 I'm Darren Marlar and this is a Weird Darkness bonus bite. From the New York Post, Naked Wolf Man spotted by hikers in German mountains, he wouldn't take his eyes off of us by Richard Paulina. Nightmare Fuel Hikers captured a bone-chilling photo of a mysterious naked wolf man who officials believe has lived in the wild for at least five years as they traveled through Germany's Harz Mountains on Tuesday. Gina Weiss and her friend Toby encountered the unkempt figure who sat on a rock and seemingly carried a spear in the heart of the wilderness, telling German newspaper Build that the figure wouldn't take his eyes off us. Weiss, 31, said the chance encounter with the unknown mountain man lasted about 10 minutes as she explored the woods near Blankenburg about 150 miles outside of Berlin. When we reached the sand caves we saw the wolf man, Weiss told the outlet. He stood up high on one of the caves and held a long wooden stick like a lance in his arm. Weiss estimated the man to be in his 40s and said it looked as if he was from the prehistoric era. He wouldn't take his eyes off us, said nothing. He looked dirty like a stone-aged man from a history book, she revealed. The Times reported that police in Blankenburg received multiple reports over the past five years of a bizarre figure draped in wolf fur or in a wolf costume who roamed freely in its wilderness. In March, authorities received a call from a distressed hiker demanding help, saying there's a wolf man running around here in the park, sharing that unexplainable fire bolts were appearing around the area of the figure, the outlet said. However, emergency personnel couldn't find the wolf man when they reached the site for its investigation. Members of the Blankenburg fire brigade also reported seeing a man roaming the forest, only to scurry away when noticing the crew, the outlet reported from MDR, the regional public broadcaster of Saxody and Halt, the state where Blankenburg's located. Emergency personnel explained their concern lies more that a man is living in the woods and could cause a detrimental wildfire than the legend of a wolf man stalking hikers out in the wild. Someone clearly knows how to live outside and adapt to the changing seasons, Alexander Beck, the head of Blankenburg fire brigade, told Build. Located in northern Germany, the Harz mountain range stretches 68 miles into the German states, Sachsen-Anhalt and Anita Sachsen, with its highest peak being the Brocken, towering over the landscape at more than 3,700 feet, according to the park's website. The region is known for its labyrinth landscape and dense vegetation which differs throughout its massive reach. Eerie legends and myths of strange and otherworldly creatures lurking in the vast mountain ranges and wilderness are nothing new for German folktales and fables. A third of the country is covered by dense woodland and the Harz's region forest is entrenched with lore focused around witches, ancient cults, and frightening devilish beasts prowling in the shadows. The culture around witches in the wilderness runs deep enough that locals in the area celebrated a festival called Walpurgis Night or Witch's Night on April 30 of each year since 870 AD according to worldhistory.org. A centuries old lore dating back some time in the mid-700s tells the tale of witches descending to the highest mountain peaks of the Harz region on May Day's Eve when their powers are legend to be most potent and danced around the fire while entering an unholy matrimony with the devil. The event is to pay respect to a 9th century English missionary named Saint Walpurgia who repelled the witches' evilness that was wreaking havoc on the nearby towns according to the outlet. The festival is often referred to as the Second Halloween. According to the legend, a well-lit fire is meant to keep evil spirits away only further fueling the strangeness of the firesights found throughout the National Park as of recent, possibly made by a wild wolf man. Find the link to the original story in the show notes and find more news in the Weird News & Blog at WeirdDarkness.com.