In April 2019, an Indian Army mountaineering team trekking high on the Himalayas captured massive footprints in fresh snow, posting the images as alleged proof of the legendary Yeti, the towering, shaggy biped said to roam these peaks. Unsurprisingly, the online world laughed it off.[1]
Apparent Yeti prints have been seen many times before, and there have been many explanations put forward to explain them away. If there actually are Yetis in the Himalayas, wouldn’t someone have seen them by now? Well, about that . . .
10 Yeti Reports: The Search Begins
10 Where’s A Camera When You Need One?

In 1925, a photographer named N.A. Tombazi was wandering the high Himalayas snapping scenic shots. One afternoon his porters shouted him from his tent, pointing at a dark silhouette some 183‑274 metres (600‑900 ft) away.
Tombazi could make out a figure that moved upright, cloaked in darkness and apparently naked. The creature shuffled from rhododendron bush to rhododendron bush, occasionally uprooting a plant. After about a minute the figure slipped into thick scrub, and before Tombazi could fetch a camera or binoculars, it vanished.
A few hours later the party trekked to the spot and discovered a series of crisp snow prints. They were unmistakably human‑shaped yet oddly tiny—only about 15‑18 cm (6‑7 in) long and roughly 10 cm (4 in) wide. Five toes were visible, the instep could be made out, but the heel was often just a point. The prints were spaced 45‑60 cm (18‑24 in) apart, clearly from a bipedal creature. The dense scrub and worsening weather kept Tombazi from following the trail.
The local porters swore the being was a Yeti, but Tombazi remained skeptical, unable to shake the image of a creature that looked almost human.
9 Hometown Expert

Tenzing Norgay grew up in the shadow of the Himalayas and first entered mountaineering when English explorer Eric Shipton recruited him for the 1935 Everest reconnaissance, a mission to scout viable climbing routes. Tenzing loved the experience so much that he participated in almost every subsequent Everest attempt.
On 29 May 1953, he reached the summit alongside Edmund Hillary, becoming one of the first two humans to stand atop the world’s highest peak.
Two years earlier, in 1951, while climbing with Shipton again, the party stumbled upon a set of snow prints. Tenzing identified them as Yeti tracks and recounted to Shipton that his fellow Sherpas had encountered a Yeti near the village of Thyangboche two years before. The creature was spotted about 23 m (75 ft) away, stood roughly 168 cm tall (5 ft 6 in), possessed a tall pointed head, and was covered in reddish‑brown hair, though its face appeared hairless.
Shipton arranged for another native speaker to cross‑examine Tenzing in his own language; Tenzing stood firm, insisting he could differentiate a bear, a monkey, and this unfamiliar biped.
8 The Lure Of The Hunt

At exactly midnight in May 1951, Richard Steinwinkler found himself on a lonely high plateau in the Himalayas. He had stopped to rest after a solo climb when he caught a glimpse of a large figure moving behind an overhang. Instinctively, he thought “Yeti” and, knowing no one else should have been up there at that hour, sprinted toward the overhang.
Initially nothing was visible, but Steinwinkler soon noticed a fresh footprint in the clay before him. He photographed the print and set off following the trail for hours, eventually locating the creature that left the mark. The animal was roughly 50 m (164 ft) away, moving bipedally and towering high, though the rugged terrain made a clear view difficult.
Excitement surged through Steinwinkler as he realized he was alone with an unknown animal. He shakily snapped several photos before carefully retracing his steps back to safety.
7 Ouch!

In 1952, Norwegian surveyors Aage Thorberg and Jan Frostis were conducting work on the Zemu Glacier near Kangchenjunga when they discovered fresh Yeti‑type footprints in the snow. With two local men, they set out to locate the source of the prints.
The creatures they found resembled monkeys with long tails, yet stood upright and were human‑sized. Frostis suggested shooting one for a specimen, but Thorberg argued the animal would be far more valuable alive. They improvised a lasso to capture a creature.
During the attempt, one of the beings snagged the lasso before the trap could close, and another struck Frostis, knocking him down and biting his shoulder. Thorberg fired a warning shot into the air; the startled creatures fled, and the men tended to their injured companion before returning to camp.
6 A Bad Position

In 1953, Drs. George Moore and George K. Brooks were making their way back from a typhus‑control mission near the Tibetan border, traveling with a group of Sherpas toward Kathmandu. A storm rolled in, forcing them into a muddy, forested stretch where they outpaced the Sherpas.
Seeking a brief rest near a large boulder, Brooks reached for a leech threatening his boot. Suddenly, something moved in the nearby brush, prompting both men to draw pistols and retreat behind the rock. Two screams erupted—one from ahead, another from the right.
Amid the chaos, a hair‑covered, upright creature burst from the foliage. It stood about 152 cm tall (5 ft), with gray skin, black hair, a mouth that seemed to stretch from ear to ear, long yellow teeth, and yellow eyes. Six or seven more figures materialized around them in the fog.
Moore and Brooks decided against shooting, fearing it would worsen the situation. They fired warning shots over the creatures’ heads, pausing their advance. After two more shots, the strange beings retreated, allowing the men to await the Sherpas’ return before continuing home.
5 A Picky Eater

In 1954, mountaineer Charles Stoner was traveling through several Himalayan villages to interview locals about Yeti folklore. During his visits, he encountered a startling tale that caught him off‑guard.
In the village of Tamyeh, Stoner spoke with a man named Lakhpa Tensing, who recounted a Yeti encounter three years earlier. During March, Lakhpa had taken his yak herd to graze where the snow had melted. When a yak strayed, he climbed a nearby rocky outcrop to search for it and heard a high‑pitched yelp resembling a puppy.
Investigating, he found fresh rodent guts scattered on the ground. About thirty paces away, perched on a rock with its back to him, sat an upright creature the size of a twelve‑year‑old boy. Covered in reddish‑brown hair and sporting a pointed head, the being stared back before Lakhpa silently retreated, unwilling to disturb the mysterious animal.
4 Word From Russia

In January 1958, Dr. Alexander Pronin, a hydrologist from Leningrad State University, was part of an expedition in the Pamir Mountains. While exploring, he thought he saw a bear perched on a cliff, but the animal stood upright, clearly not a bear.
The figure was cloaked in reddish‑gray hair, with stooped shoulders. Pronin watched it for five minutes as it moved about the ledge, then turned and vanished from sight.
Three days later, the same creature reappeared at the identical spot, prompting Pronin to admit the sighting was genuine.
3 Another Picky Eater

In 1958, a dedicated expedition set out specifically to hunt Yeti evidence in the Himalayas. Naturalist Gerald Russell, who had previously joined a 1954 Yeti mission, served as deputy leader.
Late April found Russell and his Sherpa guide Da Temba stationed at Choyang Khola, rotating night watches from a camouflaged observation post. A local informant claimed a small Yeti visited a nearby creek each night to hunt frogs.
At midnight, a Yeti roughly 137 cm tall (4 ft 6 in) emerged by the creek. Da Temba shone a flashlight into its face; the creature bolted, prompting the men to flee. The following morning, Russell discovered both Da Temba’s and the local’s prints, along with a set of small bipedal tracks matching known Yeti imprints.
2 Patience Prevails

In 1970, Don Whillans joined a group of climbers camping near Machapuchare. One Sherpa casually warned, “Yeti coming.” Whillans turned just in time to glimpse a shadow slip behind a ridge.
The next day, Whillans and a fellow climber inspected the ridge, finding strange tracks that differed from typical bear prints. The other climber dismissed them, but Whillans remained unconvinced.
That night, under a moon bright enough to read by, Whillans kept his tent’s flap open, peeking intermittently at the slope. Eventually, a figure burst from the darkness, bounding on all fours toward the cliff. The creature was large and powerful, resembling an ape or something similar. Whillans watched briefly before the animal vanished.
Morning found Whillans and two Sherpas examining the snow, confirming the tracks matched his nocturnal sighting. Yet the Sherpas pretended not to see them, perhaps fearing Whillans would pursue the mystery further.
1 Surprise On The Slope

In March 1986, Anthony Wooldridge embarked on a charitable run‑climb through the Alaknanda Valley. Unfamiliar with Yeti lore, he stumbled onto a remote, wooded stretch that no humans had visited since the previous summer.
He soon noticed a distinct trail cutting through the snow from bush to bush, snapping two photos before continuing his run toward Hemkund.
About an hour later, his path intersected a steep slope where an avalanche loomed. Pausing to assess safety, Wooldridge spotted an odd groove in the snow, as if a large rock had slid a short distance, with fresh footprints leading away from its base. He followed the marks with his eyes to a spindly shrub, then quickly raised his camera for a few shots.
Just beyond the shrub stood a creature roughly 183 cm tall (6 ft), standing upright with legs spread apart, gazing down the slope. Dark hair covered its body, and its head was large and square. Wooldridge moved a bit lower for a better angle; the creature seemed to notice him, returning its gaze.
As the weather worsened, Wooldridge realized he couldn’t reach Hemkund that day. Unwilling to camp out, he turned back toward the last village he’d passed before nightfall.
+ Don’t Forget The Prints

On 29 April 2019, the Indian Army posted a tweet featuring three photos of mysterious footprints discovered on the snow‑covered slopes of Makalu.
For the first time, an #IndianArmy Moutaineering Expedition Team has sited Mysterious Footprints of mythical beast ‘Yeti’ measuring 32×15 inches close to Makalu Base Camp on 09 April 2019. This elusive snowman has only been sighted at Makalu‑Barun National Park in the past.[12]
While many mocked the claim, a closer look at the photos reveals the large prints are spaced about one and a half prints apart. If each print measures 81 cm (32 in) long, the distance between them is roughly 122 cm (48 in) of untouched snow—far too great for a skier or snowshoe wearer, and even challenging for the region’s biggest bears.
What, then, truly made those prints? Garth Haslam, a veteran researcher of oddities, delves into the mystery on his site Anomalies—the Strange & Unexplained. Visit http://anomalyinfo.com or follow the Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/anomalies.news for more.

