An experienced hunter, Aaron Hedges, was hunting with friends in the 'Crazy Mountains' in Montana in 2014, and get separated from the group, but was in contact with them via radio, before he went missing. Paulides also has documented cases of bow hunters' mysterious disappearances, in which they are either not found or found under very bizarre conditions. The Nevada State Journal had a headline saying "Tony walked into what has proven to be a mystery void." Paulides detailed the 1966 case of an accountant from Reno, who went hunting in McCarthy, Alaska and then was never found despite numerous air and ground searches. In one of the strangest case histories, three hunters disappeared in separate locations in far northern Michigan within seven days of each other in 1909. The largest number of disappearances of hunters have taken place in the states of Idaho, Montana, Washington, Maine, Oregon, and Colorado, he cited. There are 59 geographical clusters of missing people in North America, with the largest being in Yosemite Park, he reported. They carry weapons with them," he noted, so it's all the more startling when they vanish in inexplicable ways. They know exactly where they're going to go out and hunt, they know the terrain.the dangers. In contrast to many of the those who've gone missing in national parks such as children, and people hiking alone, deer hunters and bear hunters- "those people are attuned to being in the woods. " Missing 411- Hunters" chronicles hunters who have vanished under very unusual but extremely similar conditions from four countries. David Paulides joined George Knapp in the first three hours to discuss his new book in his blockbuster series about people that have disappeared in the national forests and elsewhere.
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