Join Dean Harrison and Australian Yowie Research ® (est. 1997) as they pursue the truth behind one of the world’s oldest and most mysterious legends—the Yowie.
Through hundreds of gripping interviews with firsthand witnesses from all over Australia, chilling and mind-bending encounters are uncovered—stories that forever change how people view the Australian bush.
Since the arrival of the First Fleet, Aboriginal stories have told of a Hairyman roaming the wilderness—a creature with many names, known mostly today, as the Yowie.
Believed by some to be a relic hominid long thought extinct, the Yowie continues to be seen and reported daily.
Each episode delves further into the enigma. What truly exists in the depths of the bush? After exploring these accounts, you’ll never walk through the wilderness the same way again.
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/yowiehunters-witness-reports.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join Dean Harrison and Australian Yowie Research ® (est. 1997) as they pursue the truth behind one of the world’s oldest and most mysterious legends—the Yowie.
Through hundreds of gripping interviews with firsthand witnesses from all over Australia, chilling and mind-bending encounters are uncovered—stories that forever change how people view the Australian bush.
Since the arrival of the First Fleet, Aboriginal stories have told of a Hairyman roaming the wilderness—a creature with many names, known mostly today, as the Yowie.
Believed by some to be a relic hominid long thought extinct, the Yowie continues to be seen and reported daily.
Each episode delves further into the enigma. What truly exists in the depths of the bush? After exploring these accounts, you’ll never walk through the wilderness the same way again.
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/yowiehunters-witness-reports.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Danbulla State Forest forms part of the mountainous Great Dividing Range, which runs west of Cairns.
This is the same range that borders Red Hill, Cairns—the site of our last report, where a witness encountered a small Yowie with an expression shifted to anger; it clenched its fists, shouted, and charged the witness, pushing her in the back and over an embankment.
At the southern edge of Danbulla State Forest lies Lake Tinaroo, located in the Atherton Tablelands and constructed in 1953. The nearby township is home to only 300 residents—a small population on the fringe of a vast mountain range.
The physical characteristics of the Red Hill encounter closely match those of the Lake Tinaroo sighting. Both creatures were powerfully built, stood around 5 feet tall, and were seen within five years of each other. The coloration of height, colour and muscular build are very similar.
The sighting was in the same mountain range as the Red Hill incident, only five years apart.
Could this range be home to a lineage of Jingera—the small species of Yowie?
For more comprehensive information, reports and history of the Yowie, visit our Website at www.yowiehunters.com
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/yowiehunters-witness-reports.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.