Conversations With Sasquatch, The Encounter

Book 1 In the Conversations With Sasquatch Book Series

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Conversations With Sasquatch, The Encounter

Excerpt 1

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     I have had to readjust my beliefs and rethink many an opinion since I met a Sasquatch while out hunting for morel mushrooms in Lewiston, Michigan. I had no idea that these mushrooms were high on their list of dietary delicacies.  They prize and love them.

     I would have been afraid and crapped my pants if it hadn’t been for the long outstretched arm that offered me a half eaten morel.  There was nothing aggressive or hostile in this gesture.  He effused a welcoming aura of curious friendliness.

     I took the half-eaten morel and popped it into my mouth.  As I shook my head affirmatively, I offered him my paper sack that contained about twenty morels and two or three beefsteaks I had gathered along a cedar ridge beside Big Creek.

     It was then that I noticed the pure silence that had fallen over the forest.  The crows look-out caws had vanished, the squirrels had shushed their chatter and rattle in the trees.  Not even a bluejay or a mosquito was daring a peep.

     I struggled to swallow the copper taste that had encroached to dry my mouth.

     Sasquatch smiled.  He had jaws filled with yellow teeth and eyes that twinkled with delight.

     “Thank you,” he said, and jiggled his lips like a horse as it eats a sugar cube off your hand.

     “You’re welcome,” I replied with another swallow.

     “There’s a storm in the air,” Sasquatch offered with a gesture towards the sky, “the ozone is lifting my hairs.”  He proceeded to run his hand a few inches above his upper chest where I could see the hairs stand up as if a magnet were being run over a cache of metal shavings.  He abruptly slapped his chest and laughed.  It sounded eerily like the shriek of an eagle guarding its kill.

     The sky was clear, but I thought I could hear a distant rumble of thunder to the west.  I couldn’t remember any rain being in the forecast.  I had come dressed only in jeans, a polo shirt and sneakers.

     “You humans are such frail creatures,” he said.  “I remember when you were more like us, hunters and gatherers of the health and fruits of The Creator.”

     I really couldn’t tell if he was speaking to me verbally or telepathically.  There was such a sense of otherworldliness. I had a hard time getting a grip on my racing thoughts and emotions.  In the absence of abject fear, I felt a combination of elation and serenity.  I guess it was what you’d call dumbstruck.

     “Not much of a talker, are you?” he asked and popped a fresh mushroom into his mouth.

     “I have never met a Sasquatch before,” I managed.

     “Not many a human has,” he whispered conspiratorially.  “You are the first in many thousands of years I have spoken to.  You are the chosen one.”

     “I am honored,” I humbly croaked.

     “I am not so sure you should be.  You humans are blowing it.  You are blind to the world of the Sasquatch.  You have lost the memory and instinct of your body’s genes and the very essence of your immortal soul.”

     A darkness crept stealthily over the ridge. Lightning flashed and a huge clap of thunder reverberated off and rattled my teeth.  I began to shiver uncontrollably as Sasquatch melted into the rain with a welcoming gesture meant for me to follow him there to wherever there was going to be.

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The Encounter is Book 1 in the Conversations With Sasquatch Series of books is also available on Amazon if you are so inclined.  https://www.amazon.com/dp/1940736684

The Awakening

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Conversations With Sasquatch,

“The Awakening” book 3 in the Conversations With Sasquatch series.

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Excerpt from The Awakening:

With my body cooled down, I pick up the 30-30 and move once again toward the destination of our previous meeting site. I am all too aware that I am the only moving presence in the area, the silence is total. This has been the case so many times previously, that I am not surprised when the hairs on my arms and back begin to prickle. A chill raises a rash of gooseflesh on my back and chest. I notice I have stopped breathing, straining to hear something in the eerie and profound silence.

Without any preamble or warning, I find myself face to face with Demarcus.

I reactively flick the safety off on the 30-30, but standing dwarfed in the Bigfoot’s presence, it suddenly feels like a wimpy pea shooter instead of a weapon.

I do not believe I would ever shoot anyway, unless I absolutely have to. I’ve had a longstanding promise that I would only do so in self-defense.

Demarcus is motionless, standing about ten yards away.

His size alone is impressive enough to instill terror, but I hold my ground and meet his stare. Any aggressive move toward me and I am prepared to let the bullets fly. I am very conscious that I would have only fractions of a second to land a fatal shot before his big strides would overtake me.

“Demarcus,” I offer. “I have no idea why you were exiled here to our world, but I have no fight with you.”

Demarcus slowly swivels his head and looks about.

PURCHASE YOUR COPY HERE: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1940736749

Conversations With Sasquatch, The Encounter

Excerpt from book 1 of the Conversations With Sasquatch,  series The Encounter.  

5

     On my return to Big Creek, I am aware of some recent activity by other humans.  It is not only the physical signs, like the matted down grass and discarded cigarette butts, but also the remnants of their auras.  People leave in their wake good or bad vibrations that can hang around and be felt from here to eternity unless cleansed from the emotionally disturbed space.  What I am feeling at the moment is not good, and it isn’t long before I find a half dozen empty beer cans and several Twinkie wrappers scattered about.  

     I have never known beer and Twinkies to mix well with the forest.  I am hoping it is just a sign of some rebellious teenagers getting away from the claustrophobic demands of their parents, and what I am seeing is discarded pieces of their rebellion and carelessness that have been shed like the skin of a snake.  

     My hopes get permanently dashed when I find more cigarette butts and a game camera locked in place to a small sapling of birch.  There is a generous pile of untouched corn a few yards away from the lens that snaps my picture.  I stick out my tongue and give it the finger. 

     Tecumseh would throw a fit if he saw this disrespectful approach to the fine art of hunting.  I can literally hear one of his angry rants echoing through the forest as I decide what to do.

     “They leave their ugly scent behind like mangy dogs that seem to have a purpose to piss on everything,” Tecumseh rails.   “They are thankless of all but their own gratification.  I weep when I think about how the ancestors of such vile men invaded our tee-pees with their spirits of evil.   I pray our eternal wills continue to be reborn without such an abominable weakness for whiskey.”

     I look around and heft a broken hardwood bow about the size and shape of a baseball bat.   I contemplate and weigh it for my purpose.  Knowing I have been captured on the camera, I have decided prudence would be my best course of action.  

     I wind up and take a healthy cut and catch the camera square in the face.  It explodes into different pieces and is not easy to gather back together, but I find the photo chip and slip it into my pocket.  The rest of the camera pieces and every other sign of human presence, I put in my gathering bag.  All that is left is the cable and lock still wrapped around the birch.  I apologize in the name of Tecumseh and cut the cable free.  

     I then backtrack and gather the beer cans and Twinkie wrappers, finger-rake the grasses back to standing the best I can, and collect all the cigarette butts.  I am happily gratified to feel the forest rejoice.  

     With the area cleansed of trash and bad vibrations, I am able to return to contemplating my original purpose.  I had been looking forward to another philosophical melding with my Bigfoot friend, Loquius.

     I have been pondering, that if the Sasquatch are immortal beings that have roamed this planet since the beginning of time, then they have survived the endless disasters of climate change, including ice ages, volcanos, earthquakes, drought, famine, asteroids, and even pandemics.   

     Man is relatively new to the game, and what is most important in this age of narcissism, are the symbiotic relationships that have and can be further developed between man and nature; each one can enhance the other when common sense and basic ethics are applied to such things as forestry, farming, housing, and industry.  Even cities can be redesigned with regenerative energy and agriculture in mind.  Man is basically good and will strive for the greatest good for all concerned when he realizes that one lifetime is but a growing and cleansing journey for his immortal soul.  To survive, you have to learn that you do not shit in the bed to which you must return.  

     I hope to garner much more insight into what answers Sasquatch might have to help the human race as it seemingly hurtles unawares towards oblivion.  

     As I trek, I am elated to have removed the footprints of the litterbugs and their bad vibes.  The forest has returned to its harmonious songs within itself.  I hear the distant drumming of a partridge, the chatter of squirrels, and the peeping of some snipes at the edge of a meadow filled with dancing grasses.  A porcupine scuttles over a log, parks it itself in a defensive posture and raises its quills as I pass nearby.  

     The walk to meet Sasquatch is over two miles of ever changing terrain.  The forest is rife with organic smells and subtle changes of temperature.  I have come to recognize many sun dappled openings verdant with ferns as well as groves of various trees.   I am traversing the edge of the hardwoods that are easier to navigate than the thick cedars, tag alders and small pines that thrive next to the creek.  

     It is on the ridge where the hardwoods turn to cedars that Sasquatch appears.  I am immediately struck by the aggressiveness portrayed in his muscular stance.  There is nothing soft or serene in his posture towards me.  My first instinct is to cut and run, but I will myself to keep my poise and hold my ground.

     He vocalizes an unearthly bugle of screeching sounds that all but rattle my bones.  Instantly, there is movement to his right and another Sasquatch appears at his side.

Available on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/dp/1940736684

Conversations With Sasquatch, The Encounter

This is Book 1 in the Conversations With Sasquatch Series.

The Encounter takes us on a mind-altering passage into and out of the realm of Cross Over, a parallel Earth Universe created and populated by Earth’s Forest People, the Sasquatch. This unusual journey opens with the author hunting for the prized morel mushrooms atop a ridge overlooking Big Creek near the small town of Lewiston, Michigan.

Sasquatch Cat

 

Our Sasquatch cat is named Sol.  The Forest People rescued him from near death after his woodland caretaker passed away of old age.  Sol was taken in by the Big Creek Sasquatch and nursed back to life from a state of severe loneliness and starvation.

     Some gifts are more precious than others, and Sol came to us as a gift of pure sunshine.  We thank the Sasquatch and all the good forces that brought him into our circle.  He is fearless, gentle and loving, a guardian spirit of perseverance and courage.  If a cat can be certain of himself, Sol is just that.  Nothing rattles him, not even the vacuum cleaner.

     His one peculiar quirk is his friendship with mice.  You would think that after living in the woods and nearly starving, he’d be a ravenous mouse carnivore, but he’s not.  He does enjoy catching and toying with them and is quite skillful in that regard.  The problem being, is that he then brings them into the house and lets them go.  I have tried to explain to him that we do not condone mice taking up residence in the house, would he please keep his little friends outside, but he just smiles, blinks his eyes, and brings them inside anyway.  

Richard Rensberry, Bigfoot Book Series author   1/24/22

https://www.conversationswithsasquatch.com

CONVERSATIONS WITH SASQUATCH, THE AWAKENING, Episode 11

I find it very doubtful that Tecumseh would engage in a conversation with someone the likes of Mr. Smith, but just in case Mr. Smith decides to start playing rough, I am dropping by to warn Tecumseh that the weasel has been nosing around in our business.  

“Ah, Mr. Smith,” Tecumseh snorts.  “The man with a stone heart and a snake’s tongue.  Yes, we have had the pleasure to meet.”  

“So I have been informed,” I say.  “What did the snake have to hiss about me and my dealings with the Bigfoot?”

“He asked me about you.  Nothing was said about a Bigfoot.”

“I see.  And what, may I ask, did he want to know about me?’

(continued at: https://www.conversationswithsasquatch.com/sasquatch-novel-the-awakening.html )

The Gift

….          

            The Gift

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A stone shaped like a heart

was left on my doorstep.

It came in the night

without fanfare or noise.

It came as a gift

on little feet, by way of the forest

and a child named Pureesis.  A princess

of a smitten Sasquatch.

….

         Richard Rensberry 10/12/20

         Author of Conversations With Sasquatch, The Encounter

https://amzn.to/3f2shST

….

Pureesis-  daughter of Sasquatch lovers Loquius and Loquiili 

smitten-  love struck 

….

Sasquatch Poetry Page:

https://www.conversationswithsasquatch.com/sasquatch-poems.html