Bigfoot Researcher Captures Vocalizations and Wood Knocks During Night Experiment
Posted Saturday, July 11, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So, I just came across this video on YouTube that I absolutely had to share with you all. The Sasquatch Encounter Brigade posted something that honestly stopped me in my tracks. Two cameras, two different Sasquatch subjects, and a night that apparently verified three major things the researcher had been wondering about for years.
Here's the deal. The person behind the channel has been documenting activity at a specific spot for the past three years. We're talking about a location they visit regularly, a kind of sitting spot near a creek, where things have been happening in a pretty consistent pattern. August through mid-November, roughly six to eight nights of activity per year, all within a three-month window. The pattern? Wood knocks, vocalizations, rocks being thrown, things breaking, and subjects running up behind them. The researcher describes it almost like a performance, with the subjects running circles around them.
But here's what makes this particular night so significant. The researcher had noticed the activity was getting a bit stagnant. Same types of events, same behaviors, nothing really changing up. So they came up with a creative plan. They made a mask, put reflective tape on it, and decided to test how far away their night vision body cameras could actually pick up eye shine. The idea was to act like a Sasquatch themselves, crawl around, peek out, and see what the cameras could capture. If something happened during this process, they were going to completely ignore it.
What happened next is where things get really interesting. While they were down by the creek with the mask, something hit the water. Then there was movement in the woods behind them. And when they started walking away from the creek, an area they hadn't crossed at night in a very long time during these interactions, there was an extremely loud breaking and crushing sound. So close and so loud it sounded like they were stepping on a big rotten limb, except the path was clear.
The researcher believes the subjects use wood knocks and vocalizations to communicate the movements of human beings, specifically their movements. This night apparently confirmed that theory in a big way. The body camera picked up a vocalization that the researcher doesn't even remember hearing in person, which is fascinating because it suggests the subjects were communicating while staying just out of audible range for human ears but within range of the equipment.
One thing that really stood out to me was the researcher's observation about how the subjects behave. They don't just show up and immediately throw a rock right in front of you. They start making noise further out, across the creek, and gradually increase the volume and get closer and closer. They have the ability to come up right behind you without you even knowing, and the researcher believes that's intentional. If they wanted to scare someone off, they absolutely could. But they don't. It's almost like they're warming you up to the idea that they're out there.
The video itself shows the perspective from two different cameras. One on the tripod up at the sitting spot, and another when the researcher is down at the creek and eventually crosses it. The researcher had stopped crossing the creek during these interactions because they considered it the subjects' safe space, their hill. So the fact that they crossed it that night and got that incredibly loud breaking sound response is huge.
I could go on and on about this, but honestly, you need to watch this one for yourself. The way the researcher breaks down the timeline and explains what they believe was happening is something you really have to experience firsthand. The audio alone, especially that vocalization the body camera picked up, is worth tuning in for.
Check it out and let me know what you think. This is the kind of documentation that keeps pushing the conversation forward, and nights like this one are exactly why researchers keep going back out there.