Hi, I'm Holly and I'm Haley. Welcome to Mountain Mysteries, Tales from Appalachia. Well hello there. Hey y'all.
Hey. We have been reminiscing and chatting about music. Yeah. You know, Haley and I have been talking about our love of some yacht rock.
Yeah. I enjoy sticks, red, ambrosia, all the foods. Yeah. I love them all.
Sticks are not food. No, I wouldn't eat sticks. Oh, I mean maybe when I was a kid probably. Did you ever do that when you were a kid?
Like not eat sticks. No, but like when you made like soup, like made soups outside soups, I would make them with like, I would take paper and like, oh, you do her an indoor gal. I was an outside barefoot kid. I was indoors in the air conditioned.
I was I was a I was a free range child, which is very funny because my son is a free range outdoor. Oh, absolutely. Like constantly dirty and wet kind of kid, which I'm all about it. Yeah.
I you know, he's washable. I don't care. But that was not how I was. Right.
Yeah. You know, say all the time, like, mom, do you want to come outside and get in the hose with me? And I'm like, not really. No, sure.
Don't. No, I would get my grandmother had these metal bowls, and I would go in the house and I would get the bowl and I would fill it up with water. And then I would go around the yard and I would collect like different color leaves and twigs and little like flowers. And I would get like a big wooden spoon and I would make a potion or soup or whatever.
You would do it by the 1800s. We can start you with. Exactly. Yeah.
Well, I will say she showed up to my house tonight and she was like, Holly, I made the soup for you outside. It's my outside soup. It's my outside soup. And I don't I mean, is that a common thing for kids to do, though?
Because like I did it all the time. You know what? I do think it's normal. I made soups all the time at home.
Like I had a diner. Like in my my brother would visit my diner and like sit down and I would make him my food. I was like, do you want the soup of the day? And the soup of the day was water mixed with cut up newspaper.
And he would like pretend to eat it. And I would give him a check and he would have to pay. Oh, yeah. So mine was like foraging.
And I was like, sit down, sit down. Oh, yeah. I mean, there wasn't any kind of entertainment or anything, but he paid my metal cauldron out there. Meanwhile, my brother would usually come dressed in.
So we had for church, my mother had purchased him this one like suit jacket. So we had this suit jacket. And he would come in a suit jacket and his underwear. Oh, nice.
And he would come and he would come to the restaurant, you know, because my brother even still to this day worries more about what's on top versus bottom gotcha. So I would feed him my fake soup. And he would say, well, I've got to go. It's time for you to come to my church because I'm a pastor.
And so he would stand up at, no, I think about it. It sounds awful. But he would stand up at sort of, gosh, the stairs there, like, you know, the, I guess the bottom of the stairs. And he would preach in his laser and underwear.
Wow. Yeah. And the word of God, the word of God. And I was the waitress who was at his church, which your newspaper suit was my newspaper suit, learning about Jesus.
And my friend and co-host was outside with her cauldron. Yeah. I was out there. He was, he was trying to preach to you.
He was, he was like, little, highly, you actually, you probably weren't even alive yet. If I was seven, no, you weren't. No, well, in the future. Yeah.
He would have been preaching to me. He had been like, yeah, demon. Well, yeah, I was out there. And then I would, you know, go run through the cow pies and yeah, squished between your toes.
My son would, no, you don't think you'd like cow pies? No, he would not. No, it's a great time. No, I can tell you that he, I will say he is all about going out, getting dirty, doing the things that then he like comes in immediately and he's like, I've got to take a bath.
And so then he's in the bath for 16 hours. Oh, wow. Yeah. Usually because he's playing.
Gotcha. Makes sense. But makes sense. Yeah.
That's funny. Tonight with Spiderman. Spiderman was jumping, diving into the water. Very cool.
Yeah. Yeah. So I am successfully had a shower the other night with my one hand. There's a lot of jokes.
I'm not. I was expecting I was ready. With my one hand. And then she like looks at me and I'm like, how can you not want me think this is something naughty?
Listen, I mean, there was nothing sexual. It was a, it was a journey. It was a lot of contorting weird positioning. Do you have a detachable shower head?
I do, yes. Okay. So you can get your booty and you can get all the things. Yeah.
So that helps. That does help. Are you a washcloth gal or a just rub the soap on your body? I'm a washcloth gal.
Same. Yeah. Same. So here's what I thought about recently, actually, because I love that.
Do you use a bar or do you use I use body wash? Okay. Yeah. So back when I was growing up as a kid, we shared one bathroom.
My, my mom and my dad, my brother and I, and we shared one bar. So no negative. Um, don't like that. But that's that was because they didn't have body wash back.
Yeah. That didn't liquid soap didn't exist. And so we just use a bar and we used one bar. We all shared it and how disgusting is that.
Nobody had their own bar. I mean, I had bar soap and I was a kid, but I had my own and my brother had his own bar. So no, we all had the old ivory soap. Yeah.
So my dad liked ivory. I liked, I was spring and lever 2000. That's not delightful. I was ivory.
My brother, I think he's dove. My dad used ivory. So I actually have a bar of it's the dove like cucumber. It smells so good.
Yeah. I really like the, there's this local lady near me that makes soap, like, soap for whatever that you get at, like we get it at the local, she's all of the produce down in town and I love it. I love that kind of soap too. So every time I can get like, or like the artisanal soaps or whatever, anytime I get that, I'm obsessed.
Me too. Or like, Oh, imported from France. Yeah. It's amazing.
So yeah, next time you come into my house, bring yourselves. I will. I love it. Yeah.
We'll just take a shower. Okay. Share yourself. No, I think just why don't you just shower your own place with your hand.
With your hand with my one hand. With your one hand. And do whatever it is that you do. And no, I'll be all right.
So why would I need to bring my soap here? No, as a gift. Oh, I thought we were going to use my soap. I'll use it on my own time.
And you can do that. No, I think we've already established that's disgusting. Yeah, that's true. No, I'm sure myself.
Okay. That's really sweet. I wouldn't. But that's understandable.
Yeah. Yeah. Especially if I had the sift, which we still haven't ruled out. I mean, we're four weeks in here.
We don't know. We don't know. I mean, when are you going to get those blood tests? I mean, we'll find out.
Sometimes it starts affecting the brain. Maybe right now we're just in the thump. So I think we're okay. It possibly could tow.
Maybe the toast good right now. Well, but you never know. Never know. All right.
We're just going to call it the sift. Oh sift. Oh sift. Oh sift.
Oh, what cool nickname for you? Come here sift. Sift them. No sift.
Oh sounds bad. But my toe doesn't hurt. I don't care. It appeared there first.
That's true. We're going to call the sift. Oh, I think it's the gal. Oh my god, woman.
Or the right side. I don't know. It could be both. Oh, you're falling apart.
All right. What you got for me? Well, I'm missing person. Oh, that's not good.
No, no, it's not good. That is bad. I want to give a shout out to Brinnett Meghan who sent the story to me and said, hey, this might be interesting for the podcast. So I am going to do the story.
Today we are traveling to Davey County, North Carolina, in a town known as Moxville. Where is Davey County? So Davey County is near Winston-Salem. Okay.
Got you. I have a friend who was actually just talking about Davey County recently. So anyway, so apparently there's an area that they refer to as Meth Mountain. Sounds all right.
So, you know, feels right. Feels right. All the things, you know. Yeah.
So it is May 2006 when 30 year old mother of three Brandy Hope Knipe disappears. Knipe. Knipe. Okay.
Yeah. This story first came to national attention in 2022 when Brandy's sister Lee made a video on the TikTok. On TikTok. Yep.
Talking about this case and sharing her sister's story, which really hadn't been well publicized prior to this. So the goal obviously was to reach an audience and possibly gain more insight into what happened to Brandy. Yeah. So the TikTok went viral as they tend to.
Yeah. Lee shared that her sister Brandy was originally from Cleveland County. So around the Shelby area and was the mother of three children, two girls and a little boy. Brandy was engaged and moved with her fiance to Moxville, North Carolina.
So she moved from Shelby, which is a little bit outside of Charlotte to this area near Winston-Salem. So this Moxville is about an hour and a half from where she grew up in Shelby. So not too long after Brandy moves, her mother and little sister Lee move in with them. Lee was around 11 at the time and very close an age to Brandy's own two daughters.
The oldest was about 10 at that point. So eventually Brandy's mom leaves and goes back to Shelby, but she leaves Brandy with Brandy's three kids and the little sister. Okay. So that's kind of strange.
I thought that was weird. It is. There's some things in the story that I don't totally understand. So we'll get to it.
But from my understanding, Brandy's fiance was abusive. And eventually that relationship comes to an end, which I'm glad for her and the children it did, abusive. So kind of without a place to go, she meets this man who's in his late 40s, maybe early 50s. He goes by the name Deacon.
This man lives in a house on a lake and offers one of the houses, I guess, that he owns down the road to Brandy. And apparently he wasn't charging her rent, which is kind of suspicious. I mean, I don't know what kind of deal they had. That's kind of weird.
Yeah, it's odd. So Brandy's little sister Lee, the one who's doing these TikToks, recalls the man being super creepy and that he once took them and by them, I mean the little girls to his house. Like, hey little girls want to come to my house. And so at this time they're 10, 11 years old.
Yeah, me neither. So inside he had tons of women's clothing, shoes, and accessories. He never told them where or from whom these items came. He did however offer the girls some of the items, which they declined.
Yeah, that seems like a good bit. Absolutely. Now, a couple of possibilities here. He could be a creep and kept items from women.
Maybe he dated. Maybe they were his mom's. Maybe. Hell, it could be his.
Could be. Yeah, we can't make any assumptions. So, who knows. But eventually CPS gets involved with Lee and Brandy's kids.
So, they're removed from the home and taken back to live in Shelby with Brandy's mom and grandparents. The last time Lee recall seeing her sister was when her sister dropped them off at the bus stop before school one morning. And then that was it. I guess they were taken from school and then taken to the mom.
So, time goes by and they don't hear from Brandy. No phone calls, no visits, no notes, which is odd because if CPS is involved, typically there would be court hearings you would show up. Yeah, like what years was it 2006? Yeah, so we're doing visitation, we're doing either supervised or unsupervised visits.
It's like this. Yeah, I don't like that. There's no Brandy. Never shows, never calls, nothing.
So, no one, even like no social worker says, hey, that's weird. Where is she? Right, like even, you know, I've worked cases where the parent is in my or never appears or anything like that. And it's like a, that's a pretty severe and intense thing.
Right. When that happens, like you're doing a lot of searching, trying to find them because you're like, what does something happen to them? Right. What if, you know, and like I worked a case where that was that happened and it's like, what happened to this person?
Right, exactly. That's very scary. So, her family knew her to be kind of all over the place. So, it wasn't uncommon for her to go a few months without contacting them.
So, they didn't think that was too weird. But months turned into years and there was no word from Brandy. So, when Brandy didn't show up to her grandparents' funeral in April of 2010, Brandy's aunt knew something was wrong and she filed in the same person's report. Shh, four years.
Like four years. I mean, I get it, if it's somebody who is kind of in and out, right, like that kind of thing, like you haven't seen, like they're used to not seeing them for a while. Maybe, you know, you're just thinking like, oh, like you never want to go to like worst case scenario. I mean, that's kind of where we go.
Right. But I would, I would say that, you know, normal people, not us, are probably thinking like, oh, they've just, you know, and this is traumatic. Like having your kids removed is traumatic. And, you know, maybe they just thought she distanced herself from everyone and maybe, you know, just kind of wasn't participating in family things.
But then there's sounds like there's this big event that like she definitely should have been at, right? And then it's like people get to talk in and nobody's seen her or like maybe somebody thought like, oh, maybe Aunt Sue's seen her, right? Like it's just me that hasn't seen her or talked to her, but other people have. And yeah, I also don't know some of the circumstances surrounding the CPS involvement.
I don't know what was going on in her life. I mean, maybe she had a substance abuse issue. No, I don't want to throw that out because I don't know if that's factual or not. But you know, maybe there were some things going on in the both.
Yeah, that contributed to them being okay with the distance as well. Yeah. In the separation. I don't really know.
Like was there an argument? It was the last time, you know, talked, maybe it wasn't super healthy or productive. Right. Like it just maybe makes sense to take space for four years.
It's a long time. It's a long time. I mean, you know, it could have been family members saying Brandy get your crap together, you know, and maybe they thought she's using this time to kind of, you know, maybe she's just sort of lost in the time. Yeah.
To I don't know. But I could see that like, you know, everybody in the family thinks that she's connected to somebody else. Right. And not that, you know, like, oh, she's not talking to me.
Like I haven't heard from her, but somebody else, I'm sure somebody else has. Exactly. It just keeps going and going and going. Exactly.
Until you realize nobody else. Right. Right. Right.
So the Dade County Sheriff's Department first looked at the ex-beons, wondering like maybe he was involved in some way or, you know, something was happening. So they actually searched his house, but they didn't find anything. I will say though, they searched it like five years or four years after the fact. So, I don't know.
You know, something was there, probably not anymore. Right. So that's where they kind of first looked. Then they thought about what if she had been sex trafficked, which wouldn't be an uncommon thing.
I mean, you're talking about, you know, Winston-Salemaries, a larger city, which, you know, is very common. There's something like statistic out there that North Carolina, it's a really hot state for that. Yeah. It's a high number of young girls, young girls, but it's more so that people are I mean, it happens both way, but there's a larger number of people being imported than exported.
Right. If that makes sense. Right. But it does happen.
Yes, it does. So please kind of decided to kind of go through that trail, like look through it. So they have facial recognition. And this was told by her sister on TikTok.
So they use facial recognition at any of like the, I guess, airports and all these things. And they kind of determined, no, we don't think that she has been, you know, moved throughout the US. We don't think that she's been moved to the country. We really don't think that sex trafficking is part of this.
Okay. Again, I don't totally understand. Well, I mean, if they're running the facial recognition, maybe they're looking through like, you know, they use the dark web and you know, that's true. So maybe they're like, true.
But I mean, there's a ton of that stuff we don't know about. Right. But you know, maybe they're looking at the sites that they do know about and right, you know, and not seeing her on any of those. Right.
So yeah. So, okay, so they've gotten rid of these two theories. So now they're thinking, what if she ran away? What if she just kind of picked up and moved?
So they started to track her credit cards, her social security number. They even looked at her driver's license, which expired in 2008, but she didn't have it renewed. She didn't use her credit cards. She wasn't using her social.
So it wasn't like, you know, she wanted to start a new life, but she was still using these things. You know, it wasn't that somebody stole her identity. Right. So she just stopped using everything.
Right. So unless you went to start a new life with a whole new identity and like, you know, that's hard. That would be very hard. And I think we've done a patreon before where we talked about that and very few people are successful at that.
Well, it takes a lot of money. So a lot of money, a years of planning, you know, and a lot of people fake their own death. Yeah, for this. So, so strange.
So they also tossed around the idea that Brandy may have been killed by that unknown man or an unknown man that she'd been last been seen with. It's possible. So according to Lee, like I said, she was around 10 or 11 years old at this time. She said that it had been made mention that the last time someone had actually seen Brandy, they had seen her in the company of a man, probably around 45 years old.
Now, could this have been this deacon guy? Maybe. Maybe. It is strange though that, you know, he had the random women's stuff in his house and, you know, when she by the time that she's alone, renting out his house for free, she's kind of good.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, there's so many weird things here.
Yeah. But I did look up, you know, some more information about this just to kind of get, just some clarity because there's so many things about this case because I personally, I don't actually have a TikTok. Oh, yeah. You want to get on that?
It's a great time. Not a blast. I know you do. And I figured that it would just link me to like cleaning stuff.
Yeah. Most likely because I do like to watch stuff like that. Yeah. It's kind of weird.
But yeah. I don't know. I haven't done that. So I haven't seen these videos via TikTok, I can say.
Yeah, it's just things that I've read. So I kind of dug into it a little bit more. I would say that her car was missing as well. Huh.
So Brandy's car, not around. Okay. So then I thought about, okay, what if she got into an accident? Yeah.
Like what if she was driving somewhere, she drove off like a steep incline or something. Her into like a body of water. Right. And her car just hasn't been found.
I did think about that. So the same year that Brandy's sister posted the TikTok, investigators searched the last area where Brandy had been sighted. If this beylos or bellows creek area on the north side of Winston-Salem. But their search pretty much came up empty.
Lee tried to stay like, you know, it was at this house. I can't really know the address. I was just 11 years old. I was kind of living there.
This is sort of what it looks like. You know, it was near water. I think it was near, you know, this lake area. So police are trying to like search this area, but they can't really find anything.
It just kind of becomes like a needle in a haystack almost at some point. So let's jump forward to 2025. Oh, wow. Yeah.
So we're three years in the future. We are 19 years since Brandy disappeared. Okay. Please get a tip about car parts found at you pull it.
All right. I had no idea what you pull it. So I got off Brandy. Well, that's what I thought.
But I had to Google it. Okay. So it's a warehouse in Winston-Salem that sells used car parts. All right.
So if you're missing a seat in your creeper van, you can go to you pull it. You can go to you pull it. And there you go. If you need a bumper after your hit and run, you can go to your exactly.
And of course, we're joking. But don't do that. But a lot of like auto body shops and individuals, like this is just a cheaper way to like, yeah, fix up your car than it is to have to buy all the places like that, especially around just like where I live. It's where I got not necessarily for car parts, but for like, like lumber, no, not by cars, like lumber and siding and fencing.
Like, I got the fence, the white panels that go down my driveway from one of these places where I literally had to like climb into the back of this like barn situation. Wow. And my dad and I like pulled them just like a discount. So like, I mean, the place like that exists.
And they're not all like super sketchy. Like the guy who ran it was great. He wasn't sketch at all. But like, they have like random appliances and things like, you know, they get on discount at like auctions or things like that.
And they just end up in these like warehouses. Yeah. And then people like me who are poor and can't buy, you know, real fencing. Google.
There is a place that your brother follows on Instagram that I was actually looking at today. That is a warehouse that sells things like bathroom vanities. That's how my landlord does all of his like rental properties. I have been looking at that because I'm going to replace the vanity in my primary bathroom.
He bought the landlord when they were doing before we moved in the bathroom, the downstairs bathroom. That whole like mirror medicine guy in a situation came from one of those places. Exactly. It's a win and such a deal.
So they're not like, yeah, no, they do. So there had been a tip that led police there. There actually had been a tip through the tick tock. Oh, yes.
Nice. And so police went and they found these car parts which seem to match Brandi's car. Okay. So they swapped the car for DNA.
And I don't know like, how much of this car was left? Like they searched it and there wasn't any, you know, any clues that came from that necessarily, but like swabbed it and everything to also identify and make sure that like this was Brandi's car. Yeah. So the family gets a call saying, Hey, can you come to the Davis Sheriff's Department?
You know, we just want to have you guys as DNA to, you know, and so they go to be like, Hey, here's my DNA. And that's when the police say, yeah, so we really think this car could be it and we want to try and make that match. And so that's what they do. And it does connect them to Brandi.
Now I do want to say that like having DNA in your car is normal. Yeah, I'm sure I've got tons of DNA all over my car. Absolutely. It doesn't mean there was a crime in the car.
It just means maybe she sneezed right or got a nose lead or yeah, exactly. Or your hair, we could fall a little bit like that. So that's not odd. But what is odd is that all these years later, the parts of her car would just show up.
That is weird. Like, can I trace how long they've been there? I don't know. Like, is there records of?
Because I mean, I'll be honest, like some of the places that I've been to, they're like this, I don't know what their record system is like, it's probably not right. No, no, but maybe it is maybe it's organized. Hey, we like where did chainsaw come from? I got a box of tile.
There's this place called box of tile. Pretty much, but now it had like doors and like different things. And there's like a whole like yard out front and there was just like random piles of boxes of tiles. I love it.
So they were like out in the elements or whatever, but their tiles, so they're not who cares. Who cares? And I'm like, I wonder who dropped these off here. Just random boxes.
What are you using random tiles for? It's for the, um, no, um, in my bedroom, there, the windowsill there, it was really like, like chipped away almost. And like the, it's plaster, but it was like really chipped away. So we just laid the tile there.
You know that you rent, right? You, my landlord does not care. I was good. Like you've painted this place.
You have done everything. I have never looked in a place that I rented that they would allow me to do stuff. Oh, yeah. No, my, it's a very unique situation.
My landlord's great. Um, I can just text him and be like, Hey, I'm going to re-tile a bathroom. He'd be like, that sounds great. Have fun.
Wow. I mean, obviously I'm not going to re-tile a bathroom, but if I wanted to, he'd be like, all right. Wow. Yeah.
I mean, we put up like a, I mean, we put up a temporary fence. Yeah. Because we are renting, we're going to like concrete into the ground, right? But yeah, when, I mean, that was part of this, we got it for such a deal is because it needed all this work and we're willing to do it.
It's true. It's true. It's a great house. It's a lovely, really great house.
I really like living there. Yeah. Anyway, back to this. Back to the story.
And side note, I love doing DIYs. So I'm constantly doing things to my house. Anyway, so now that it puts my rec idea, like, out the window. Oh, yeah.
So yeah, we're finding like the car parts. I want to know what parts. Me too. And that's the thing about the story is so many things are still like unknown.
Yeah. And I hope work comes out because this was just found in February. Oh, wow. Yeah.
So very recent. And another development is that they think they may have found the property, where Lee last saw her sister, like where she was living. And it's actually a cross from a small creek, not a lake. And it was like some miles distance.
Yeah. And I mean, you're talking about the memory of an 11 year old like again. But once I guess Lee saw the pictures of it, she was like, that's it. That's the place.
So detectives were like, okay, it's a correct house. Not where she disappeared from. It's just where she had been living at the time because that wasn't where she was like last seen by anybody. But anyway, they go ahead and they talk to the current owner, the past owners, they're trying to follow up on all these leads.
They basically interview anybody that's been connected to the property. They say that there's no evidence to show that a crime occurred there. Everybody was super cooperative and helpful. So they are also honing in on a man named Eric.
The detective says, quote, we're trying to focus on finding Eric end quote. So they believe that Randy may have met him at a bar in Winston Salem. And they know that he drove a red pickup truck. He's a person of interest just because he was involved with her.
And he was seen with her at one point. They stress like he's not, you know, a suspect here. Right. But like, and then maybe another connection.
But another connection maybe just to say more about like, what was her mental state? Like how was she doing? Had she talked about any other people that she may have been around or that she was meeting up with? They're just basically trying to find the last person that she was seen with.
Yeah, gotcha. So, you know, Lee has continued to use her TikTok platform as a way to not only establish a timeline, but also to get the story out there. You know, Brandy's kids continue to miss her. Her daughter even talked about how as a kid, her mother used to like to sing with them in the car.
And one of their favorite songs was the Lee and Walmik song, I hope you dance. Which by the way, was a very popular song when I was graduating high school. And my friend in high school used that as her senior quote. Yeah, so it's very important for these two girls.
Ashley, the oldest daughter and her sister Sky who are still missing their mom after all these years. And I think that you just, it never goes away. And they're still continuing to look. I will say, if you have any information on Brandy, please call the Davey County Sheriff's Office at 336-751-6238.
Brandy at this point now would be 59 years old. Oh, wow. Just crazy. Yeah.
59, 49. 49. 49 years old. She has brown eyes.
She at the time of her disappearance had long, light brown hair and a very small slim build. She has a couple of tattoos, including a heart with wings on her right wrist and a rose with a dagger on her right shoulder blade. She again would be 48 years old. And she's white.
She is. She's like, yeah. Gotcha. Okay.
So yeah, crazy story. I mean, I never give up hope, you know, right? She's still out there. Yeah, I hope so.
Maybe she had a, you know, mental break or something or maybe, or, you know, maybe, I know it sounds crazy, but you know, there are those stories of some people who have amnesia or, you know, and they don't know who they are. And they kind of have to reestablish themselves. That happens too. Yeah, or, you know, or something did happen.
You know, they're just need to find her and whatever, hopefully in an, you know, okay, state, but if not, like, it's a case of some closure. Some answers. If anything for the family, I, you know, you don't want to hear that she's deceased. But at the same time, at least that would give you some kind of closure.
Yeah, this not knowing. I can't imagine that not knowing. Yeah. I mean, like it's horrible.
The few days during Hurricane Pelling that I didn't know where my family was and like, if everybody was okay, was really awful. And I can't imagine. And that was for like two days. Yeah.
I can't imagine not knowing years for years. Like, I mean, her sister is such an incredible, sounds like an incredible person and advocate for her. And yes, like I can't imagine how she is, you know, she has truly brought this case back to life, in the public eye and using this platform to do so. Because yeah, I think that she's really helping fuel the fire now, which hopefully will lead to some answers.
Yeah. Well, and like we said, make sure to reach out to, you know, if you know anything or anything like that, reach out to the D.C. County Sheriff's Office. Sheriff's Office.
Yeah. I mean, thanks for sharing. That's your welcome. You're welcome.
Thank you, Bridget. Thanks for having me. For the suggestion. Yeah.
And leave for, you know, for making a video. Yeah, doing the thing. One day, if I get the TikTok, I will. Yeah, absolutely.
All righty. Well, if you want to reach out and chat with us, you're welcome to do so at mountainisseries.appleaction at gmail.com. You can get some as an email there. Find us on our Facebook about mysteries, tales from Appalachia.
Find us on Instagram, mountainisseries.appleagia. And check us on our patreon at patreon.com slash mountain mysteries. Our big shout out of this week goes to Cookville, Tennessee. Oh, thanks.
Cookville. We will catch you next week. Bye. Bye.