Minerva Bigfoot Investigation: Megaphone Experiment Yields Strange Sounds and Lights

Posted Tuesday, June 30, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

So there's this episode from the Sci-Fi Central channel that dropped recently, and honestly, it's one of those quiet-on-the-surface investigations that still manages to give you chills by the end. The whole thing takes place at a property in Minerva where the host has been documenting activity for a while now, and this time he's brought along Alexander Petakov for a night of fieldwork. The setup is pretty straightforward. They're heading up a creek bed into the woods to build a campfire, with the plan being to flare the area, hang out for a couple hours, and then split up to do some solo audio work. Classic sit-and-wait methodology, which honestly is one of the more respected approaches in Sasquatch research. The North American Wood Ape Conservancy has been running this kind of stationary observation tactic for years at their spot in Oklahoma, sometimes called Area X, and they've had some of the most compelling long-term data on record. The patience-based approach makes sense when you think about it. These aren't creatures that respond to aggressive pursuit. If anything, the evidence suggests they observe us far more than we observe them. What makes this episode interesting is the contrast. The host openly admits that activity has dropped off significantly since the leaf canopy started thinning out in fall. He's standing there saying it feels dead, questioning whether they've moved on from the area entirely. And then things start happening. First, there's a strange light captured on camera in the more secluded section of the creek bed behind them. The camera was facing away from the cabin, meaning away from the only artificial light source in the area. So whatever that glow was, it wasn't coming from human infrastructure. Could be anything, but in the context of an investigation site with documented history, it's worth noting. Then comes the vocalization. One of the crew describes hearing something that sounded like a yell, but not human. The first comparison that came to mind was a cow, and there is a cow farm in the area, but the host points out the nearest cows would be too far away to be audible from that spot. The sound was also too deep to be coyote. Coyotes can sound eerie in the woods at night, but their vocal range is distinctly higher and more yipping than what was described here. Deep, non-human vocalizations in Sasquatch country are always worth paying attention to, especially when they happen near creek beds, which are classic travel corridors for these beings. The wood knock is the real standout though. A clear, distinct knock was heard, and the crew confirmed it. Wood knocks are one of the most commonly reported auditory phenomena associated with Sasquatch encounters. Researchers like those at the NAWAC have documented hundreds of them. The theory is that these knocks serve as a form of communication, possibly territorial, possibly a response to human presence, and possibly a way to gauge distance and intent. Either way, when you get a clean knock on a quiet night, that's not something you just brush off. One thing the host mentions that I found really compelling is the idea of using sound to elicit responses. They've tried Gregorian chanting, baby crying sounds, John Denver music, and in this episode, creepy music blasted through a megaphone. The reasoning behind this is rooted in primatology. Great apes are curious creatures. They don't operate purely on instinct. Chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, they all display curiosity, playfulness, and even what you'd call mischief. If Sasquatch is a North American great ape, which is the working hypothesis for many researchers, then it stands to reason that unusual or novel sounds could pique their interest enough to approach or respond. The fact that previous attempts with chanting and baby sounds didn't get reactions doesn't invalidate the method. It just means the responses are unpredictable, which honestly tracks with everything we know about these encounters. There's also a really honest moment where the host talks about the psychological side of this work. What happens when nothing happens? How long do you stay? At what point do you accept that maybe they're just not showing up that night? That kind of transparency is rare in paranormal documentary work, and it actually makes the moments when something does happen feel more earned. If you're into long-form Sasquatch investigation content, this one's worth the watch. It's not flashy, it's not overproduced, and it doesn't try to sell you on anything. It's just people in the woods doing the work and letting the evidence speak for itself. Sometimes the quiet nights tell you the most.