The location chosen for our Fall 2007 expedition has been a longtime hangout of mine. I started camping and hunting this location back in the summer of 1991, just after turning 23 years old. Since that time I’ve tried to find every opportunity to visit that I could. You see, I grew up in the Adirondack mountains and like my woods wild and this location certainly is that.
Expeditions
NESRA Fall 2005 Sasquatch Expedition Report - Eastern Adirondack Mountains, New York
At over 6 million acres in size (almost twice the size of the state of Connecticut), the Adirondack Mountains Forest Preserve is the largest State Park in the country and one of the largest tracts of undeveloped, wild lands in the contiguous United States. If Bigfoot is habitating the Eastern states, then the Adirondack Park would provide ample wild habitat, protected and free from the widespread encroachment of humans... Indeed, the region holds a rich history of anecdotal Sasquatch sightings, including around the area of Whitehall, NY - considered by many as an East Coast hotbed of Sasquatch activity. Those interested in reading more about Sasquatch encounters and reports in the Adirondacks, Whitehall and other upstate New York and Vermont locations, are encouraged to read Monsters of the Northwoods, by local, independent researcher and author, William Brann.
October 2005 NESRA Post-Expedition Briefing
Significant Observation Events Prepared by: Billy Willard, Josh Willard, Tim Willard and Tom Lancaster
Friday, October 14, 2005
On the afternoon of Friday October 14th, an eight-person NESRA expedition group made its way to the pre-planned base camp located north of Albany, New York. The base camp was located several miles from any human inhabitants on the western edge of a quarter-mile diameter, remote pond just west of Lake George, within the Adirondacks. The entire expedition region consisted of miles of thickly wooded mountains, hills, valleys, lakes, ponds and swamps.
NESRA
Colors![]() |
Chuck
Adinolfi and Tom Lancaster![]() |
Billy
Willard![]() |
During late afternoon and night hours of the 14th, it rained quite steadily. At approximately 7 p.m., Billy, Josh, Tim, and T, Lancaster braved the rainy weather and walked around a portion of the pond to the south edge of the pond. Within 200 feet of their destination (their chosen observation post) one thud was heard. The thud sounded like a large boulder or thick tree trunk hitting the ground in an area located approximately 100 feet to the east of their location. The thud sound was not accompanied with noises typically made by a tree trunk splitting as a tree falls and other noises associated with the breaking of tree branches as a tree hits the ground. A faint odor was observed at the time of the thump. The odor smelled like a mixture of chicken excrement and a partial decomposed dead animal. Within five minutes of the thump, three animal “whoop” sounds were heard within approximately 100 to 200 feet to the east and south of their location. This all occurred at a 20- to 50-foot wide flat pond terrace located immediately next to the pond and approximately 3 to 10 feet above the pond. Extending from the terrace is a fairly steep hill with approximately 40 to 50 feet of local relief. Within 15 minutes of this encounter, an investigation of the thump area was initiated by Tom S., Billy, Tom Lancaster, Josh and Tim. Results of this investigation did not reveal any Bigfoot trace evidence or the cause of the thump.
Tom S.![]() |
Tim
& Josh![]() |
From approximately 8 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., Billy and Tom Lancaster sat
in chairs on top of the hill located next to the pond and within 100
feet of the thumping encounter (this observation post initially
included Tim and Josh). They endured the harsh rainy weather with wet
weather gear and umbrellas. Billy and Tom Lancaster faced in opposite
directions from one another. [They had night vision equipment that was
inoperable due to the fogging of the lenses.] During their
approximately two-hour observation period, Billy and Tom Lancaster
heard
occasional rustling in the underbrush within 20 to 50 feet of their
location. These rustling noises and limb breaks were distinctly heard
amongst the noise of the raindrops hitting their umbrellas.
Additionally, Billy observed eye shine of two eyes close to the ground
within 30 feet of himself as well as eye shine higher off the ground
(approx 5-6 feet) within 50-60 feet.
Rock
Climbing![]() |
Michael
Killen![]() |
Puddle
Jumping![]() |
Saturday, October 15, 2005
During the evening hours of this day, A NESRA team strategy was enacted, which included the implementation of call blasting and tree knocks at set times by Tom S. from the south side of the pond. A full moon was present and the sky was relative clear with a few fast moving clouds. As a part of a team effort by NESRA, Billy and Tom Lancaster set up an observation post at approximately 8 p.m. on the east edge of the pond (on the opposite side of the pond from the base camp). Billy and T Lancaster faced in different directions away from the pond (i.e., Billy faced northeast and Tom Lancaster faced southeast). Their observation area was a relatively flat area with some ground surface undulations (5 to 10 feet of relief). At approximately 8 p.m., Billy heard two animal grunt sounds approximately 30 to 50 feet to the northeast of his location. Within the next hour, movement (rustling of underbrush and limb breaks) was heard several times at approximately 30 to 70 feet from Billy and Tom Lancaster’s location.
| Fording the Stream and Onward En Route to Basecamp | ||
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A Shadowy Figure Spotted
At approximately 9 p.m., a man-like figure was sighted by Tom Lancaster approximately 70 to 100 feet southeast of his location. This sighting was observed during a moment when the moon was shining on the forest without the obstruction of clouds. The moon was located in the east sky and thus, lit up the forest such that tree trunks were dark against the moon-brightened forest background. The man-like figure was observed moving through a fifty-foot stretch of forest from the north to south within one to two seconds (away from the location where Billy heard the two grunts). Due to the man-like figure’s fast movement through the forest and the limited light (i.e., relative to daylight), Tom Lancaster could only see the figure’s man-like head and body as it passed through the trees and some underbrush. The figure was observed to be potentially taller and wider than an average human (approximately seven to eight feet tall when compared to nearby tree limbs). Surprisingly, no sounds were heard as the figure moved through the forest (e.g., footsteps, rustling and braking of tree limbs).
| The
Final Stretch and Arriving At Base Camp |
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![]() the Proper 'Line' for Approach over Rocks |
![]() Setting Up Basecamp |
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More Wood-Knocking Heard
Between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m., two wood knocking events were heard
approximately a quarter- to a half-mile away from the location of Billy
and Tom Lancaster (immediately confirmed not to be created by other
NESRA team members via radio communication). These wood knock events
were each composed of two knocks in a five to 10 second period. The
knocks sounded as if a huge tree truck or boulder was struck against a
tree. No other significant observations were made before leaving the
observation post at approximately 12 mid-night.
| Pond and Skyline At Basecamp | ||
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Moon on the Rise |
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Post Expedition Briefing Report
Report Submitted By: Michael Killen
Friday, October 14, 2005
7:00pm – NESRA members Tom Lancaster, Billy Willard, Josh Willard and Tim Willard left base camp and moved to their listening post on the south side of the pond. Shortly after this first group left camp, Tom S. also left camp headed for their initial listening post location at the south east end of the pond.
7:46pm – Tom Lancaster heard a loud single heavy thud.
Immediately after the thud, a foul odor was detected at his
location and three loud “whoops” were heard.
| Area Views Nearby Basecamp | ||
![]() Vibrant Colors of an Adirondack Fall |
![]() Gnarly Stand of White Pine & Blue Spruce |
![]() Muddy Root Cluster of a Downed Pine |
7:58pm – Tom S. moved to a new location at the water’s edge at the south east end of the pond. A strong smelling foul odor was immediately reported. Tom S. made three wood knocks at this time in an attempt to evoke some type of response. Seconds after the wood knocking, Chuck Adinolfi was radioed and asked if he had heard the wood knocks back at base camp on the west side of the pond.
8:01pm – As Chuck Adinolfi reached for his radio to answer, he heard a high pitched “howl” which came from the east side of the pond and only lasted for approximately 2 ½ seconds. This was a single “howl” and the sound was not repeated.
8:06pm – Tom S. left his listening post on the south east edge of the pond and headed back to base camp.
9:04pm – Billy Willard saw eye shine approximately 5 feet above the ground up on a ridge line approximately 60 feet above his location on the south side of the pond. The eye shine appeared to be yellow/green in color.
9:36pm – Billy Willard again saw the same yellow/green eye shine
further south down the same ridge line above him. This time the eye
shine only appeared to be approximately 2-3 feet above the ground. In
each instance, the eye shine lasted approximately 2-3 seconds.
| Pond
& Nearby Swamp |
||
![]() Pond at Dusk |
![]() Pond on a Misty Morning |
![]() Nearby Swamp |
10:07pm – Billy Willard and Tom Lancaster left their listening posts and headed back to base camp. Billy Willard, Tom Lancaster, Josh Willard and Tim Willard went to sleep for the night at approximately 10:30pm.
10:52pm – While tending the fire Michael Killen and Tom S. heard two “hoots” which came from the swamp at the north end of the pond. The “hoots” were of a moderate volume. They weren’t overly loud and each “hoot” was approximately 3 seconds in duration. The “hoots” sounded fairly close to the base camp and didn’t seem to be a distant vocalization.
10:53pm – Michael Killen and Tom S. investigated the area where the sound originated from but could not find the source of the “hoots”. Nothing was found and no other noises were heard from this location again. Michael Killen and Chuck Adinolfi decided to stay awake and remain alert to listen for any other sounds which might be heard during the night. Nothing unusual was heard for the rest of the night.
| NESRA
Fall 2005 Investigative Team |
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![]() Left to Right (Back): Chuck Adinolfi, Tom Lancaster, Tom S., Billy Willard (Front) Tim Willard, Josh Willard, Mike Killen |
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NESRA Fall 2005 Sasquatch Expedition Report - Eastern Adirondack Mountains, New York
At over 6 million acres in size (almost twice the size of the state of Connecticut), the Adirondack Mountains Forest Preserve is the largest State Park in the country and one of the largest tracts of undeveloped, wild lands in the contiguous United States. If Bigfoot is habitating the Eastern states, then the Adirondack Park would provide ample wild habitat, protected and free from the widespread encroachment of humans... Indeed, the region holds a rich history of anecdotal Sasquatch sightings, including around the area of Whitehall, NY - considered by many as an East Coast hotbed of Sasquatch activity. Those interested in reading more about Sasquatch encounters and reports in the Adirondacks, Whitehall and other upstate New York and Vermont locations, are encouraged to read Monsters of the Northwoods, by local, independent researcher and author, William Brann.
October 2005 NESRA Post-Expedition Briefing
Significant Observation Events Prepared by: Billy Willard, Josh Willard, Tim Willard and Tom Lancaster
Friday, October 14, 2005
On the afternoon of Friday October 14th, an eight-person NESRA expedition group made its way to the pre-planned base camp located north of Albany, New York. The base camp was located several miles from any human inhabitants on the western edge of a quarter-mile diameter, remote pond just west of Lake George, within the Adirondacks. The entire expedition region consisted of miles of thickly wooded mountains, hills, valleys, lakes, ponds and swamps.
NESRA
Colors![]() |
Chuck
Adinolfi and Tom Lancaster![]() |
Billy
Willard![]() |
NESRA Fall 2006 Bigfoot Expedition Report - New Jersey Pine Barrens

NESRA
Fall 2006 Expedition - Wharton State Forest
Southern New Jersey Pine Barrens
October 13 - 15, 2006
Report By:
Tom Lancaster, Chris Bartow and Michael Killen
NESRA
Field Researchers descended on the Jersey Pine Barrens for a weekend investigation
in search of the Eastern Bigfoot / Sasquatch. Given the population density
within the state of New Jersey (# 1 in the nation with an average of 1,134
people per square mile), it's no wonder that some balk at the idea that
a creature such as Bigfoot / Sasquatch could exist in such a dense state
of people, highways and factories. Certainly, northern Jersey and its massive
backyard communities to New York City account for a lot of the human density.
However, looking closer at the state and the lay of the land, it becomes
evident that New Jersey does hold some rather large tracts of wild lands.
The Jersey Pine Barrens - The Area &
Its Ecology
The central and south Jersey Pine Barrens are a unique area that covers approximately 1.1 million acres, which is nearly one quarter of the state’s total land mass. The area is part of the Atlantic Coastal Pine Barrens, which cover the coastal plain of New Jersey, much of the southern half of Long Island and Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Like all Pine Barrens, the land is underlain by sandy, nutrient-poor, acidic soils that support a stunted forest comprised primarily of pitch pine (Pinus rigida) and blackjack oak (Quercus marilandica) as well as intermittent, swampy stands of Atlantic White Cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides.) Underlying much of these pinelands is the Cohansey Aquifer. This formation of unconsolidated sand and gravel functions as a vast reservoir estimated to contain over 17 trillion gallons of some of the purest water in the country. The water in this shallow aquifer lies at or near the surface, producing bogs, marshes, and swamps. The streams of the pinelands are fed by this aquifer, including the Wading River, the primary waterway traversing the area of our expedition. Natural organic contents leaching out of the soils (tannin from decaying pine needles, for instance) are responsible for the dark tea color of the region's streams, including that of the Wading River. The area holds ample amounts of native wild blueberry, cranberry and raspberry throughout the region. Early settlers from the 1600's pegged the term 'barrens' as they had little luck utilizing the land for traditional cultivation, primarily due to its sandy, acidic, nutrient poor soil. Farming does take place by growing native plants such as blueberries and cranberries. Other limited commercial crops are grown by adding soil nutrients and raising the PH of the soil. Today, the Pine Barrens hold a strong and diverse mix of flora and fauna - home to an estimated eight-hundred and fifty species of plants and three hundred and fifty species of birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians. There is also a rich history of anecdotal Bigfoot / Sasquatch sightings within the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Could Sasquatch be one of its resident species? We aimed to find out.
NESRA Spring 2005 Saquatch Field Report - Adirondacks - Whitehall Area - New York
(Unexplained Wood Knocking and Thumping Heard)
The Following Report Was Submitted By: Chuck Adinolfi
Hi Folks, this is just an excerpt of my report to NESRA of our April, 15-17, 05, Whitehall, NY, expedition.
It's unfortunate that the exact location needs to be kept secret but it is likely that we will be active in this area again in the near future.
My quick disclaimer: I am not suggesting that any activity I describe here is related to Sasquatch activity, though the area is well known for such and I have spoken with eye witnesses who claim to have seen BFs within a mile of this very spot. All I am saying is that there was a quite unusual event and it bares further investigation.
What happened and what was observed:
In the mountains West of Whitehall, NY, on Friday, 4-15-05 I and a fellow NESRA researcher were at our base camp. The conditions at camp were as follows; 10:30pm, wind out of the East at about 7mph, 37F, humidity 34%, sky clear, moon waxing 40% illumination about 20 degrees past zenith.
I had recently finished grilling boneless pork chops on our campfire using McCormick brand Montreal Steak Seasoning (because I like the stuff, YUMMY). Just after adjusting the grill so the chops wouldn't dry out, I found myself on the South side of the fire with David to the East. While making sure everything was going well with the fire and chops, I heard a single wood-knock (I have heard wood-knocking before) from the West, it seemed to be at quite a distance, (I don't dare take a guess how far). At which point, I said "I just heard a knock from the West." My counterpart looked at me with a bit of surprise and bewilderment as to what to do next. I told him it was from quite a ways off. In a matter of what might have been about 10 seconds, there were 2 knocks, considerably closer to camp (also from the West). My counterpart grabbed a board (earlier in the day, we had determined what sounded right by trying a few combinations for knocking) to answer the knocks we had just heard (we had not done any wood-knocking of our own). As he raised the board to try a whack, we were stopped in our tracks by what we heard. A thumping noise approaching camp from the West (over the hill and out of our sight), the exact direction our smoke was heading (approached from down wind). We both pointed to where we heard this thumping (too stunned to speak) as the noise approached the camp to within about 40 yards (we were pointing in the exact same direction). As the first few thumps sounded, a Bared Owl began hooting (as if it had been startled) from what seemed to be 10 yards directly South of the origin of the thumping. The thumping stopped for a few seconds, just long enough for both of us to look at each other as if to say, "what the heck was that?" Then the thumping began again, headed to the North this time as if it were trying to get away from our camp, and it thumped off into the distance. The entire observation, from the first Knock to the last thump lasted about 40 seconds, neither of us smelled anything out of the ordinary or heard anything unusual aside from the knocks and thumps. The thumps were quite loud and shook the ground (not like an earthquake but it could be felt through our boots), as if they were made by something hitting the ground with a section of a telephone pole. The timing between thumps seemed like if it were an animal walking, that it would be an unnatural gate, as if something with long legs had one lead foot. Hours of speculation lead to no conclusions and an investigation of the area that the thumping noises came from gave no clues as to what may have made the noises. We were not able to duplicate the intensity of the thumping. The nearest trail in the direction of the thumping is over a half mile away.
I don't know how to list this encounter as anything but unexplained. If anyone reading this has any plausible explanations as to what we heard, I would love to hear them. Also, If anyone has information that would link this to Sasquatch activity, it would help my research.
I'll check in to answer any questions, as your questions and my answers might help us all better understand what was observed.
Thanks,
Chuck

The Following Report Was Submitted By Chuck's Research Counterpart
Here's my account of our 2005 NESRA Whitehall (Spring) expedition...
There was a definite unexplainable encounter that occurred on Friday night. I also heard one distant vocalization on Saturday night that sounded exactly like one I heard on a Bigfoot site somewhere. (I'll have to find it again to make proper reference.) I got my car stuck in the mud at the base of <location withheld> and walked 2.7 miles up an extremely steep ravine to our camp site. I was about a half a mile from my destination when I heard a clear vocalization in the distance behind me, coming from the <location withheld> direction (Where I had left my car in the mud).
Friday night's encounter "took the cake" however. At approximately 0:30PM, Chuck heard a distant tree knock, he believes came from across <location withheld>. It was immediately followed by two more wood knocks which sounded like they were made about a quarter mile from us. It was at that point that a barred owl started hooting and both Chuck and I began to hear what sounded like bipedal footsteps approaching our campsite from the West. I was leaning on a horse hitch and Chuck was tending the pork chops on the fire. The noises could be likened to a very large boulder being dropped on the ground repeatedly. They got louder as they approached and literally shook the ground so that both Chuck and I could not only hear the "thumps" but also feel them. The horse hitch I was leaning on shook as well as the ground underneath our feet. The sounds and ground reverberations were unexplainable and could not be attributed to any known phenomenon of nature. Chuck and I discussed possibility after possibility and nothing we came up with could fit the scenario. The thumps changed direction just over a small hill at our campsite and moved North, away from us, growing less intense as they moved off into the distance, eventually disappearing.
The gait of the thumps was not only inhuman but also seemed out of the range of even possible Sasquatch movement. When I searched the hill for impressions, there were many indentations but nothing that could definitively be classified as a footprint due to the extensive leave cover. I did find grouse feathers however and it occurred to me that if it was a Sasquatch that made those ground-shaking thumps, it could have been taking a few steps and then stomping on the ground with all its might to stir up the many grouse that were "holed" up in our area. We had been hearing grouse thumping their wings on logs since Thursday. They sounded like mini helicopters or like someone trying to start a lawn mower. The place was loaded with them. This "stomping for grouse" theory could easily account for the extremely long gait as well as for the ground shaking that occurred in tandem with each consecutive thump. The thumps were consistent and moved along at a quick pace. All-in-all, I'd say it was a 30 to 40 second encounter that involved well over 25 thumps.
As for known animals large enough to possibly account for the thumps we heard and felt, the chances are extremely low that a known animal such as a deer, moose or bear hopping through the forest that evening are the source of these very intense stomps. These animals are quadrupeds and the sounds we heard were not quadrupedal in nature. (There was no flam or gallop in these noises at all.) What we heard were single successive thumps, consistent with a bipedal stride or intentional stomps. In addition, I doubt any of these quadrupedal animals could shake the ground from that distance, save maybe a large bear jumping up and down with all its might. But even this could not account for the crescendo and decrescendo of the approaching and departing thumps and vibrations.
That's a brief explanation of what occurred. It's definitely an area worthy of some repeated NESRA expeditions this Spring, Summer and Fall.




















