Legends of the Hidden Horde

El Cadejo

9 min · 15 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio El Cadejo

Descripción

Long before the Spanish galleons crested the horizon, indigenous wisdom taught that every soul walked with a nahual, a spirit companion often manifesting as an animal guide. Dogs, revered as loyal psychopomps who ferried the dead across the perilous rivers of the underworld (much like Xólotl in lore or the faithful hounds in Maya funerary rites), embodied this bond between the living, the ancestors, and the unseen realms.  The Cadejo emerged from these deep roots: a massive, shaggy spirit-dog, its tangled coat symbolizing the wild, unkempt mystery of the liminal paths—the rural trails and mountain passes where human vulnerability meets the eternal. Sources https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadejo [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadejo] https://www.espookytales.com/blog/The-Legend-of-El-Cadejo/ [https://www.espookytales.com/blog/The-Legend-of-El-Cadejo/] https://www.reachtheworld.org/jeffreys-journey-el-salvador/traditions/mysterious-legend-dog-red-eyes [https://www.reachtheworld.org/jeffreys-journey-el-salvador/traditions/mysterious-legend-dog-red-eyes] https://folktalesamerica.com/the-white-cadejo-and-the-black-cadejo-a-tale-of-two-spirits-from-belize/ [https://folktalesamerica.com/the-white-cadejo-and-the-black-cadejo-a-tale-of-two-spirits-from-belize/] https://ratcreek.org/2021/02/11/an-el-salvadorian-fable-el-cadejo-legend/ [https://ratcreek.org/2021/02/11/an-el-salvadorian-fable-el-cadejo-legend/] https://www.nicaragua.com/blog/cadejo-friend-or-foe/ [https://www.nicaragua.com/blog/cadejo-friend-or-foe/] https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/El_Cadejo [https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/El_Cadejo] https://mybeautifulbelize.com/belizean-folktales-el-cadejo/ [https://mybeautifulbelize.com/belizean-folktales-el-cadejo/]

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31 episodios

episode The Honey Island Swamp Monster artwork

The Honey Island Swamp Monster

Deep In the heart of southeastern Louisiana, where the Pearl River bleeds into a labyrinth of bayous and ancient wetlands, lies the Honey Island Swamp. Nearly seventy thousand acres of primeval wilderness, cypress giants draped in veils of moss, black water that mirrors nothing but the void above, and a silence so profound it presses against the chest like a warning. This is a place that time forgot, where the line between the living world and something older, something tainted, grows thin. Here, among the tangled roots and hidden sloughs, whispers persist of a creature the locals call many names: the Honey Island Swamp Monster, La Bête Noire, the Louisiana Wookiee… and, in older stories tied to the land’s first peoples, the Letiche.  This is episode 30: The Honey Island Swamp Monster Sources https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/strange-creatures/honey-island-swamp-monster.htm [https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/strange-creatures/honey-island-swamp-monster.htm] (overview and Letiche ties) Scholarly thesis on belief traditions: https://research.library.mun.ca/10863/ [https://research.library.mun.ca/10863/] (Frances Leary) Choctaw hattak chito references: Memorial University archival content on Indigenous lore. Skeptical analysis (Joe Nickell tracks/hoax evidence): https://web.archive.org/web/20090925135750/http://www.csicop.org/si/show/tracking_the_swamp_monsters/ [https://web.archive.org/web/20090925135750/http://www.csicop.org/si/show/tracking_the_swamp_monsters/] Dana Holyfield documentation/books and film: Search “Honey Island Swamp Monster Documentations” on Amazon or her related works. Documentaries: YouTube searches for “In Search of the Honey Island Swamp Monster” or Animal Planet features. .

18 de jun de 202610 min
episode Walking Sam / Chiye-Tanka artwork

Walking Sam / Chiye-Tanka

In the vast, windswept lands of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, where the Badlands stretch like ancient bones under an endless sky, stories have been passed down through generations of Lakota people. These are not mere tales for entertainment. They are living threads of oral history, woven with respect for the land, the ancestors, and the unseen forces that walk among us. In Episode 29 we approach one such story with care and reverence, the legend of the figure known as Walking Sam, also called Tall Man, Big Man, or in older traditions, Chiye-tanka. We honor the Lakota and broader Indigenous voices who carry these traditions. This retelling draws from documented accounts, elder perspectives, and cultural context, recognizing that folklore here reflects deep connections to place, history, and resilience amid profound challenges. It is shared not to sensationalize, but to explore the mysterious with humility. Sources: https://weirddarkness.com/walking-sam/ [https://weirddarkness.com/walking-sam/] (Detailed sightings and police testimony). https://dailydot.com/walking-sam-myth-lakota-pine-ridge-suicides/ [https://dailydot.com/walking-sam-myth-lakota-pine-ridge-suicides/] (Cultural context and elder accounts).  Additional references from tribal police reports, Peter Matthiessen’s In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, and respectful folklore compilations (searchable via above for further reading).

16 de jun de 202610 min
episode Tata Duende artwork

Tata Duende

They say the monte does not forget. It remembers every footfall, every greedy swing of the machete, every broken promise whispered, or forgotten, beneath its canopy. In the black-soaked lowlands of Belize, where the ancient blood of the Maya still nourishes the roots of towering ceiba and mahogany, something older than empires walks. Not a devil conjured by colonial fear. Not a simple saint of the wild. Something woven from the first covenant between people and the green world, when the pyramids drank starlight and the forest still spoke in unbroken tongues. This is episode 28: Tata Duende. Sources: * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende] * https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende] * https://folktalesamerica.com/tata-duende-the-forest-guardian-of-belize/ [https://folktalesamerica.com/tata-duende-the-forest-guardian-of-belize/] * https://www.greaterbelize.com/tata-duende-the-old-man-who-protects-the-forest/ [https://www.greaterbelize.com/tata-duende-the-old-man-who-protects-the-forest/] * http://www.legendsofbelize.com/ [http://www.legendsofbelize.com/] (associated with the book Legends of Belize by GrissyG & Dismas) * https://www.native-languages.org/maya_guide.htm [https://www.native-languages.org/maya_guide.htm] (for broader Yucatec pronunciation context)

12 de jun de 202613 min
episode Stikini artwork

Stikini

In the misty cypress groves and hammocks of the southeastern lands long stewarded by the Seminole people, a story endures, passed in hushed tones by those entrusted with its weight. It speaks not of mere monsters from the wild, but of a profound warning woven into the fabric of community, power, and the fragile line between human and something lost.  This is Episode 27: Stikini, a story drawn from Seminole oral traditions with a deep respect for the sacred knowledge of Indigenous storytellers, medicine people, and cultural stewards who have preserved these teachings through generations of resilience, including the forced journeys of the Trail of Tears. Sources https://urbanlegendsmysteryandmyth.com/2025/08/stikini-seminole-owl-witch-that-feeds.html [https://urbanlegendsmysteryandmyth.com/2025/08/stikini-seminole-owl-witch-that-feeds.html] https://a4play.com/pages/stikini [https://a4play.com/pages/stikini] (or fernflowerpress variant) https://grokipedia.com/page/Stikini [https://grokipedia.com/page/Stikini] https://www.bestiary.us/stikini/en [https://www.bestiary.us/stikini/en] Supporting ethnographic context: -  Books like Oklahoma Seminoles: Medicines, Magic and Religion by James H. Howard and Willie Lena; Dictionary of Native American Mythology by Sam D. Gill and Irene F. Sullivan. Music created with Suno - https://suno.com/s/HWTWgvodJIrawqZL [https://suno.com/s/HWTWgvodJIrawqZL]

10 de jun de 20268 min
episode The Snallygaster artwork

The Snallygaster

For thousands of years before any European foot pressed into what settlers would name Frederick County, the Piscataway, Susquehannock, and other Indigenous nations moved through these valleys.  Then came the German-speaking immigrants in the 1730s and after, clearing fields on land already shaped by generations of Indigenous stewardship. They brought with them whispers of the Schneller Geist... Sources https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snallygaster [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snallygaster] https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/what-is-the-snallygaster [https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/what-is-the-snallygaster] https://www.thebanner.com/western-maryland/snallygaster-maryland-cryptid-racist-BBKKZPBUCZHGDASRT6J754D4OU/ [https://www.thebanner.com/western-maryland/snallygaster-maryland-cryptid-racist-BBKKZPBUCZHGDASRT6J754D4OU/] https://mdhistoricaltrust.wordpress.com/2025/10/31/the-snallygaster-shadows-fear/ [https://mdhistoricaltrust.wordpress.com/2025/10/31/the-snallygaster-shadows-fear/] https://www.snallygastermuseum.com/ [https://www.snallygastermuseum.com/] https://frederickhistory.org/we-the-people/ [https://frederickhistory.org/we-the-people/] (for Indigenous historical context of the land) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_Maryland [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_Maryland]

5 de jun de 20267 min