Woman Shares Bigfoot Encounter on Washington's Olympic Peninsula

Posted Thursday, July 16, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

# Track Casts, Whoop Bark Responses, and a Witness Who Got More Than She Bargained For on the Olympic Peninsula So there's this interview that recently popped up on YouTube over at the Bigfoot Society channel, and honestly, it's one of those conversations that sticks with you long after it's over. Jeremiah Byron sat down with a witness from Washington state's Olympic Peninsula who had a genuinely chilling encounter last October — and she came prepared with physical evidence. Picture this: it's around 4 AM, pitch dark, and this woman is walking her dog through her quiet cul-de-sac neighborhood. The kind of place where elk, deer, and coyotes are regular visitors. Then out of nowhere, this absolutely putrid stench hits her. She describes it as everything gross piled together and left to cook in the hot sun — rotting flesh, fish, rotten eggs, the whole nasty cocktail. Her dog, who has a high prey drive, perks up immediately. Here's where it gets wild. She decides to try a whoop bark — just one, just to see what happens. And something answered back. Loud. Like, unnaturally loud. She says it sounded like the creature had "barrels for lungs" and was mimicking her exactly. Her dog's hair stood straight up on her back. What really sealed it for her was the elk. These are animals that don't spook at anything — backfiring trucks, dogs, nothing. But they were absolutely terrified. Eyes wide, necks stretched back, clumped together tight. Whatever was back there had them treating it like a serious predator. She went home, grabbed her gear, and went back to investigate before any rain could wash away evidence. What she found were four tracks — one adult and three juveniles. She made a cast of the right foot because it was the clearest one, and brought it to the Bigfoot Research Convention in Ocean Shores that November. She says it was the first time she'd told anyone the full story, and being in a room full of believers was like "a safe space." The tracks themselves were massive — she compared them to grizzly and black bear prints and said there was zero resemblance. If you've ever studied Bigfoot track morphology, you know that dermal ridges, mid-tarsal breaks, and pressure patterns are some of the key features that distinguish Sasquatch prints from bear tracks. A proper cast can reveal those details in ways that photos simply can't. About a month after the initial encounter, she tried another howl and got another response — this one described as very loud, very long, and definitely not coyote. Wolves in that area are practically extinct and stick to much higher elevations, so the vocalization didn't match any known animal in the region. The Olympic Peninsula and surrounding areas like Gifford Pinchot and Skamania County are absolute hotbeds for activity. The dense, old-growth forests, the rugged terrain, the remote wilderness — it's exactly the kind of habitat where a reclusive species could thrive undetected. Cushman, Mount Jupiter, the Dosewallips area — these places come up again and again in witness reports. But what really made this interview stand out was the witness's perspective on what Bigfoot actually is. She's a paranormal investigator — came from the ghost-hunting world — and she dropped a take that was genuinely thought-provoking. She doesn't just ask whether Bigfoot exists; she asks what Bigfoot is. Her theory? That they seem to "hover between this world and another." She mentioned the hologram-like eyes, the way they can fade away and disappear, how they stay just out of light range even with flashlights and spotlights, and how trail cameras almost never catch them clearly. There's something to that. The way witnesses consistently describe that almost otherworldly quality — the way these beings seem to exist on a different perceptual plane than we do — it's a thread that runs through so many encounter reports. Whether you interpret that as interdimensional, spiritual, or simply an evolved survival mechanism doesn't really matter. The consistency of the description is what makes it interesting. She also made a point that honestly needs to be heard more often: Bigfoot might be the only species humans haven't completely screwed up. We haven't hunted them to extinction, destroyed their habitat, or wiped them out. As a conservationist, she sees no reason to go capture one or hunt one. Her take is that they're respectful of us, and we should be respectful of them right back. That mindset — the conservation angle, the respect angle — is something that resonates deeply with a lot of people in this community. The idea that maybe, just maybe, there's something out there that we've left alone, and that's why it's still here. The full interview is worth checking out. Jeremiah Byron does a solid job letting the witness tell her story without rushing her, and there's a lot more detail in there about the track cast, the convention experience, and other sightings in the area. If you're into Olympic Peninsula encounters or vocalization response stories, this one's a must-watch.