Possible Yowie Encounter. Otway National Park, Victoria.
Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2016 11:01 pm
It was around 4pm on the Sunday afternoon of September 26. My girlfriend and I had been at Apollo Bay, Victoria for the weekend. Given that the Great Ocean Road was closed from Apollo Bay to Lorne, we had to take the alternative route through the the Otway National Park, Forest-Apollo Bay Road.
We decided to stop in the National Park on the way back as the scenery was so beautiful. We saw a sign on the side of the road that advertised a picnic ground. I have now found out the road is known as Sunnyside Road, Mt Sabine. The picnic ground is just off Sunnyside Road, and there is a trail that leads from the picnic ground to Sabine falls. We parked the car and decided to walk along the track and have a look. The countryside a mix of untouched forest with beech trees, mountain ashes, and ferns and other bracken at ground level, and pinus radiata plantations.
Now I have done a lot of research on this site and others, and I truly believe Yowies/bigfoots/sasquatches are real. I must make that clear. What that means is that I look for things that most others would miss in a similar situation.
The first thing that I noticed even about 150m down the track was that there were parts of the forest that didn't seem natural. Lots of branches, of similar thickness had been broken at similar heights, most of them propped at a 90 degree angle (see photos 1 and 2). They were all a bit higher up the trunks of the trees than I could reach (I am 6 foot 4 and probably have a reach of 8 1/2 feet or so on my toes). They all look like they had been snapped with force around 10-12 feet up the tree. These, while not massive trees, were much much thicker than I could ever get close to breaking with my hands. Probably four times thicker at least than I could break, if not a bit more. It just didn't feel right to me the way the bush had been manipulated.
Anyway along the trail a bit further, we found a structure to the side of the trail. You can see from photo 3 that the structure has five points of contact from five different logs. Then it dawned on me that each of them was braced against a trunk of a nearby tree. I went off the track to see how strongly in position they were. They were braced that hardly against the trunks of the nearby trees that I couldn't move the structure at all. It was so strong. I couldn't believe how strongly it was braced. It would take real strength to brace those logs like that.
We kept on moving along the track, and a noise caught my attention. I said to my girlfriend "quiet" "still". We both stopped walking and were deadly quiet and still. We turned to where the noise was coming from. To the right of us, there was a noise that both of us had never heard before. It was like a wooden version of an iPhone camera noise, a bit like the noise of bark being ripped off a tree. It was quite loud. The noise was around 30 metres from where we were, silent and still on the track. The noise happened around 12 more times, then one of the trees was shaken quite violently and aggressively. We got the feeling that whatever it was now knew we were there and it was making its prescience known.
As it happened, a sense of fear came over me. For the first time in my life, I felt like I wasn't the top dog in the Aussie bush. I stayed still with fear. Then whatever shook the tree, moved from where it was, on the right side of the track, to the front of the trail ahead of us. It moved to that position so quickly that it freaked the both of us out. It had moved what I guess to be 50m in a few seconds, through dense foliage. It dawned on me that it was now in front of us, blocking our further approach into the forest. We both had never experienced anything cover ground like that so quickly. The other strange thing was that it's motion was silent. It make no noise that we could hear as it moved, all the more amazing given how fast it had move. Unfortunately the foliage was so dense that we couldn't make anything out. We stood there still and silent for a little while longer, deciding whether we would go a bit further down the trail or head back to the car at the picnic ground. We decided to go a bit further down the trail, but decided to turn around and go back to the car. Fear got the better of us.
On the way back, we found another structure that looked totally out of place in the bush. There is no way that the branches fell like that. Someone or something had intentionally put the branches there in that arrangement (see photo 4).
Both of us really can't explain what we had encountered that afternoon. The more we think about it, the more we think that it was a Yowie. There is nothing in the Australian bush that would shake a tree like that, or move that quickly through the bush. Also, the feeling of fear we encountered, and the structures and parts of the bush that were out of place are other things that point us in that direction. We are so intrigued that we are thinking of going back to the site to have another look. Not sure whether I can gather the courage as it was scary.
We decided to stop in the National Park on the way back as the scenery was so beautiful. We saw a sign on the side of the road that advertised a picnic ground. I have now found out the road is known as Sunnyside Road, Mt Sabine. The picnic ground is just off Sunnyside Road, and there is a trail that leads from the picnic ground to Sabine falls. We parked the car and decided to walk along the track and have a look. The countryside a mix of untouched forest with beech trees, mountain ashes, and ferns and other bracken at ground level, and pinus radiata plantations.
Now I have done a lot of research on this site and others, and I truly believe Yowies/bigfoots/sasquatches are real. I must make that clear. What that means is that I look for things that most others would miss in a similar situation.
The first thing that I noticed even about 150m down the track was that there were parts of the forest that didn't seem natural. Lots of branches, of similar thickness had been broken at similar heights, most of them propped at a 90 degree angle (see photos 1 and 2). They were all a bit higher up the trunks of the trees than I could reach (I am 6 foot 4 and probably have a reach of 8 1/2 feet or so on my toes). They all look like they had been snapped with force around 10-12 feet up the tree. These, while not massive trees, were much much thicker than I could ever get close to breaking with my hands. Probably four times thicker at least than I could break, if not a bit more. It just didn't feel right to me the way the bush had been manipulated.
Anyway along the trail a bit further, we found a structure to the side of the trail. You can see from photo 3 that the structure has five points of contact from five different logs. Then it dawned on me that each of them was braced against a trunk of a nearby tree. I went off the track to see how strongly in position they were. They were braced that hardly against the trunks of the nearby trees that I couldn't move the structure at all. It was so strong. I couldn't believe how strongly it was braced. It would take real strength to brace those logs like that.
We kept on moving along the track, and a noise caught my attention. I said to my girlfriend "quiet" "still". We both stopped walking and were deadly quiet and still. We turned to where the noise was coming from. To the right of us, there was a noise that both of us had never heard before. It was like a wooden version of an iPhone camera noise, a bit like the noise of bark being ripped off a tree. It was quite loud. The noise was around 30 metres from where we were, silent and still on the track. The noise happened around 12 more times, then one of the trees was shaken quite violently and aggressively. We got the feeling that whatever it was now knew we were there and it was making its prescience known.
As it happened, a sense of fear came over me. For the first time in my life, I felt like I wasn't the top dog in the Aussie bush. I stayed still with fear. Then whatever shook the tree, moved from where it was, on the right side of the track, to the front of the trail ahead of us. It moved to that position so quickly that it freaked the both of us out. It had moved what I guess to be 50m in a few seconds, through dense foliage. It dawned on me that it was now in front of us, blocking our further approach into the forest. We both had never experienced anything cover ground like that so quickly. The other strange thing was that it's motion was silent. It make no noise that we could hear as it moved, all the more amazing given how fast it had move. Unfortunately the foliage was so dense that we couldn't make anything out. We stood there still and silent for a little while longer, deciding whether we would go a bit further down the trail or head back to the car at the picnic ground. We decided to go a bit further down the trail, but decided to turn around and go back to the car. Fear got the better of us.
On the way back, we found another structure that looked totally out of place in the bush. There is no way that the branches fell like that. Someone or something had intentionally put the branches there in that arrangement (see photo 4).
Both of us really can't explain what we had encountered that afternoon. The more we think about it, the more we think that it was a Yowie. There is nothing in the Australian bush that would shake a tree like that, or move that quickly through the bush. Also, the feeling of fear we encountered, and the structures and parts of the bush that were out of place are other things that point us in that direction. We are so intrigued that we are thinking of going back to the site to have another look. Not sure whether I can gather the courage as it was scary.