The idea for Bigfoot Juice came to Webb when Corey — who is a member of a local Bigfoot research team — complained about smelling the same as her because they both used Happy Body Care’s sole bug spray.

“He decided he didn’t want to smell like me anymore or whatever when he went into the woods on his searches, and that he wanted a little more of a manly smelling bug spray,” she said.

The couple started discussing what ingredients would go into such a bug spray, and naturally, the subject of Bigfoot came up.

“We started talking about if Bigfoot was going to be attracted to the new bug spray,” Webb recalled, “and if so, what would he be attracted to?”

In the end — though Webb wouldn’t divulge any of the ingredients — she settled on a mixture of musky essential oils, with a very faint scent. Her theory is that it will attract any nearby Sasquatch because it’ll “be interested in seeing what the scent is coming from, because it’s not exactly a woodsy, outdoors smell, but it’s not so overpowering that they’d be like, ‘Oh, that’s a human. I’ll go around them.’ ”

At $7, the spray is a steal, whether you buy it for its novelty aspect or because you really are trying to find Bigfoot. Like with every other Happy Body Care product, the special formula is concocted at the Webb’s kitchen table, usually at night after the kids go to bed.

“Right now, everything is made by us at home. We put the labels on the bottles, we do everything.”

Eventually, she hopes to open a Happy Body Care shop in Marion, where Bigfoot fans are common and alternative, green businesses are scarce. A lot of the locals, she said, are conservative and “old-school” and could benefit from a reality check.

“I got the shit scared out of me when I realized just how bad some stuff is,” Webb said. She thinks it’s important that others come to similar realizations and understand that living a cleaner, more natural life “doesn’t mean you have to stop shaving your armpits and grow dreadlocks.”

Having a brick-and-mortar store in North Carolina would also be a smart idea because the state has some of the highest numbers of Sasquatch sightings in the country. “There’s a ton of them here,” Webb said, although she herself has yet to see one. In fact, she’s not 100-percent convinced that Bigfoot even exists. But she isn’t totally closed-off to the idea either.

“My husband is much more of a believer than I,” she said. “I’m on the fence about it. I don’t want to say that he doesn’t exist because I’ve never seen him, but then again, I’ve never seen Mount Everest and I heard that exists.”