Cascade Range · 4,200 ft · Pre-dawn · Cell service: none

INTO THE WOODS

"The tracks were fresh. Whatever made them weighs somewhere north of 800 pounds. It had been watching the camp."

— Field Notes, Dr. E. Hargrove · October 3rd

SIGHTING #047 — Coldwater Basin — 3 witnesses — October 2024dot THERMAL HIT — Ridge 44N — 800+ lbs estimated — Classifieddot FOOTPRINT — 18.5 inches — Cast recovered — Evidence Locker #12dot AUDIO — 2:47 AM — Vocalisation at 94 dB — Not matched to known speciesdot TRAIL CAM — Dead River Valley — Subject moved at est. 28 mphdot BRANCH BREAK — 40 ft elevation — Fresh — Consistent with large primate
The trail narrows. Canopy closes overhead. You notice the birds have gone silent. The creek sounds different here — muffled, as if the forest itself is holding its breath. Your guide stops. Points at a branch snapped cleanly at twelve feet. Fresh sap. Something very large passed through here. Recently.

Sighting Zones

5 documented encounter zones · Cascade backcountry · 2022–2024

Coldwater Basin

ZONE A

ZONE A — Coldwater Basin

Date: Oct 2024 Witnesses: 3 witnesses Evidence: Thermal hit + footprint cast CONFIRMED

Dead River Valley

ZONE B

ZONE B — Dead River Valley

Date: Sep 2023 Witnesses: 1 witness (solo hiker) Evidence: Audio recording + trail damage PROBABLE

Ridge 44N

ZONE C

ZONE C — Ridge 44N

Date: Jun 2024 Witnesses: 2 witnesses (research team) Evidence: Film footage + branch breaks at 12 ft CONFIRMED

Old Growth Corridor

ZONE D

ZONE D — Old Growth Corridor

Date: Mar 2022 Witnesses: 4 witnesses (survey crew) Evidence: Visual sighting + vocalisations CONFIRMED

Cascade Saddle

ZONE E

ZONE E — Cascade Saddle

Date: Nov 2024 Witnesses: Unmanned (trail cam) Evidence: Motion-triggered photo sequence UNDER REVIEW

Evidence Locker

Classified — Expedition Files 2019–2024 · Not for public release

Thermal camera evidence of large figure in forest
Digitally enhanced trail camera still
Trail camera footage of forest at night
Large bipedal footprint in mud with measuring ruler

Enhancement Analysis

Raw thermal capture (left) compared to digitally enhanced analysis (right). Enhancement processing reveals additional detail in the subject’s outline and suggests bipedal locomotion consistent with primate gait patterns.

Processing: FLIR post-capture → NIR enhancement → Edge detection

ENHANCED
RAW THERMAL
RAW THERMAL ENHANCED

Something Ancient Lives Here

The data converges. Every sensor, every witness, every broken branch points to the same coordinates. Whatever it is, it’s been here far longer than we have.

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Documented Sightings
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Largest Footprint (inches)
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Est. Weight (lbs)
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Hours Since Last Contact
Thermal camera evidence of large figure in forest
Digitally enhanced trail camera still
Trail camera footage of forest at night
Large bipedal footprint in mud with measuring ruler

Track Analysis Protocol

Standard measurements taken at every discovery site. All casts made with dental stone for maximum detail preservation. Average length: 15.2-18.5 inches Average width: 6.8-7.4 inches Stride length: 4.8-5.5 feet Depth range: 1.8-2.4 inches (compacted soil) Dermal ridges: Present in 73% of quality casts

Observed Behavior Patterns

89% of sightings occur between 10 PM and 4 AM. Territorial marking includes branch breaks at 10-14 ft and wood knocks. Vocalisations: Low-frequency infrasound (18-22 Hz), howls, wood knocks Avoidance: Subject consistently maintains 200+ yard buffer Diet evidence: Foraging signs suggest omnivorous, heavy on roots and berries

Required Expedition Gear

DSLR + 500mm telephoto FLIR thermal imager Parabolic microphone Dental stone casting kit GPS waypoint logger 72-hour ration pack Bear spray (2 cans min.) First aid / trauma kit VHF radio (no cell service) Red-lens headlamp

Expedition Protocol

1. Never travel alone. Minimum team of three. 2. Maintain radio contact at 30-minute intervals. 3. Document everything. GPS-tag all evidence locations. 4. No flash photography. Infrared only after dark. 5. If subject is within 100 yards: stop, observe, do not approach. 6. All specimens must be photographed in situ before collection. 7. Return to base camp before full dark. No exceptions.

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The Fire Keeps Watch

Remember: never hike alone after dark |

Base camp. The only warm spot for four miles in any direction. The fire crackles. Outside the circle of light, the old growth is absolute darkness. Somewhere in it, something breathes.

It Was Here Last Night.

Dawn breaks. The expedition continues. Join us. See what Pond Apex can build.