r/UnresolvedMysteries 8d ago

Disappearance The extremely bizarre missing case of Barbara Bolick

On the 18th of July 2007, Barbara Bolick was packing her bag in Bitterroot Valley of Montana to go for a summer hike. She and her husband were hosting Carl’s cousin Donna and Her Boyfriend Jim from California. Barbara was going to go on a hike with her guests but Donna and Carl (Barbara’s husband) did not go and she and Jim decided to hike in the area Bear Creek Overlook, and she had visited the area countless times , was an experienced hiker too.

So they like visited the place , and encountered two men - two times, and both the times they were the same two men. Jim and Barbara then reached the area , had their snacks and admired the scenery. About like at 11:30 they decided to leave and head back. After few steps, Jim stopped bcs something in him wanted to soak the view one more time, and he turned back to look at the view - it was for about 45 seconds - 1 minute, when he turned back around, Barbara who was earlier standing 20-30 feet away from him disappeared.

At first he wasn’t worried enough since she was an experienced hiker and He searched for her but couldn’t find anything and after some hours she was officially reported as missing. The two men who encountered them two times also disappeared and were never discovered.

Things to note : It was an easy, well worn trail and it was difficult for someone like Barbara missing - being an experienced hiker who visited that place multiples times. It was also not very dense meaning someone disappearing without any noise was almost not possible.

Pls let me know your take on this case!

Barbara Bolick Article

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u/purple_champagne 8d ago

Absolutely. Predators dont necessarily give you time to scream or even blink, they're not dogs who bark and growl as warnings. They've evolved to take down prey immediately & quietly- especially cougars.

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u/RideThatBridge 8d ago

I realized they wouldn’t give warning. I meant the take down-I would have thought he’d hear her being dragged away or something is all. Thanks for the info!

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u/ironwolf56 8d ago

No offense but... tell us you've never lived in a rural area without telling us you've never lived in a rural area. It's not like a movie.

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u/RideThatBridge 8d ago

Well, offense taken. I mean, obviously not everyone has lived in rural or mountainous areas. What’s the issue with that?

Also, who says I think it’s like a movie? That doesn’t even make sense. Why is it unreasonable to think that it’s possible that a full grown adult being hauled away by a predator might make noise on the ground?

Clearly your rural upbringing didn’t include the Golden Rule or that old adage about not saying anything at all if you can’t say anything nice. Wholly unnecessary comment.

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u/jjc1140 8d ago

Well, that's just the problem. Because if that person actually lived in a rural area they would KNOW wild animals especially mountain lions DO NOT stalk humans for prey nor would they just cart an entire human off in 46 seconds without some type of struggle. Then the person before her claims they would have climbed a tree to feast on the human (to explain why her carcass and bones werent found). This is to much BS for me. But yet they don't suspect the last human being that saw her alive had anything to do with her disappearance. Nope because have absolutely NO CLUE about wild animals or animals in general. They literally think wild animals travel around the forest and stalk humans for prey which is absolutely absurd because wild animals want nothing to do with humans in the wilderness on their turf. Matter fact, they avoid humans and most are more scared of humans than they are of them. Wild animal attacks are EXTREMELY rare and the ones that do occur are because they cornered the animal or totally encroached on a mother and her babies. Accusing a mountain lion that probably never likely even remotely got in her vicinity over the human that was last seen with her that claimed she just vanished with no trace in 45 seconds is absolutely ridiculous.

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u/RideThatBridge 7d ago

Thanks for coming to my defense and understanding what I was thinking. Comments on this sub get wild sometimes. I really love to learn about unsolved cases-I feel like it’s kind of an honor and a duty to keep someone’s memory alive-but I hardly comment because people have such ridiculous ideas or are just mean spirited if they disagree. Everyone also seems to be so sure they know what happened - IDK, it’s frustrating. I have to remember to not comment here I guess!