Mysteries of the Canadian Rockies [New 2024 Mystery Documentary]



In this video, we explore some of the forgotten mysteries of Canada’s Rocky Mountains.

0:00:00 – Introduction
0:01:07 – Mountain Giants
0:03:33 – Mountain Dwarves
0:06:58 – Giant Owl
0:11:28 – Thunderbird Stories
0:17:21 – The Tragedies of Spirit Island
0:20:42 – Mammoths in the Athabasca Pass
0:26:55 – Expeditions Over the Mountains
0:28:59 – Legend of the Ghost River
0:33:17 – The Monster of Lake Minnewanka
0:36:35 – The Lost Lemon Mine
0:50:55 – Jack Ladner’s Pocket Watch
0:58:28 – Ghostly Tales of the Banff Springs Hotel
1:02:36 – Ghosts of the Chateau Lake Louise
1:07:15 – Ghostly Tales of the Prince of Wales Hotel
1:13:28 – William Roe’s Wildman Encounter
1:19:39 – The Wildmen of Kootenay Plains

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43 thoughts on “Mysteries of the Canadian Rockies [New 2024 Mystery Documentary]”

  1. Enjoy your videos very much! This one especially! Have been to the three hotels you tell about! Not to stay but tp explore and enjoy the arcatecture and ambiance! And got to see all that beautiful country! Love my n. Idaho but your mountains and area very beautiful too!!

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  2. I'm Blackfeet from Browning M.T. (Blackfeet Rez) just on the border of Canada by Glacier Nation Park. With the little people we also called them 'Rock throwers' because they would throw large rocks at you from the brush to try and scare you away from thier areas. They have long strong arms. They would also play tricks, we have a story of a warrior back in the day that was fasting in the mountains for a vision. He woke up one of the mornings on the side of a cliff after the little people had put him there while he slept. lol
    Great video by the way. Good to hear the old stories again. and the footage is making me miss home. in a good way though, thank you.

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  3. Man… I just found this channel after something in my room disappeared, then reappeared when I turned around. I searched and found your little people videos. Hooked. Then I kept watching. It is so comprehensive and powerful. I live in the Colorado Rockies, so it is very similar country – but much of our native history and mythology is gone. Tragic, just like the history, among the worst of the states when it comes to treatment (extermination) of the natives. Many are still here, but much of the knowledge and stories are gone forever. New Mexico, where I grew up is a different story altogether – and I have had many paranormal experiences there. Anyways, amazing channel, I just had to give my respect. This is so powerful, and needed.. it explains so much.. the unseen world is real, and interacts with us still. We need these videos to help us understand it better. We don't know SH*T..

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  4. Talking with a native elder in the southern Okanagan I quickly realized that these stories are true. He had several experiences with little people and one Sasquatch story as well. I believe him.

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  5. People have eaten mammoth meat frozen in Arctic tundra. Idiots think this meat was frozen thousands of years ago. That is not possible as the meat would be nothing but a greasy stain in the ice by that time. The mammoth must have been recently frozen. The Earth is hollow and pathways into it exist in the Canadian north. Mammoth still live there.

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  6. As a native Idahoan, the region I consider home isn't defined or limited to political lines on a map.. I'm home in the Rockies, the 49th parallel be damned. Furthermore, I'll be damned if I haven't my share of legitimately mysterious happenings in these mountains.
    👍🏻 Keep up the good work, Hammerson! I'm immensely proud of you for undertaking the arduous procurement & custodianship of The Archives.

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  7. My Dad's mom was Half Blackfoot. my mom's granfather was half African probably from Malta. No one ever noticed but when I show my black friends his picture they always like instantly "that's a brotha", hehe. So funny it was not known until his passing.

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  8. Awesome video! I live in central Alberta. I have driven across RACEHORSE PASS (west of Morley, AB) in southern Alberta in my Jeep. I can’t seem to find any info on the history of Racehorse Pass or NorthFork Pass just North of it.
    Does anyone know of any history of these passes?

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