Tree the bigfoot was behind in "Brown Footage"

Lowland flood plain at expedition site

Deer limbs found along road on way to expedition

Rib cage and partial spine of a deer, head was not found

The trip I was on took place in the same park that the Brown Footage was filmed. In fact, the audio was recorded on the trail leading to the thermal film site. It was our second night in the park. The first night was relatively uneventful as it was cold and a very active (and loud) group of University Geology students were camped nearby. The Sasquatch Hunters did allow me to record some footage on one of their thermal recorders, however, the first time I have used such an expensive piece of equipment. The second night was vastly different. Still cold ( temperature dropped to about 27 degrees Fahrenheit at 2am) but much quieter, it was a beautifully windless night for recording.Our expedition group was open to the public and had attracted a decently large amount of people (though arguably a bit too large for the research area) allowing us to break into three smaller research groups. My group headed north and then east along the trail that leads into the primitive campsite where the Brown Footage was recorded a few months prior. The trail drops in elevation drastically from where we were camped and leads into some dense brush. When we were deep enough in recording devices were distributed (audio recorder, IR cam, thermal camera, parabolic microphone) and the group got settled. After listening in silence for a while we decided to try a howl. Nelson, age 13, and his father were on the expedition and in our group. Nelson had been actively interested in bigfooting for a year or so and practiced his howls frequently. As evidenced by the audio, he was quite good at it. His first howl returned the response heard in the audio clip above. I distinctly remember the silence following Nelson's howl, the long moments with everyone holding their breath, and then, unbelievably, a response. Coming from (as best I can tell) due west, it was quiet at first, but in a matter of moments there was no doubt:was howling back. Throughout the expedition our two other howlers, Matt and Stacy, had showcased their vocal cords. Their howls sounded nothing like this, and as the response drug on for an astounding eight seconds, I was pretty sure neither of them could maintain such a level of volume for so long.After the howl died down there was an audible assortment of shocked responses from the group (partially included in the audio clip). As most of us were first time bigfooters we were pretty shocked. I think half of us didn't expect to actually hear something. And I recall even Matt Roberts, an experienced bigfooter, remarking on the quality of the response. It truly was amazing. We followed with another howl from Nelson that received no response but for exciting a pack of coyotes off to the northeast. I wish I had access to that recording as the coyotes gave us a nice long response. I remember Matt Roberts mentioning perhaps hearing another call from the west as the coyote howling wound down, but it was too faint to pick up on the recorder.The rest of the night was much more uneventful and though we made several more trips around the investigation area there appeared no more activity. Another research group did report footsteps off in the brush that seemed to mimic their pace, but the proverbial "curse of bigfoot" struck (exactly when you need your equipment the most, is when it will break) and that groups' thermal camera had a fatal recording issue and was unusable.All in all, the trip was a success and one heck of a good time. I thoroughly enjoyed the professional but welcoming attitude of the Sasquatch Hunters and look forward to many more bigfooting expeditions with them. That being said, I am excited to announce I will be accompanying them once more on the Northeast Georgia expedition, May 10th-12th.Thanks for reading!- A.Z.P.S. The image below and one to the right are two of several photos I took of a deer carcass my father and I found along the road to the expedition. Based on how the limbs were removed from the body I believe coyotes had a go at it. The head of the deer was nowhere to be found.