The Night I Became the Prey: A Hunter’s Terrifying Survival Encounter with a Rogue Bigfoot
The wilderness of Nordegg, Alberta, is a land of jagged limestone peaks and endless stands of black spruce. It is a place where the wind doesn’t just blow; it screams. For Frank Chard and Donald Cabbie, this was their cathedral. They were seasoned hunters, men who could read the language of the forest like a familiar book. But in the late autumn of 2013, they stepped into a chapter that was never meant to be read by human eyes.

The Vanishing at the Treeline
The trip began as a standard excursion. Frank and Donald had planned to meet at a designated trailhead before dusk to set up their base camp. But as the sun dipped below the peaks and the temperature plummeted toward -20°C, Donald never appeared.
Most men would have waited until morning. But Frank was a hunter, and a hunter does not leave his partner behind in a mountain freeze. Against every instinct of self-preservation, Frank mounted his snowmobile and pushed deep into the alpine forest. The machine’s headlight cut a lonely path through the swirling snow until the engine suddenly sputtered and died—choked by the brutal cold.
Frank was now a pedestrian in a kingdom of ice. He unslung his rifle, lit his headlamp, and began to walk. He began to call out into the dark.
“Don! Don!”
The forest answered with a sound that froze the marrow in his bones. It was a bi-tonal howl—a sound that started as a low, guttural rumble and ended in a high-pitched scream that vibrated the very air. Frank, believing it was a distorted call from his lost friend, pushed further into the shadows. He didn’t realize he was being lured.
The Macabre Discoveries
As Frank ventured into a rarely traveled ravine, his headlamp caught a flash of red against the white snow. He slowed his pace. Lying in the center of the trail was a severed human head. The expression was one of absolute, crystallized terror. It was the first sign that whatever inhabited these woods did not kill for food alone; it killed for dominance.
Driven by a mix of shock and a desperate need to find Donald, Frank pressed on. He soon came across a series of “structures” that defied natural explanation. These weren’t the nests of bears or the dens of wolves. They were tightly packed wooden shelters, built with thick branches that had been snapped by immense physical strength.
Inside one of the shelters, Frank made a discovery that shattered his veteran composure. A full-grown wolf had been pinned to a branch, its front legs ripped from its torso, its chest cavity gutted with surgical brutality. Beside it hung a deer’s head, suspended upside down, its fur sparse as if it had been plucked clean by massive, leathery fingers.
The Capture and the Nest
The camera Frank carried—a tool for documenting his hunts—captured the final seconds of his freedom. A shot rang out as Frank fired at a shadow that moved too fast for the human eye to track. Then, the screen erupted into chaos. The footage shows the ground rushing by as Frank is dragged, helplessly, by a massive, hairy limb.
Frank woke hours later in the “Nest.” The air was thick with the copper scent of blood and the sweet rot of decaying flesh. He was lying on a makeshift bed of woven branches and dry leaves. The floor of the cavern was a graveyard of elk, moose, and predators, all discarded like refuse.
In the corner of the lair, a massive figure lay sleeping. It was covered in matted black fur, its chest rising and falling like a slow-moving mountain. In a moment of sheer, desperate madness—or perhaps the instinct of a hunter wanting proof—Frank drew his knife and sliced a small clump of fur from the creature’s flank.
The creature stirred. Frank didn’t wait. He bolted from the lair, plunging into the pitch-black mountain night.
The Signal in the Dark
The second video clip recovered from Frank’s gear shows his frantic descent. He is seen firing a distress flare into the sky—a lonely red spark against the infinite black of the Alberta wilderness. He moved with a blind, panicked energy, his spotlight scanning the trees as he felt the “oppressive silence” of the forest closing in around him.
He eventually found his way back to civilization, a broken man carrying a secret that the world wasn’t ready to hear.
Conclusion: The Sealed Evidence
For ten years, the story of Frank Chard and Donald Cabbie remained a whisper in the hunting community. It wasn’t until 2023 that a group of hikers discovered Donald’s remains in the same ravine—his gear scattered and his skull showing signs of the same brutal “disposal” Frank had witnessed.
The Alberta and British Columbia provinces are statistically the highest-frequency areas for these encounters. Data from wildlife authorities and independent researchers suggest a chilling pattern:
The Strength Factor: To rip the limbs off a wolf requires a force exceeding 1,500 pounds of pressure—far beyond the capabilities of a grizzly bear.
The Structural Markers: “Tightly packed nests” and “woven branch beds” are markers of primates, not the indigenous wildlife of the Canadian Rockies.
The “Nordegg Zone”: This specific region has a 40% higher rate of “unresolved” missing persons cases compared to the rest of the province.
The full footage of Frank’s night in the nest remains sealed by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), classified under an ongoing investigation into Donald Cabbie’s disappearance. The two clips that leaked to the public are only fragments of a much darker whole.
Frank Chard never hunted again. He disappeared from the public eye, leaving behind only the grainy, terrifying evidence of a night when the hunter became the trophy. The Nordegg forest remains silent, but for those who know the story, every crack of a twig is a reminder: you are never truly alone in the deep timber.