I'm often alone at very high altitudes, especially forests, because I live in a country in the alps. I carry a ranged weapon and a knife on me at all times when I'm up there, so I usually never have a reason to leave in a hurry. However, there was one time I picked my rucksack and left the area instantly. No, it wasn't an unfamiliar sound or the growling of thunder of a roar of a large animal, the feeling of movement nearby or the wind howling, none of that. It was that the birds stopped chirping, the rustling in the underbrush stopped, the critters all around scurried off. It's not the noise or its origin that's dangerous, it's whatever carries silence in its arrival.
@@watermelonkittens7553 it means absolutely nothing, i'm just picking on you for no reason other than it's the internet and people are making jokes all the time.
The most scary part of wendigos is that they could also imitate human dialogue (even people you know, family, friends, etc.) according to Native American mythical sources
The funny thing is- I went hunting with my dad this one time and we heard that, and my dad said it was probably an elk or something… but we don’t have elk here 👀
Funny how I came across this today when yesterday my dad was trying to explain that to some city folk that if a hillbilly has told you not to go over there and also refuses to go there, you should absolutely not go there.
For Hazbin Hotel Viewers, Alastor is based on the Wendigo since he's part deer and is a cannibal but something I noticed is that in this audio it sounds like Screeching combined with Radio Static and a hint of Sirens. Which checks out with Alastor since he kills people making them scream (or screech) and causes danger to people hence the siren like a police siren, and radio static because he's the Radio Demon.
Funny thing is, true Wendigo lore never portrayed em as deer. They are originally described as tall, thin pale humanoid figures that sometimes grow in proportion to their last meal. They have a heart of ice, and in some legends, can be up to 10 or 15 feet tall. The Wendigo sometimes is the physical embodiment of hunger, cold and selfishness of those who dare to eat their fellow men during the harsh winter.
The howl made me shrug and feel like there is something closing in on me. For real its unreal, if I would hear that in real life I'd probably kms instantly.
Well if you still hear sounds 1: if you have a BROTHER its him playing 2: if you dont have a BROTHER but a SISTER its her 3: if you dont have a SIBLING its one of you PARENTS 4: if you PARENTS aren't Home, you better run to the basement, lock it and go to a Table, hide under it
We all know the wendigo is a very egotistical creature im sure it was allured by the thought of striking fear into man on a greater scale You can even hear it trying to exaggerate it's distortion to an unreasonable degree.
After initial observation, i have concluded that, in some rare circumstances, i might confuse a wendigo screaming with that of a BO1/2 early-round-starting zombie.
I've worked at a ranger tower for a month now, seen one of these things, it sounded similar to this, but one hell of a lot scarier, and tried to shake the tower I was in, wouldn't go away for two weeks.
That's when you barricade the window and door of your bedroom, get under the bed(putting covers all around so it doesn't spot you) , and pray to God it can't smell you, and you can't hear it, because if you've heard it, it sure as hell heard you
Imagine listening to this while camping to freak out your friends like "shit, that's actually quite scary" then going to turn it off and realising you didn't hit play
As a Hunter, the scariest sound isn’t one you know well, it’s a sound you’ve never heard before. Why? Because that means something you’ve never seen before is out there with you, and god forbid that it finds you.