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  <title>Tales From The Road</title>

  <lastBuildDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 23:04:30 -0400</lastBuildDate>
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  <copyright>© 2026 Tales From The Road</copyright>
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  <description><![CDATA[Most people fall asleep at night.Truckers are just getting started.For 21 years behind the wheel of an 18-wheeler I’ve crossed deserts, mountains, forests, and lonely highways at 3 AM… the kind of places where strange things happen.UFO sightings.Cryptid encounters.Unexplained lights.Truck stop legends.Stories that sound impossible — until you hear how many people have seen them.This podcast isn’t just trucking stories.It’s a late-night dive into the unexplained, the paranormal, and the mysteries people whisper about after dark.Told by truckers, travelers, and people who’ve seen things they can’t explain.Welcome to Tales From The Road.#UFOs #Cryptids #ParanormalRadio #StrangeEncounters #LateNightMysteries #TalesFromTheRoad]]></description>
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    <itunes:title>Siege of the Rock Apes: Vietnam&#39;s Unseen Watchers</itunes:title>
    <title>Siege of the Rock Apes: Vietnam&#39;s Unseen Watchers</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[What begins as another patrol through the endless green quickly becomes something else entirely—an atmosphere that presses on the lungs and the mind. In this episode, veterans' voices stitch together a mounting dread: movement at the edge of the trees, rocks that thud like punctuation against metal, and a presence that never quite attacks but refuses to leave. It is less an enemy than a verdict, a slow, deliberate notice that this is not your place. We follow firsthand witness accounts—men wh...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>What begins as another patrol through the endless green quickly becomes something else entirely—an atmosphere that presses on the lungs and the mind. In this episode, veterans&apos; voices stitch together a mounting dread: movement at the edge of the trees, rocks that thud like punctuation against metal, and a presence that never quite attacks but refuses to leave. It is less an enemy than a verdict, a slow, deliberate notice that this is not your place.</p><p>We follow firsthand witness accounts—men who went into the jungle certain of what war looked like and came back altered by something that didn’t fit any map or textbook. They recount sleepless nights split into sharp fragments, the unnerving quiet before the rocks begin, and yellow-red eyes that stare without hunger or rage, only an uncanny, patient awareness. The creatures are called many names—rock apes, rakes—but their behavior is the same: pacing, monitoring, flinging stones as if to mark territory or warn intruders away.</p><p>The story builds through small details that compound into a siege: food taken without trace, sounds circling the camp, impacts on helmets and packs, and the maddening way one could feel observed even when nothing was visible. Men double their watches, keep weapons raised, and slowly start to doubt their own senses. These are not cinematic attacks; they are psychological sieges that erode certainty, that turn seasoned soldiers into people who whisper and wait for dawn.</p><p>Through layered witness testimony the episode asks a chilling question: what do you do when the thing that watches you is not driven by conquest but by guardianship—something older than the war, ancient as the trees, and as indifferent to human lines as the jungle itself? The answers are not neat. The soldiers return with scars that are mostly memories: of eyes that didn’t blink, of journeys that felt paced by an unseen footfall, and of a landscape that would not relinquish its own claim.</p><p>Listen as the narrative moves from the first unsettling hints to the slow, inevitable conviction that the men were under siege—not by bullets, but by a presence that remained long after the firing stopped. This is a tale of how the wild can watch you back, and how, sometimes, the scariest thing is not what chases you but what simply refuses to leave.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What begins as another patrol through the endless green quickly becomes something else entirely—an atmosphere that presses on the lungs and the mind. In this episode, veterans&apos; voices stitch together a mounting dread: movement at the edge of the trees, rocks that thud like punctuation against metal, and a presence that never quite attacks but refuses to leave. It is less an enemy than a verdict, a slow, deliberate notice that this is not your place.</p><p>We follow firsthand witness accounts—men who went into the jungle certain of what war looked like and came back altered by something that didn’t fit any map or textbook. They recount sleepless nights split into sharp fragments, the unnerving quiet before the rocks begin, and yellow-red eyes that stare without hunger or rage, only an uncanny, patient awareness. The creatures are called many names—rock apes, rakes—but their behavior is the same: pacing, monitoring, flinging stones as if to mark territory or warn intruders away.</p><p>The story builds through small details that compound into a siege: food taken without trace, sounds circling the camp, impacts on helmets and packs, and the maddening way one could feel observed even when nothing was visible. Men double their watches, keep weapons raised, and slowly start to doubt their own senses. These are not cinematic attacks; they are psychological sieges that erode certainty, that turn seasoned soldiers into people who whisper and wait for dawn.</p><p>Through layered witness testimony the episode asks a chilling question: what do you do when the thing that watches you is not driven by conquest but by guardianship—something older than the war, ancient as the trees, and as indifferent to human lines as the jungle itself? The answers are not neat. The soldiers return with scars that are mostly memories: of eyes that didn’t blink, of journeys that felt paced by an unseen footfall, and of a landscape that would not relinquish its own claim.</p><p>Listen as the narrative moves from the first unsettling hints to the slow, inevitable conviction that the men were under siege—not by bullets, but by a presence that remained long after the firing stopped. This is a tale of how the wild can watch you back, and how, sometimes, the scariest thing is not what chases you but what simply refuses to leave.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>survivorgamer31</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 04:22:49 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>935</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>Happy Face Killer: The Trucker Who Terrorized America&#39;s Highways</itunes:title>
    <title>Happy Face Killer: The Trucker Who Terrorized America&#39;s Highways</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In this episode of Tales from the Road, the host tells the true story of Keith Hunter Jesperson — the "Happy Face Killer" — a long-haul truck driver who preyed on vulnerable women along U.S. highways, left taunting letters with a smiley face, and was eventually arrested and convicted. The episode covers witness accounts, investigative breakthroughs, and how the isolation of life on the road enabled his crimes, serving as a chilling reminder for drivers and travelers to stay vigilant. ]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode of Tales from the Road, the host tells the true story of Keith Hunter Jesperson — the &quot;Happy Face Killer&quot; — a long-haul truck driver who preyed on vulnerable women along U.S. highways, left taunting letters with a smiley face, and was eventually arrested and convicted.</p><p>The episode covers witness accounts, investigative breakthroughs, and how the isolation of life on the road enabled his crimes, serving as a chilling reminder for drivers and travelers to stay vigilant.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode of Tales from the Road, the host tells the true story of Keith Hunter Jesperson — the &quot;Happy Face Killer&quot; — a long-haul truck driver who preyed on vulnerable women along U.S. highways, left taunting letters with a smiley face, and was eventually arrested and convicted.</p><p>The episode covers witness accounts, investigative breakthroughs, and how the isolation of life on the road enabled his crimes, serving as a chilling reminder for drivers and travelers to stay vigilant.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 01:50:35 -0400</pubDate>
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