A woman in Ohio thinks she has audio proof that Bigfoot is back in the wilderness.

Suzanne Ferencak has never recorded howls.

She shared the recording with the News Journal of the USA TODAY Network. She says she has seen Bigfoot in her area before.

Others aren't so sure. A group of workers at the park said the sound could have been a coyote's call.

She plans to talk about her encounters during the weekend.

'I always have a recorder going'

According to Ferencak, she first saw bigfoot when it jumped over a back road in Ohio.

She describes the beast as 712 feet tall and hairy. It's called Bigfoot by her.

Suzanne Ferencak is seen on her property where there has been Bigfoot activity in Holmes County on Thursday, July 21, 2022. TOM E. PUSKAR/ASHLAND TIMES-GAZETTE
Suzanne Ferencak is seen on her property where there has been Bigfoot activity in Holmes County on Thursday, July 21, 2022. TOM E. PUSKAR/ASHLAND TIMES-GAZETTE

She concluded that her rural home is a prime location for Bigfoot. The movie "The Back 80" was released in the summer of 2017.

Ferencak said she had heard knocks and howls around her home for a long time.

All of the activity stopped after that. It was like wow, where did it go?

She purchased an audio recorder for her backyard to make sure she didn't miss anything.

Ferencak said it was not a very expensive recorder. I have a recorder whenever I'm out. I've been doing this for a long time.

There are more than 20,000 hours of sounds in her catalog.

Ferencak said he had not recorded anything decent.

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Bigfoot howl had a responder

Ferencak keeps a campsite near the woods behind her house. She will build a campfire if no one else can.

On the Saturday before Independence Day, she was at that campsite.

This is a field on Suzanne Ferencak's property in Holmes County, Ohio, shown here on Thursday, July 21, 2022.

There had been a lot of fireworks earlier that night. There were large booms.

She continued stoking the fire. The day became Sunday. There was a loud noise.

The third of July was when he said it was.

She heard howls.

Ferencak said you hear some howls. You hear howls from coyotes and then you hear a chorus of coyotes.

She thought it was a mythical creature.

Kyle said that he and other colleagues listened to the audio recording and compared it to recordings of other animals.

The closest thing we could think of would be the call of an alpha male coyote. There is a coyote in its pack.

The match wasn't quite right, according toCasey.

Ferencak plans to buy a more expensive audio recorder now that she believes Bigfoot is back.

Scientifically researching Bigfoot

The Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization collects reports of possible Bigfoot Sightings.

There was a report that caught her attention. A family was camping at Pleasant Hill Lake Park when they heard things being thrown at them.

The children went inside the tent and the husband grabbed his pocketknife.

Something ran into the woods, according to the report. A witness said he saw a tall, dark and hairy figure run into the woods. When he saw it, witness thought of a Bigfoot.

The administrators of the Muskingum Watershed Conservancy District asked Ferencak if she would take part in a "Bigfoot Basecamp Weekend" at a local park after hearing reports of strange creatures in the region.

The Bigfoot event was supported by a government agency for the first time.

Matt Moneymaker is the founder and president of the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization and host of the show "Finding Bigfoot" on Animal Planet.

There will be a town hall meeting.

We're hoping a lot of people come forward with their stories I know that there are people out there who are afraid to come forward because of the ridicule.

Three people from the area are going to tell their stories for the first time.

Ferencak said they're recent. In the last six months.

Researchers hope that they can add more encounters to their database.

"If we can connect some dots along the way, then we can come up with a pattern," he said. It's interesting.

You can follow reporter Tuggle on social media.

USA TODAY contributed to the story.

The article was first published on the News Journal. The woman says she has audio.