Bigfoot Investigation in Oklahoma's Ouachita Mountains Reveals Possible Sighting
Posted Tuesday, July 14, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
If you've ever wondered what Bigfoot research looked like before the internet took over, there's a documentary floating around YouTube that takes you right into the thick of it. It's a fascinating watch that blends old-school field investigation with some genuinely spine-tingling moments, and it's worth carving out some time for.
The documentary focuses on research being conducted in the Ouachita Mountains of southeastern Oklahoma, a region that doesn't get nearly enough attention in the Sasquatch world. Most folks picture Oklahoma as flat prairie land, but the southeastern corner is a whole different beast. The Ouachitas are a distinct mountain range that runs north-south, completely separate from the Ozarks which run east-west. Geologically and ecologically, they're their own thing, and that rugged, isolated terrain makes it prime habitat for a large, reclusive hominid to remain hidden.
One of the most compelling segments features a researcher describing an encounter that will make your hair stand up. While in the field with a companion named Darryl, who was doing barred owl calls from camp to bring the owls in, they heard something that sounded like a barred owl but felt off. Then it let out what the researcher described as a "god awful banshee scream" like a wild woman screaming in the forest. About half an hour later, they heard it again, but this time it had moved from northwest to due west. The idea that something was deliberately mimicking owl calls before unleashing that terrifying vocalization is exactly the kind of behavior reported by witnesses across the country. Vocal mimicry has long been considered a hallmark of Sasquatch behavior, with researchers like Dr. Jeff Meldrum and others documenting similar accounts over the years.
The documentary also does a great job of showing how the research community has evolved. It touches on the early days when folks like Don Keating in Ohio would organize town hall meetings and run mailing lists to share information and coordinate investigations. Back then, if someone reported a sighting within 36 hours, researchers would rush out to document it on videotape or audiotape, photograph the area, and look for physical evidence. There wasn't a Facebook group to post in. You had to actually show up.
But the real highlight comes during a nighttime field operation with radio communication between team members. Darryl, positioned on a slope with a six-power scope, spots something that stops him cold. He describes seeing a large flash of white-gray movement through the trees, something of significant size about 70 to 75 meters up the slope. The trees pushed out and moved significantly, and then he got a clearer look. What he describes next is the kind of detail that makes every researcher lean in: a large figure moving slowly from left to right, slightly bumping its head so he could see the top of the head, with slits for eyes just above the leaves, and then glimpses of white between the green foliage before it disappeared.
That level of detail, the deliberate movement, the eye shape, the coloration, matches patterns that have shown up in credible sighting reports for decades. The researchers in the documentary emphasize the importance of critical thinking in the field, making sure you don't turn every sound or shadow into Sasquatch sign just because you believe they're out there. That discipline is what separates serious investigators from casual observers.
The documentary is a solid reminder that the search for Sasquatch isn't just about catching one on camera. It's about understanding the landscapes they might inhabit, documenting witness accounts, and putting in the hours in the field. The Ouachitas deserve more attention from researchers, and this video makes a strong case for why.
Definitely worth checking out if you haven't already.