Texas Dogman
What if it's True Podcast
Cameron Buckner
4.8 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 16 October 2025
⏱️ 22 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
After 25 years in Alaska, where the narrator immersed himself in the rugged wilderness—from the Arctic Pipeline to the Aleutian Islands and gold mines—developing a passion for cryptids, they spent over five years earning the trust of tribal elders. These elders shared ancient encounter stories, histories of elusive creatures, and even passed down a Woolly Rhinoceros tooth from a hunt in the late 1600s or early 1700s. Alaska's extremes brought thrilling wildlife sightings, like cooperative black bears raiding dumps and moose wandering urban streets, evoking Jack London adventures. Seeking warmer climes, the narrator relocated to a lush, open suburb in East Texas—137°F milder than Alaska's winters—only to discover cryptids thriving amid the greenery and barking dogs that suddenly fall silent at night. One afternoon, after a doctor's visit in a one-story office complex, their service Jack Russell Terrier grew agitated, pulling on the leash before freezing and trembling violently. As the narrator knelt to comfort the shaking dog, an unnatural silence descended—like a shadow blocking sound—accompanied by a foul, inexplicable odor. Remaining still, they waited it out until birds and frogs resumed chirping, and the presence lifted. In the soft mud nearby, a massive footprint appeared: longer and wider than the narrator's size 13 shoe (which barely dented the earth), ending in three deep claw marks from a heavy, narrow foot. Photos sent to Alaskan hunter friends yielded no identification. Locals whisper of similar run-ins with 10- to 12-foot-tall beasts, dubbing this a "Dogman." The narrator teases more harrowing tales for the brave-hearted. A devoted fan of the channel, they praise the host's non-judgmental, enthusiastic narration of such bewildering experiences, plus the joyful glimpses of farm life—chickens, dogs, roosters, and drone views—that brighten their housebound days due to disability. Grateful to have survived, they urge vigilance: always stay alert to live and share your stories.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Okay, here's a bigfoot story that I thought was interesting. |
| 0:13.0 | I grew up just outside of Davenport, Iowa in the 1960s and 70s. |
| 0:18.6 | We grew up around cornfields as well as apple, pear, and cherry orchards. |
| 0:24.0 | My first encounter was around at the age of seven. I would wake up and hear sounds that were |
| 0:30.2 | really strange, even for the countryside. And we had a German shepherd who stayed outside and |
| 0:36.2 | would usually not make noise at night unless there was something moving around. |
| 0:41.1 | But one night it was barking his head off. |
| 0:44.2 | I decided to get out of bed to see what was causing him to make so much noise. |
| 0:49.6 | I had walked to our back door when I suddenly stopped in the living room. |
| 0:56.3 | There was a hairy face in the window watching me. Unfortunately, it wasn't the only time I saw it. It happened several times in my youth. |
| 1:05.4 | As I got a bit older, some of the other girls and I would walk up to the cornfield just before dark. We were |
| 1:13.0 | rather daring as young girls playing at night. On one of our walks, we started to hear something |
| 1:19.5 | growling. We knew it wasn't a dog because the farmer lived quite a ways from the field. There |
| 1:26.1 | weren't many boys who lived by us, so we didn't think it was one of them either. |
| 1:30.7 | And when we reached the streetlight at the opening of the cornfield, we saw something moving, |
| 1:36.4 | and then suddenly we heard a loud rib-shaking growl, and we took off running. |
| 1:42.7 | We all went home, and we never said anything to anyone about what had happened. |
| 1:48.2 | The last time I had heard or seen anything was just before I became a teenager. |
| 1:54.2 | I would see a face in the window every now and then, and it would be smiling at me. |
| 1:59.9 | Now that I think back on what happened, I'm beginning to believe that the one in the window |
| 2:04.8 | was possibly what we heard in the cornfield, because around that time I was being bullied. |
| 2:11.3 | Perhaps the face in the window had followed us to the cornfield to give the other girls a scare. |
... |
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