Category Archives: Dark Outdoors

A Deep Dive On Black Panthers

What if America’s wilderness hides a predator science won’t acknowledge? In this episode of Dark Outdoors®, author Michael Mayes—known for his work Shadow Cats—joins us to dig into the controversial and chilling reports of black panthers roaming across the U.S.

Listen here with links to the show on Spotify, Apple, IHeartradio & Audible.

You can listen directly on Podbean here.

For decades, eyewitnesses from Texas to the Appalachians have sworn they’ve seen something impossible: massive black panthers prowling the woods, stalking farmlands, and vanishing into the shadows. Yet, mainstream science insists such creatures don’t exist in North America.

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In this thought-provoking episode of Dark Outdoors, we sit down with author and researcher Michael Mayes to explore the mystery at the heart of his book Shadow Cats. Together, we examine chilling accounts, folklore, and the deep cultural roots of black panther sightings. Are these elusive predators a product of myth, mass misidentification, or could there be something truly hidden in America’s wild places?

Expect a conversation that pushes beyond campfire tales—diving into history, biology, and the unsettling implications of predators that may walk unseen. Whether you’re a skeptic or a believer, this is one episode that will make you think twice the next time you walk into the woods after dark.

Are they black mountain lions – black cougars?

Are they black jaguars?

Are they jaguarundi?

Are they escaped exotics?

What about the mysterious black longtail?

Take a deep dive on black panthers with us.

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Email Chester at chester@chestermoore.com.

The Wild Man That Wasn’t

A wild story has been spreading across social media — claiming that Texas Game Wardens arrested a man for trying to hunt squirrels with his bare hands and teeth near Lake Tawakoni. According to the viral post, the man called himself a “primal predator” and argued his “God-given claws and fangs” meant he didn’t need a hunting license.

Watch the video here.

It sounded so absurd… it had to be true, right?

Well, not exactly.

Watch until the end — you’ll laugh, cringe, and maybe even double-check your next viral post.

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In Case You Missed It!

Did you see the video I did about the new “black panther” photo circulating? This is the most interesting photo I have seen in years.

Check it out here.

Market Killing of Great White Sharks

Over at our sister site www.gulfgreatwhites.com, I posted a blog about the killing of great white sharks for illegal trade in shark parts.

Check out that post here.

And please subscribe to that blog as well for in-depth shark content.

Chester Moore

Follow Chester Moore on the following social media platforms

@gulfgreatwhitesharksociety on Instagram

To support the efforts of Higher Calling Wildlife® click here.

Subscribe to the Dark Outdoors podcast on all major podcasting platforms.

@thechestermoore on Instagram

Chester Moore’s YouTube.

Higher Calling Wildlife on Facebook

Email Chester at chester@chestermoore.com.

Ghost Lights of the Southern Forest: Science Vs. Supernatural

On quiet nights in the deep East Texas woods, where the old railroad bed of Bragg Road cuts through towering pines, a strange light sometimes floats above the dirt. It shimmers, drifts, and fades. For decades, people have called it the Ghost Light of Saratoga , a ghostly glow that refuses to be explained away.

Listen here: Links to the show on Spotify, Apple, IHeartradio & Audible.

The phenomenon stretches back generations. Long before Bragg Road became a back-country curiosity, this area near Saratoga, Texas, was part of a logging route for the Santa Fe Railway in the early 1900s. When the tracks were torn up, the stories began. Hunters, travelers, and locals described a single orb of light appearing in the distance — bluish white, sometimes green or orange — hovering over the old line before blinking out like a dying lantern.

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Cross the Sabine River into southwest Louisiana, and you’ll hear nearly the same story in the community of Fields. There, too, people talk about ghost lights gliding through the swamp mist, known locally as feu follet — French for “foolish fire.”

Scientists have offered logical explanations.

Methane and phosphine gases released from decomposing vegetation can ignite when they meet oxygen, creating short-lived flickers of light. That’s the classic “swamp gas” theory. Others say the Saratoga Light is nothing more than distant car headlights refracted through the humid air and warped by the perfectly straight road. Engineers from Sam Houston State University once studied the phenomenon in the 1970s and suggested optical refraction as the most likely cause.

And yet — not everyone’s convinced.

Witnesses describe the light rising and falling, changing color, and even following cars. Some insist it’s too bright, too fast, too alive to be an illusion. Folklore fills in the rest: a railroad brakeman decapitated in an accident, forever wandering the right-of-way with his lantern in hand. Others whisper about lost spirits trapped in the Big Thicket, or energy from the land itself, echoing its long, violent past.

That tension between the natural and the supernatural — between what can be measured and what can only be felt — is exactly what Dark Outdoors® explores. Our upcoming series takes a boots-on-the-ground look at stories like these, where the wilderness holds more questions than answers.

So, what are those ghost lights really? Science points one way, folklore another. Somewhere in between lies the truth or maybe just the mystery that keeps us heading back down that lonely dirt road.

Kicking off 13 Days of Dark Outdoors®, we’re diving into the legend of the Saratoga and Fields ghost lights, blending field investigation, expert interviews, and a healthy respect for the unknown. Whether you’re a skeptic, a believer, or just love a good night-time mystery, this is your chance to experience both sides of the story.

Because in the dark outdoors, some lights guide you home and some lead you deeper into the woods.

(If you’ve ever seen either of these ghost lights, share your story. E-mail chester@chestermoore.com.)

Get This Decal For Free!

During our 13 Days of Dark Outdoors® we’re giving away this decal for free. Simply, subscribe to the program where you listen to podcasts, email me at chester@chestermoore.com with your mailing address and where you subscribed (Spotify, Audible, etc) and I’ll send one out.

Follow Chester Moore on the following social media platforms

Chester Moore

@gulfgreatwhitesharksociety on Instagram

To support the efforts of Higher Calling Wildlife® click here.

Subscribe to the Dark Outdoors podcast on all major podcasting platforms.

@thechestermoore on Instagram

Chester Moore’s YouTube.

Higher Calling Wildlife on Facebook

Email Chester at chester@chestermoore.com.