Copy/Paste from my post on a hiking forum a few years ago:
Dax's Sasquatch Story
This is 100% true, I swear on my leatherman multi-tool, may it never dull.
First I need to set the stage. If you drive to Buntzen lake in Anmore (Port Moody) just before you enter the park there is a private campground/RV site on your right hand side. When I was a kid we would go there every summer for a week. They had an arcade, a heated pool, the lake was a 10 min walk and there was lots of hiking to be found. I loved going up there. At the back of this campground was an old access road that switchbacked up the side of the mountain and I used to like to hike up it as a kid. Getting to the top was sort of anti-climactic as the only thing at the top was a gravel turn around and a tidy tank full of diesel fuel, but the view of Buntzen lake was nice. Looking on google earth now it seems that the road is much more developed and a lot of the trees have been cleared out in between the switchbacks, but the road is still there. This road heads up towards Eagle mountain, but doesn't appear to connect with the trail connecting Buntzen to Eagle.
Now I need to introduce the players. First off there is myself, I was in my first year of Junior High school, so that would make me like what? 14ish? Anyways, I was not your average city slicker kid. My father was a deer hunter and I had been on many hunting trips. I had spent time alone in the bush and I had previously seen and have since seen many, many bears in the woods. This year my parents decided that we (my brother and I) could each invite one friend along to come camping for the week with us. This was very exciting and I made the obvious choice to invite my best friend, who we will call Adam. Adam was your average city slicker kid, but he had the adventurers spirit and was never afraid to jump into something head first. The third and most important player in this story... is a dog. When our neighbor learned we were going camping for the week he suggested that we take along his dog, he was going to be skiing in Whistler for the week and he reasoned that his dog would much rather be out in the bush camping than locked up in his timeshare in Whistler. The dog's name was Cody, which was short for Kodiak and Cody was not your average dog either, half Siberian husky and half wolf this was one big ass dog. Cody lived with two young children and he was extremely protective of them, the running joke was that the parents could have left town and Cody would have been the perfect baby sitter in their absence. Cody's owner was also an avid outdoorsman who lived right next to Burnaby mountain. Cody was taken for daily LONG walks on Burnaby mountain and one of his favorite 'games' was to chase around the local coyote population on the mountain. I never personally saw it but I have heard that one time he took on 3 large coyote's at the same time and won. Now that the introductions are out of the way, lets get into the meat of this story.
We had barely stopped the car and turned off our game boy's when I eagerly asked my mother if I could show Adam my "hiking tail" (the old access road) and I think she decided it would be quicker to unpack the car without us than to have me pestering her the entire time, so she conceded, "Sure, but take the dog for a walk while you are at it." So off we went charging up the access road with all of the enthusiasm that only 14 year old boys can muster. We were out in nature, taking on the world and we were damn excited to be camping instead of stuck at school. Adam and I were walking side by side and Cody was doing his own thing, he had one of those long retractable leashes and he was zipping back and forth from the left to the right side of the road as far ahead of us as the leash would allow, which was quite a long ways. We were just rounding the last bend when Cody lunged towards the bush, ripping the leash out of my hand, which sent the leash screaming towards him as the retract system reeled it in. This wasn't too surprising to me as I assumed that he was about to flush out a coyote. Just inches before he pounced off of the gravel road and into the bush he froze dead in his tracks, half crouched down, ears straight back and tail between the legs. He didn't move and didn't make a sound, he just froze right in place. Now I know what you are thinking, there was a bear in the bush right? Well after talking with his owner I learned that Cody had encountered bears plenty of times before and every time he started barking his head off and growling. This time he was dead silent and wouldn't move. He just stood there staring into the bush. Just then a head pops up out of the bush about 10 feet from Cody and about 30 feet from Adam and I. At first I thought it was a bear, which strangely enough didn't scare me at the time. A few moments passed with the "bear" and the dog just staring directly at each other, neither one moving a muscle. The more I looked at the "bear" the more I realized what I was actually seeing. The head was much narrower than a bear's head should be and it was missing the protruding snout, in fact I didn't see much of a nose on it at all. And the ears were not on top of his head like a bear should have, the ears were small and on the side of it's head, they looked more like human ears, but they were black and kind of furry, but they were defiantly not on top like on a bear. Just as I am starting to put this all together in my mind the dog does an instant 180 and bolts at full speed between Adam and I back down the trail towards camp. I managed to grab the leash as it bounced past me and the line started spooling out of the leash, when it hit the end of the rope it jerked me around and Cody was now dragging me along with him. We ran and ran and ran, I have never ran so fast in my entire life. Cody was dragging me down that road much faster than I could run and several times I fell and rolled and bounced back up on my feet but Cody never broke stride, it was almost like water skiing on gravel behind a dog. We didn't stop until we reached the campsite where we tried to relay this story to my parents, but of course we were way to winded and excited to get anything meaningful across to them. It was mostly just rapid verbal diarrhea. My parents looked at us like "Yeah, sure you did guys, now run along and go for a swim to cool down" Anyways the fact remains that I know exactly what I saw, the image will forever be burned into my mind.
So this brings up some interesting questions. Firstly, why wasn't Cody barking at whatever was in the bush. If it was in fact a bear Cody would have been barking up a storm, or at least growling. But he was dead silent. Also, why did he turn and run, Cody was a VERY protective dog, if he thought we were in danger I fully believe he would have fought to the death protecting us. He must have been scared out of his mind to bolt out of there like that. The most interesting question I have is what the hell is a bear with human shaped ears doing in the bush!
I have grabbed some Google Maps pictures and attached them below. You can very easily find higher quality pictures by goggling for "Anmore BC" and clicking on MAPS at the top. You can't really miss the access road, it looks WAY more developed in the 10-12 years since I have been there, but the location of the encounter is still the same. Interesting to note that if you continued up and over that mountain you enter the Coquitlam lake valley and then you end up in Fool's Gold route/Pitt lake territory, which as far as I am concerned is no-man's land. If a large creature was living the the forests of BC, that is one location where it would be sure to have a lot of uninhabited area to roam in.
Now I don't expect any of you to believe me, I was just a dumb kid and I am sure you are all thinking, kid saw a bear, big deal. But I want to say one more time, I had seen before and have seen since lots and lots of black bears, and ever a grizzly or two. This was NOT A BEAR! But if it helps you sleep at night then feel free to write this story off as another bear encounter mistaken for a sasquatch sighting. I honestly don't mind.