แล้ว +32

      @@nouhorni3229 interesting. But in reference to Appalachia, the great water is more likely than not a reference to the Mississippi. The Cherokeee did drive native tribes out that are the oldest in this hemisphere. They’re thought to have come across the Bering though. I’m going to have to do some digging now 😊

  • @FirstLast-ce3en
    @FirstLast-ce3en ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Anyone who thinks that the US would have qualms about wiping out forest people hasn’t paid much attention to our history

  • @laurenmiller2841
    @laurenmiller2841 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    On the subject of bodies found decapitated, I once read a book by a woman who served as chaplain for a park ranger sevice in Maine and who therefore was involved with many search and rescues---apperently it's not uncommon to find heads separated from bodies because, and I swear she wrote this, bears like to bat them around on the ground like balls/toys---they can be found miles away sometimes, by her knowledge.
    "Here if You Need Me" by Kate Braestrup, wasn't anything too special, just a classic Hope in Dark Places type fare, but that crazy detail stuck with me

  • @azureascendant994
    @azureascendant994 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    If you saw my six foot, four inches scottish grandpa, you'd think he's some feral giant from the highlands... RIP grandpa.

  • @scribeslendy595
    @scribeslendy595 ปีที่แล้ว +1761

    As someone that grew up in a poor, rural area, I actually really appreciate your acknowledgement of common stereotypes and just how incorrect they can be
    I know that's not really a huge deal to most, but so many discussions on the topic feed into harmful stereotypes that dehumanize these groups of people.
    Also, thank you for properly pronouncing "Neanderthal" lmao
    Edit: yes, people in rural areas aren't perfect, but no group of people are. This isn't a defense of intolerance, just of broad labels.
    Edit 2: Neander-tal is closer to the original German name than Neander-thal. I do realize that it's merely a matter of what English-speaking country you live in

    • @georgesoros14yearoldwife37
      @georgesoros14yearoldwife37 ปีที่แล้ว +32

      Pronunciation changes from traditional UK pronunciation (Knee-an-dur-thall) as opposed to the Americanized Knee-an-der -tall

    • @MrBrachiatingApe
      @MrBrachiatingApe ปีที่แล้ว +39

      The Americanized version is really just a better approximation of the original German pronunciation. Thal in German means valley and the German language lacks English-style interdental sounds.

    • @nerdjournal
      @nerdjournal ปีที่แล้ว

      No one really believes the stereotypes about hicks and inbred people. In fact, the poor communities in these areas are the ones who use the stereotypes the most. I come from a rural area in Arkansas. What actual Harmful stereotypes actually affect white people in rural areas? Pronouncing something appropriately? After blessing someone for speaking against harmful stereotypes against cumb white people? Are you a contradiction? I guarantee the people those harmful stereotypes are about don't pronounce neanderthal to your liking. I'll never understand praising someone for something subjective. It always seemed elitist to an extent. Anyway. Blame it on my autism I just find it funny when people seem so contradictory and at the same time so blissfully unaware.

    • @kas7145
      @kas7145 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      Hard agree on the rural people thing. Honestly you're more likely going to run into a racist gun nut with 5,000 "NO TRESPASSING" signs than someone luring you into a lair or a colony of Hills Have Eyes people.
      The toothless stereotype is super hurtful to people who simply didn't have access to dental care. Hurt tooth = pulled tooth when the closest dentist is seven hours away.

    • @richardknight8338
      @richardknight8338 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      You'd see my teeth and make assumptions. I was homeless in my early 20s. Not exactly a dental plan out there. And it's hard to convince yourself you're doing hygiene when you're brushing your teeth with puddle water or in a dingy bathroom you're going to be searched when you leave. 20 years later and I have two wonderful girls. I have a home now. I work. All for them. But I still carry the marks from what I went through. So, please, strike the teeth thing from your mind. It's going to be bad enough when they are teenagers. Having this stigma on their father that no one would judge as doing anything wrong will embarrass them. I didn't take care of myself like I should have. It's not their fault, you know?

  • @sickbisquit8673
    @sickbisquit8673 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    i love the phrase "freedom units" idk why ive never heard of that before

  • @VintageNarwhal
    @VintageNarwhal 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    “It was only a few months of near starvation”
    Yeah… only…😂

  • @keltongaskey
    @keltongaskey ปีที่แล้ว +229

    As someone who lives in the foothills of the Cascades in Oregon, if there were feral people living in the mountains we would never know. Thems mountains are dense.
    If the Aidens ever come out to Oregon for a video I'd be happy to be a guide.

    • @teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425
      @teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Do you think there's/have you heard of any?

    • @keltongaskey
      @keltongaskey ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425 It's certainly possible. I haven't heard of any though. The people to ask would be loggers though.

    • @teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425
      @teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@keltongaskey alas I live on a miniscule Scottish island renowned for its lack of trees, so ima have to leave that task to you😄i imagine feral humans could be the very least of anyone's worries in an area like that.

    • @keltongaskey
      @keltongaskey ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425 Lol it would be hard for me to live somewhere without trees.

    • @zbelair7218
      @zbelair7218 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Agreed, the tree people are out there too. Oregon is beautifully wild.

  • @matthiasthulman4058
    @matthiasthulman4058 ปีที่แล้ว +91

    Deliverance was one of the original "watch out for hillbillies" trope movies. Kinda set the precedent going forward

    • @____________838
      @____________838 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      And it was inspired, in part, by Federal Appalachian-hatred.

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      That scene traumatized me for life whenever I am in the forrest

    • @dlsimmons6382
      @dlsimmons6382 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That movie scarred my mind as a child..

    • @IWasaTeenageTeenWolf
      @IWasaTeenageTeenWolf ปีที่แล้ว +8

      More recent movies adding to this are the Hills Have Eyes remakes (which are based on the story of Sawney Beene) and even Red State, though Red State was more a fantastical Hollywood take on WACO, but in the Deep South.

    • @King-balloon
      @King-balloon ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@djquinn11 boy you got a pretty mouth.

  • @gatedude07
    @gatedude07 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I remember listening to a podcast episode of National Park After Dark and hearing the story of a guy who had been hiking along the Appalachian Trail for several days and feeling like he was being followed for a couple of those days. Then one night he woke up to several dirty men trying to cut his hammock down. He cut himself free with his knife (his hammock had mosquito netting) and ran off, losing his pursuers but also getting himself lost.
    I personally doubt they were cannibals but they clearly weren't there for a polite chat either. Maybe they only wanted to rob him, maybe worse. But people like that may be responsible for some of these disappearances certainly.

  • @darthjesus7959
    @darthjesus7959 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    usually hate features of other creators in videos but that guy Ryan was actually a joy to listen to. good call

  • @nikkilecomte4773
    @nikkilecomte4773 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    one of the things I've always found interesting in regards to feral people and cannibalism in folklore is a pattern of folklore and cultural taboo among indigenous american tribes in regions with harsh winters, which often gets lost in translation to popular culture. violating certain high crimes meant you lost your humanity forever and became a cursed creature (which varied in name across tribes: Chenoo, Kiawahq', Stonecoats, Witiko, and of course, Wendigo), and while cannibalism IS on that list of high crimes, it was far more common for people to be cursed and ostracized for refusing to provide food or shelter to someone in need than for them to be accused of cannibalism. that element of the folklore was more of a metaphor for putting personal desires over the lives of others in the community and why it isn't safe to continue to trust people who had shown themselves to be so selfish and cruel.

    • @oliviabb73849
      @oliviabb73849 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thank you for this comment. Fascinating thing to ponder about!

  • @chungusblungus7826
    @chungusblungus7826 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    I have a Native American friend in Appalachia who says that he and other people in his clan have been chased by feral humans.

    • @brucewayne2955
      @brucewayne2955 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Sure buddy. We believe you & your imaginary Native American friend 😅

    • @chungusblungus7826
      @chungusblungus7826 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@brucewayne2955
      rude

    • @chungusblungus7826
      @chungusblungus7826 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@brucewayne2955
      wait hold up, what's so unrealistic about be having a Native American friend? Like, that seems like a weird thing to get hung up on

  • @debbilermond1553
    @debbilermond1553 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    In regards to Alan Berry and Ron Morehead; I had a Sasquatch encounter near Trout Lake, WA (the Dark Divide between Mt. St. Helens and Mt. Adams) which sounded very similar to the Sierra Sounds. Alan Berry sent me one of his copies of the CD to compare to what I heard in 2001. It was frightening similar! I also had dinner with Ron Morehead and other Sasquatch researchers in Graham, WA. He is as genuine as they come and was full of a wealth of details regarding his encounters in the High Sierra with Alan Berry and the hunters who kept the hunting camp in this Mtn. Range.

  • @tiggytheimpaler5483
    @tiggytheimpaler5483 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Based on how many drug ops have been found in some of these parks i wouldnt be surprised if some sort of limited grow operations are responsibke for a lot of these, even as far back as the late 40s when the first drug gang murders started ramping up

  • @battlyan3470
    @battlyan3470 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    When I hiked sections of the Appalachian Trail, I noticed that my footsteps would echo, making it sound like I was being followed. After a while you get used to it.

  • @claremorgan6033
    @claremorgan6033 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    1783 The story of Sarah Witcher. She too as legend has it, wandered from her home for a few days. They found her and she said a bear took care of her . There is a children's book about it, and I read it to my children many times throughout the years.

    • @claremorgan6033
      @claremorgan6033 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Correction: Sarah Whitcher

    • @ashriihi
      @ashriihi ปีที่แล้ว

      It's fictional 😅

    • @randydiabolo
      @randydiabolo ปีที่แล้ว +7

      There was a kid named Casey Hathaway in North Carolina in 2019 who wandered out into the swamp in January and was found a few days later, little the worse for wear despite the near freezing temperature. His story: He hung out with a bear for 2 days.

    • @victory8928
      @victory8928 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      there are multiple forms of the story, the earliest is honestly the least bizarre as in a bear just took her and when they found her, the bear swam away wanting to escape being shot to death. While later sources add in the bear picking berries and acting human like. very odd, although from what I gathered it seems like it was a rather simple yet shocking event that stuck and overtime it became more legend than truth.

  • @legacydouglas2821
    @legacydouglas2821 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    idk why i have neverrrr been able to sit through any video like this that mainly focuses on the person talking and not images or videos to go along with it, but i was able to easily watch this full video without getting distracted or bored. Great video!

  • @adrianadykstra6604
    @adrianadykstra6604 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Love the wendigoon reference, this is the first video I’ve seen of yours so the algorithm is making connections 😅

  • @LeeLee-pk4ss
    @LeeLee-pk4ss ปีที่แล้ว +168

    I'm surprised that you didn't get into the documented cases of feral children. These kids were either lost or neglected by their parents. The most recent cases are of the girl raised by dogs, the chicken child, and a boy and monkeys. (the monkey boy didn't spend as much time in the wild to go completely feral) There are also American folk stories about a wolf girl, this story was made famous by the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark books by Alvin Schwartz. I mention that book because he had references in the appendix as to were he found the stories in the books.
    And just for fun we can't forget the two most famous stories (though as far as I know are fiction) Tarzan and Mowgli

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  ปีที่แล้ว +36

      Those are a bit of a different story. Typically those are kids who were abandoned, not born in the wild.

    • @EmiStar070
      @EmiStar070 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      There's the faerie kids from Ireland that were green from some sort of deficiency

    • @Bagginsess
      @Bagginsess ปีที่แล้ว +12

      lol for me the most famous story of wolf children would be Romulus and Remus

    • @Alexandraadftxr7052
      @Alexandraadftxr7052 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@EmiStar070 You mean the changleings, or The green children of Woolpit? I wrote wath you said into goodle, and I got changlings. If you refer the the geen children of woolpit, then sorry, but that happands in England.
      Also I can agree with the deficiency therory, but there is also a posablility that the children come from an isoleted small villige or comunity, and they skinn was green because of eather inces that happand there.

  • @celladoor_uk
    @celladoor_uk ปีที่แล้ว +80

    Only a few months of near starvation, I actually thought you were being ironic when you mentioned that as if it wasn't a long time to be starving but it seems you were serious. I get that cannibalism is wrong and I think one might be jumping to it too quickly in the first week or two without any reliable food source but after a month, with no clear sign of rescue, I doubt there are many people who wouldn't eat another human, especially if that human was already dead.

    • @RachelleBeyer
      @RachelleBeyer 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      100% agree. That was fuckin stupid to say. Those people who did resort to eating humans would have done so out of sheer desperation. It was not a “slight inconvenience in regards to food.”
      Fuckin rude.

  • @jxn1056
    @jxn1056 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Thank you ❤
    I absolutely appreciate your kindness, and clarification in speaking of us country folk 😊
    It has always been a huge misconception and speculation that people who live in rural areas (especially Appalachia) are feral, cannibalistic, incestuous creatures LOL.
    WV here.. love the country, and our mountains ❤
    Also, love your channel

  • @ultimatemixmeister5127
    @ultimatemixmeister5127 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    As someone who’s had a Sasquatch encounter five years ago (July 28th, 2018), I guarantee I wasn’t laughing about it afterwards. I was goddamned terrified. Did a TH-cam interview about it recently.
    Interesting video. Thanks for posting.
    -Eli

  • @srg24601
    @srg24601 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    So this is just for my area and doesn't explain weird stuff like headless bodies, but I live near a national park that has some dissapearences/"mysterious" drownings and occasionally we get people coming around asking about local legends and the paranormal. And considering we're deep in the Appalachian mountains we do have plenty of those, but when they ask about the park most people just shrug and say a sinkhole got them. The whole area's full of limestone and holes open up all the time.
    Depending on the hole it can be an actual hole but sometimes stuff gets sucked down and the dirt fills back in and all you get left with is a slight indent in the ground. If one opens up in the lake and someone's swimming too close they can get caught in the current as it fills the chamber and drown.
    Depending on the size of the sinkhole it can be loud like a big tree falling or it can be a muffled cracking sound. Sometimes they don't make a sound at all and you just find a hole in your yard the next morning. There was a boy my great grandpa knew back when he was ~10ish that went missing in the area. It was a case of "he rounded the bend and when we caught up he was just gone." Men from town came to search and noticed a dip in the trail a few feet deep and when they started scooping dirt out with their hands they found the top of the boy's head. The earth literally just decided it was gonna eat him.
    I'm trying not to make this sound like a new hole's cracking open every minute cuz it really isn't *that* bad, but it's enough to be an issue. And even if everyone's pretty sure a sinkhole killed someone, you usually don't find a body to confirm so they just end up as a cold case. This doesn't even cover the non-locals that wander off the trail and want to explore some "cave" they found. This happened a couple years ago and at first nobody could find the woman but then someone heard really quiet yelling and found a hole on the side of an enbankment. They looked in and saw the bottom of the woman's sneakers where she thought she could wiggle on in and got stuck 🙄
    That being said, when someone goes missing or mysteriously dies on our stretch of the Trail or the Blue Ridge Parkway everyone casually says the tree lights or cave people took them lmao. The dichotomy of mountain folk XD

  • @yorgul8203
    @yorgul8203 ปีที่แล้ว +108

    The Lore Lodge has to be one of the best TH-camrs I have ever seen in my life. Seriously man your content is amazing, engaging, and always leaves me curious to learn more. Amazing job and keep it up!

    • @hollygarfield123
      @hollygarfield123 ปีที่แล้ว

      honestly same, anytime im in a funk where i don't know what video to watch his stuff usually piques my interest

  • @daisypage9394
    @daisypage9394 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    6:03 a little note is that Neanderthals and other close homo sapien relatives is that we interbred with them and they had their own culture and language so we definitely did see them as human, people today would probably think they looked weird though! Neanderthals specifically adapted to a slightly different niche in a slightly different area which led to slight physical differences
    People of European descent are estimated to have 1-6% Neanderthal dna I believe!

    • @daisypage9394
      @daisypage9394 ปีที่แล้ว

      There are Neanderthal cave paintings and cave paintings by other species in the homo genus as well!

  • @grimmmickey5125
    @grimmmickey5125 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Seeing how Celts held the Forrests and other lands in such high regard I'm sure if anyone has really seen something it would have been them.

  • @jacopoarmini7889
    @jacopoarmini7889 ปีที่แล้ว +136

    there's a lot of "wild man" stories in Italy, especially in the central, more forested regions. They are described as the usual tall man covered in fur, however they are never malevolent, and are actually quite intelligent and usually friendly. It sometimes kidnaps women and children, for the explicit purpose of repopulating his own race. However, all stories agree that they have gone extinct due to human expansion.

    • @cameron.t
      @cameron.t ปีที่แล้ว

      Friendly, kidnaps ocassionally
      ☠️

    • @jacopoarmini7889
      @jacopoarmini7889 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@cameron.t in the stories it is generally agreed upon that italian wildmen resorted to kidnapping once their numbers began to decline due to human expansion and destruction of their habitat. It is immoral but was a last resort of sorts.

    • @marksienicki1253
      @marksienicki1253 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      When are we gonna give the Itslians a break!?!

    • @stealthwarrior5768
      @stealthwarrior5768 ปีที่แล้ว

      They are friendly, accept for tge kidnapping and rape of women. Yikes!

    • @inquisitive-
      @inquisitive- ปีที่แล้ว +5

      That seems unlikely. There are over 6000 abandoned towns and villages in Italy. Surely they occupy one or two of them discreetly. Some such towns are beautiful. Many of them are actually.

  • @reclawyxhush
    @reclawyxhush ปีที่แล้ว +71

    There is also another disturbing possible explanation of many highly suspicious disappearances, especially in open wilderness. Some time ago I was interested in forensic psychology regarding serial killers. There are many interesting and terryfying aspects that appear to be some atavistic traits hidden deeply in human nature and reappearing with disturbing regularity within the deranged personalities of psychopaths. I think one who wants to make out what's being happening with regard to people disappearing without a trace (and a reason which might suggest that they wanted to take their own life or break with their former life), should seriously consider the possibility of "part-time feral people", highly functioning within society yet from time to time feeling irresistible urge to hunt the "ultimate game", i.e. other humans. It is very possible that such a predatory personality feels extreme excitement and pleasure at the very thought of killing a person. I strongly suspect that many of those individuals pursue careers which facilitate indulging in such murderous disposition and may even find perfect cover from the very fact of being seemingly a reliable and trustworthy member of society doing respectable job.

    • @Elle-elle-elle
      @Elle-elle-elle ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Israel Keyes' FBI interviews alluded to a lot of this. He would pre-visit areas and bury tools, sometimes coming back years later to retrieve them. He talked about opportunities in the outdoors and trails, and missing persons that had been assumed to have accidents. Just something for you to dig into if you're interested

    • @SouthernBelleReviews
      @SouthernBelleReviews ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Absolutely!!!

    • @iino07
      @iino07 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Similar to the premise of the Hostel franchise, the human mind can be a frightening place and I don't doubt there are individuals or even groups of people who would do that.

    • @idiosyncraticmushroom3030
      @idiosyncraticmushroom3030 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      This lines up with the Eloise story also on this channel

  • @AlexisNapier-yn8pi
    @AlexisNapier-yn8pi 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I’ve lived in Appalachia my entire life, so it was nice to hear you clarify about that stereotype 😊 Great video btw!

  • @thevillager8339
    @thevillager8339 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    "Is this legit, is this something completely made up"
    My guy, it's Scotland.

  • @darienkinne1347
    @darienkinne1347 ปีที่แล้ว +130

    The story of Zana the wild woman is interesting. She was recorded as being covered in hair, and large in stature. Stronger than any man, and as fast as a horse. She was captured in the Caucus Mountains in Russia. She was given as a gift to some Lord or noble I think, and was kept in the town over which they presided. She was eventually "domesticated", but always refused clothes. She was raped by men in the town and gave birth to children, from whom there are still living descendants. A DNA analysis of remains from Zana and her son showed a significant amount of lineage coming from Africa, certainly out of place for someone in the Caucus Mountains. There are historical pictures of Zana's children, who all seemed to live normal lives, however are noticably taller and more harry than their peers.

    • @stealthwarrior5768
      @stealthwarrior5768 ปีที่แล้ว

      Poor woman. Seems the raping men were the real ferals.

    • @anon2427
      @anon2427 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Definitely Sasquatch

    • @phantom_mserafi
      @phantom_mserafi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      BS

    • @WeAreInYourWall
      @WeAreInYourWall 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      🤦🏽‍♂️

    • @vijones
      @vijones 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      ​@@phantom_mserafiyou can look it up bro bro. It's got historical evidence and literal living descendants that are visibly tall and hairy. It's not "BS" Its at. Her being a sasquatch or of sasquatch descent is obviously questionable. But OP didn't mention sasquatch, they just stated a genealogical abnormality.

  • @smm855
    @smm855 ปีที่แล้ว +77

    OK, not *exactly* feral people but more on the 'scary hillbilly horror movie' trope you should watch Dale and Tucker vs Evil. It's a horror comedy and honestly one of my favorite movies. It's really a fun twist on the genre.

    • @loadingmikke7451
      @loadingmikke7451 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I loved that movie. x)

    • @screweverything2215
      @screweverything2215 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      They hate my face! 😆

    • @quackocane
      @quackocane ปีที่แล้ว +3

      It really is fucking great

    • @johnnycovenant2286
      @johnnycovenant2286 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      He just up and hucked himself into the wood chipper

    • @vincent67239
      @vincent67239 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      YES! I loved that movie! And the wood chipper scene is one of my favorites

  • @haileybalmer9722
    @haileybalmer9722 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I firmly believe that most missing person cases in which the person disappeared in the woods is just a skill issue. Even “experienced woodsmen”, whatever people think that means, are susceptible to the forces of nature.
    Do not go off of the trail.
    Do not go alone.
    Do not stay in the woods if the weather turns foul.
    Leave the woods if you suspect you are being followed, that’s probably a bear.
    It’s not a playground.

  • @SuperSneakySakura
    @SuperSneakySakura ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Hey There! Absolutely adore your content, just wanted to pop in here and correct one thing that I don't think has been mentioned. Not to annoy just because it's in my area of study. (Cultural Anthropology)
    There aren't actually anymore hunter gatherer/purely foraging people groups left roaming the earth today. Except for possible the sentinel Island people but I think they are horticulturalists themselves. Nowadays, due to expansion of world powers and human developmental sprawl and land/earth resource overuse, the last major Foraging groups have been forced out of their way of life because they did not have enough land to live off of. These people being the Ju!/hoansi people of Southern Africa and the Baaka people of the Ituri forest.
    I wish I could say these groups still existed with this pattern of survival, but sadly it is just unsustainable now, and the neolithic revolution has reached us all.
    You are correct in your descriptions of their ways of life and patterns of movement though, and I adore your addition of these groups into your video essay, it was nice to see.
    P.S. Please fellow Anthropology specialists add on or correct me anywhere I am mistaken, I am writing this at 1am by memory.

    • @michaelstark831
      @michaelstark831 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Aren't the Hadza hunter gatherers?

    • @frankvandorp9732
      @frankvandorp9732 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Were they "forced out of their way of life" by "land/resource overuse", or did they just change their way of life themselves because they wanted food security, a better standard of living, and a lower likelihood of dying from minor injuries or easily treatable diseases?
      Because the latter seems a lot more likely to me. The former sounds more something that you're supposed to say if you want to get good grades in Cultural Anthropology classes.

  • @truter5243
    @truter5243 ปีที่แล้ว +134

    Few years ago we went hiking and came across a wolf that was in a very bad way. Now wolves don't naturally live in my country so we were puzzled. Restrained it, gave it a lot of water and food and carried it back out of the forest for wildlife services to come get it. Turns out it escaped from a sanctuary where wolves go after people who illegally import them do not want them anymore. Moral of the story is that even though something does not fit the area, you need to keep an open mind that it might be an animal from another continent. Especially in this day and age where you can buy just about anything. I mean this wolf looked like a creature from a horror movie. It was in a very very bad way. Could have easily passed for a fairytale monster

    • @waner17
      @waner17 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      this isn’t new either. haven’t rich people always dabbled in exotic pets?

    • @Kayla_P99
      @Kayla_P99 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      About a year ago there was an emu that escaped a sanctuary of some kind and ran around in the Rockies. You know, the Western American mountain range notoriously close to Australia lol

    • @truter5243
      @truter5243 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Kayla_P99 hahaha that gave me such a good laugh now

    • @Quincy_Morris
      @Quincy_Morris 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      This is one of the theories explaining the beast of Gevodan

    • @truter5243
      @truter5243 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Quincy_Morris I'll look that up. Thanks

  • @whipcreeb
    @whipcreeb ปีที่แล้ว +46

    thank you for being informed and aware of harmful stereotypes. appalachian people generally really are some of the best people you'll ever meet. sincerely, an appalachian woman

  • @Milkman4279
    @Milkman4279 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Knocking 3 times on the ceiling means you want me

  • @johnnytopside1437
    @johnnytopside1437 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Honestly this is much better content than anything history or discovery has put out in the last few years

  • @thurayya8905
    @thurayya8905 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    You say a few months of near starvation like it was merely an afternoon without takeout (regards the Donner Party). That's a long time to go without food.

  • @kaipacifica1289
    @kaipacifica1289 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I find it hard to believe there are feral, thriving populations, but as times are hard, more-and-more people are forced out of society into the fringes... and it's understandable that some of those driven out of society will purposely disregard the norms of society and be seen as "feral." But thriving populations? Unlikely.

  • @mosaics.out.of.madness
    @mosaics.out.of.madness 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Look into Glen Moquin! 30 year cold case, no body. Went missing in northern Quebec, Canada at the age of 22. My uncle. Seems to maybe fit the 411 phenomenon. They found his clothing and wallet folded up in the woods. Dogs couldn't find a scent. Very mysterious.

  • @Nonayabizness360
    @Nonayabizness360 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I watched a documentary a couple years ago about the Vietnam veterans coming back from the war in the 1970’s who had such bad PTSD that they couldn’t assimilate back into our everyday society. They were just going off grid and living in the woods and state and National forests in our country and I believe that it’s quite possible that these people could have had families and if anyone could have made it in the forest it was these people. I actually saw the documentary here on TH-cam and it’s worth watching if you find it. Remember these men were drafted and they saw horrible things and many were sprayed with chemicals like agent Orange, pink and blue and it had absolutely horrible side effects. Btw our government has never addressed these people going off grid and they did not handle PTSD very well back then, they still don’t handle it well now.

  • @darienkinne1347
    @darienkinne1347 ปีที่แล้ว +40

    The TH-cam channel Soft White Underbelly has a series of videos following the Whittaker family. They live in very rural Appalachia and are the result of generational inbreeding. I think this series gives a profound insight into these people's existence, and de-stigmatizes those born into and through such circumstances.

    • @thegreencat9947
      @thegreencat9947 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Everybody loves Ray.... I have been keeping abreast of the impact that he has placed upon the whittakers. I wish only for the best for them. They are so happy and content.

    • @Blackhatchic1
      @Blackhatchic1 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Yes and he needs to stop exploiting this family. Cool to interview and ask if people want to donate to help them, however, it is not cool for him to now bring a female journalist to start doing the same so they both can profit from these continuous videos. Its so sad that this family believes they're genuinely their frirnds, not realizing they're actually being portrayed as a freak show/made fun of. People who genuinely want to help.others to not have the need to showboat...Dude needs to move on. Its shameful.

  • @hollyjollyxmas
    @hollyjollyxmas ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I don’t think we ever truly know what we’re capable of until pushed to the brink

    • @marvinbone1379
      @marvinbone1379 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Holly, I agree. "The Walking Dead" brilliantly displayed that.

  • @Tony-nt5zd
    @Tony-nt5zd ปีที่แล้ว +1

    There's hill people in the sticks up here but they're not feral, they're just off gridders, folks who are homeless on paper but figured out how to make their own homes, hippies and communists who decided to live off the land somewhere with a gray area jurisdiction, and so on. They're pretty decent and honest folks but when city people meet them the difference in etiquette and culture is usually enough to fuck with anyone who doesn't bolt the second they see them.
    Nice to see you clarifying that this isn't about them. I've had some good experiences with them when I lived out that way and I always feel like people don't understand that they're just people making it work how they prefer or however they can.

  • @noteworthyarchive
    @noteworthyarchive 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    ‘Only a few months of near starvation before he started eating people’ my bro you would eat people after a few weeks. You have no idea what hunger does to you.

    • @jacqueline373
      @jacqueline373 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yeah i can’t believe he acted like starving to death for months is no big deal

  • @verylostdoommarauder
    @verylostdoommarauder ปีที่แล้ว +51

    The idea of there being an above ground uncontacted native tribe in North America is basically impossible, even with the vast forests. Especially the idea that the Forest Service has to be actively containing them. Pretty much every native tribe in the West got forced onto a reservation by the military at some point.

    • @elisorrells5314
      @elisorrells5314 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah the federal government has zero reason to tolerate and protect some nomads that also just randomly kill American citizens

    • @xgtwb6473
      @xgtwb6473 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Yeah, yeah. The government is soooooo competent at everything they, no way a group of people could evade them. 😂

    • @LegendOfTheFLame393
      @LegendOfTheFLame393 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Over government lost a fighter jet left supplies and modern equipment to terrorists and half of the terrorists are made by the usa and people getting lost in the woods and dying is extremely common in the USA its still mostly forest or woodlands or areas nobody could explore due to how dangerous and expensive it is to explore it

  • @ttamn92
    @ttamn92 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    One side of my family is from the very deep backwoods of Appalachian mountains and idk if I would consider them Farrell or not but they are extremely close to it.. I'm talking about people who have never left the mountain never been in a city not even a super small country town.. they live 100% off the land grow and hunt for food make clothing the whole thing... they have their own language that's loosely based on English but its not English.... I had heard my grandparents talk about the "hill folks" but never really thought it was like that but I got to go see the old family land and I got to see and exspericance (the best word I can come up with to explain the situation) the way they live and its incredible that people are able to live that way in 2023 ....

    • @emily7195
      @emily7195 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      That's not at all what it means to be feral but your family sounds super cool I am very jealous of them

    • @chewy99.
      @chewy99. ปีที่แล้ว +23

      You should document them. Record a video with them. How they talk, live, how they make clothes. That is very fascinating and it’s worth it so that history can remember them.

    • @nippolopolis4431
      @nippolopolis4431 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      I didn't believe you until you showed that you do indeed have your own version of English. "Exsperiance"--- is this similar to the English word "experience"?

    • @stealthwarrior5768
      @stealthwarrior5768 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@nippolopolis4431 don't be mean.

    • @ashriihi
      @ashriihi ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@nippolopolis4431 I'm dying laughing at this 😂

  • @Flashahol
    @Flashahol 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Some years ago, the police arrested a man who had disappeared since the '80's. This guy had been living in the woods along the Appalachian trail for decades and occasionally would break into homes and steal mainly camping equipment and food. I remember the picture of his face made me wonder if it was a picture from before his disappearance or if he still sported his old 80's style "aviator" glasses. The picture was from after his arrest, which makes me cringe at how many pairs of glasses I have destroyed in the same amount of time...

  • @MultiNaruto900
    @MultiNaruto900 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It's so wild that I just watched a video where a law firm is a sponsor

  • @nickjohnson410
    @nickjohnson410 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    i used to live in Santa Cruz, CA and there are legit lots of people that live in the woods. We called them Woodsies. Most are relatively "normal" but i guarantee you there are people that have been living way back in the woods since the 70s and 80s. Feral Hippies.

    • @smm855
      @smm855 ปีที่แล้ว

      lol Feral Hippies for some reason conjures my brain to think of some hippy offering you weed and if you turn it down he eats you 🤣

    • @spacedandy7555
      @spacedandy7555 ปีที่แล้ว

      They are hippies! They don’t have any money!

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth ปีที่แล้ว

      The dome of the extra serious Anarcho primitivist types apparently too.

  • @rberkowitz9453
    @rberkowitz9453 ปีที่แล้ว +62

    If you actually watch Trey the explainer video on rapid evolution, the Daphne Major finch actually explain how species splinters off and make new species. And it often…involves inbreeding.

  • @skitzlemusic8036
    @skitzlemusic8036 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is seriously a cool channel, I can tell you put an incredible amount of effort into this. Good job 👍 😄

  • @Principessa1046
    @Principessa1046 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The acting in this was superb, and the ending approaches with an exceedingly well-written twist that flips the horror villain trope on its head.