Alaska Bigfoot Studies Shares Sunday Thoughts and Dogman Encounter
Posted Monday, July 13, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's something refreshingly honest about a researcher who admits their own habits might be working against them. A recent upload from Chuke's Outdoor Adventures tackles a topic that doesn't get nearly enough attention in the Sasquatch community: whether our obsession with gadgets and tech is actually keeping us from making real contact in the field.
The host, who runs Alaska Bigfoot Studies out of Anchorage, spends a lot of time outdoors and has plenty of experience with the wildlife that shares Alaska's forests. Moose, black bears, wolves, and even the occasional duck sighting all make appearances in his regular Sunday updates. But what makes this particular video worth checking out is his willingness to dig into a philosophical question that many researchers quietly avoid.
He brings up an interesting angle connected to recent UFO disclosure stories. Apparently, some whistleblowers who worked with Dr. Greer in Indonesia described how certain operations required people whose consciousness wasn't as "tainted" by modern technology. These individuals allegedly possessed abilities that technology tends to diminish. Now, whether you buy into the UFO angle or not, the underlying idea is fascinating when applied to Sasquatch research. If technology dulls certain human senses or intuitions, what does that mean for researchers who head into the woods loaded down with gadgets?
The host doesn't shy away from his own contradictions. He's openly a gadget guy, the kind of person who gets excited about night vision, thermal optics, IR lasers, and the latest gear. And he's not wrong that thermal imaging and night vision have produced some genuinely compelling evidence over the years. Thermal cameras have captured heat signatures moving through forests that match descriptions of large bipedal creatures, and night vision footage has documented unexplained vocalizations and movements that daylight cameras miss entirely.
But here's where it gets really interesting. He shares a personal experience from Prince of Wales Island, where one of his game cameras was physically pushed down and turned away. That's not unusual, actually. Researchers across North America have reported similar incidents with trail cameras, sometimes finding them knocked over, repositioned, or simply missing memory cards. The idea that Sasquatch might be aware of surveillance equipment and actively avoid or disable it has been floating around the research community for years.
He also mentions a dogman encounter during an extended camping trip in the mountains, far from technology and cell service. This aligns with countless other witness reports suggesting that the most profound encounters tend to happen when people disconnect from their devices and immerse themselves fully in nature. There's something to be said for the idea that our constant connection to Wi-Fi, Starlink, and smartphones creates a kind of barrier between us and the wilderness.
The takeaway from this video is pretty simple but worth sitting with. Technology has its place in Sasquatch research, but balance matters. The best evidence might come from researchers who learn to trust their instincts, their senses, and their connection to the land, rather than relying solely on the latest thermal scope or trail cam.
Anyone interested in the intersection of technology, consciousness, and field research should definitely give this one a watch. It's a good reminder that sometimes the best tool you can bring into the forest is your own awareness.