Four Friends Report Close Sasquatch Encounter in Newfoundland Wilderness
Posted Saturday, July 11, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So, I just stumbled across something that genuinely gave me chills, and I had to share it with anyone who appreciates a good, solid encounter story. A YouTube channel recently covered what might be one of the most unsettling firsthand accounts I've heard in a while, and the details are the kind that stick with you long after the video ends.
The story originally came through Sasquatch Chronicles, which has become one of the most well-known platforms for witnesses to share their experiences. The narrator describes a winter morning back in 2012, deep in the forests of Newfoundland, just off the eastern coast of Canada. For those unfamiliar with the terrain, Newfoundland is known for its incredibly dense, remote woodlands and brutally cold winters, exactly the kind of environment where reports of Sasquatch encounters tend to surface.
The setup is familiar to anyone who's spent time in the bush. A group of four close friends had a remote cabin they used as a basecamp for cutting firewood. Rustic doesn't even begin to describe it, four bunks, a cast iron wood stove, and nothing else. Their routine was well established, and on this particular morning, the narrator drew the short straw and had to be the first one up to fire up the stove and cook breakfast.
That's when things took a turn.
Stepping out onto the porch around 5:30 AM, he noticed something off in the treeline about 15 meters to his left. A dark vertical shape pressed against one of the larger trees. At first, he chalked it up to grogginess, maybe a trick of the dawn light. But it didn't move. Not a shift in weight, not a breath of vapor in the freezing air. Just absolute stillness.
When he brought his three friends outside to confirm what he was seeing, the mood shifted from curiosity to something much heavier. With the light improving, the shape became undeniable. It was humanoid, massive, and covered in dark fur so black it seemed to absorb the surrounding shadows. The figure was leaning against the tree with its head tilted to the right, resting against the bark. Here's where it gets really interesting, the witnesses used a low-hanging branch as a reference point. They were all tall men and knew that branch well. For the figure's head to be touching it, they estimated it had to stand at least seven feet tall.
The group tried everything to rationalize what they were seeing. A lost hunter? Someone in a tactical suit frozen to the spot? But as the sun crept higher, the fur became visible, and no amount of wishful thinking could explain that away.
Then came the moment that really got my heart racing. One of the friends grabbed two pieces of firewood and slammed them together, creating a sharp crack that echoed through the trees. The effect was immediate. The creature's head snapped up and looked directly at them. The witnesses describe eyes and teeth so white they stood out against the dark fur, mouth and eyes wide open in what appeared to be shock.
The video cuts off there, but the tension in the telling is palpable. What makes this account stand out is the multi-witness element. Four people, all seeing the same thing, all arriving at the same conclusion. In Sasquatch research, corroboration like this is considered significant. The remote location, the winter conditions, the physical description matching countless other reports across North America, it all lines up in a way that's hard to dismiss.
Newfoundland itself has a rich history of "wild man" folklore, with Indigenous traditions speaking of large, hairy beings inhabiting the deepest woods long before European settlement. Stories like these didn't start with the Patterson-Gimlin film in 1967, they go back generations.
If you're into detailed encounter stories with that creeping sense of dread, this one is worth the watch. The narrator's delivery really sells it, especially when he describes his hands trembling as he tells the story years later. Check it out and let me know what you think, because this is the kind of report that sparks a lot of conversation.