Maxim Ferkel Discusses Patterson-Gimlin Film and Interdimensional Bigfoot Theory

Posted Thursday, July 16, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

So, I stumbled across this fascinating interview on YouTube the other day over on the Deep Woods Paranormal channel, and I just had to share it with you all. If you're anything like me, you've probably been seeing all the chatter online about that recent documentary claiming the Patterson-Gimlin film is a hoax. Well, this video takes a completely different angle, and honestly? It's got me thinking. The host brings on Maxim Ferkel, and let me tell you, this guy's credentials are wild. He's a former rock journalist AND a former psychologist who got completely bitten by the paranormal bug. And when I say paranormal, I mean the whole spectrum, cryptids, UAPs, demonology, the works. He wrote a book called "The Lost Tribes of Bigfoot" published by Hangar 1, which apparently has this cool feature with QR codes that link to video summaries of each chapter. How neat is that? But here's where things get really interesting. Maxim comes at this from what he calls the "woo side," and he's not afraid to say it. He believes, like Jacques Vallée and John Keel, that Bigfoot might be an interdimensional traveler. He references the Einstein-Rosen bridge theory, that whole concept about folding the space-time continuum and punching a portal through it. His logic actually makes a lot of sense when you think about it. If these beings were traveling trillions of light-years from somewhere else, the energy and motivation required would be astronomical. But if they're popping in and out of our dimension through some kind of natural phenomenon? That's a completely different ballgame. What really got me was when he started talking about the elements of high strangeness. J. Allen Hynek had this principle that one or two weird things could be coincidence, but when you stack three, four, five strange elements together, you have to pay attention. And when it comes to Sasquatch encounters, the list is long. Eyewitnesses seeing them together, the knocks, rocks being thrown at people, those mysterious wood structures, and of course, that unmistakable smell, wet dog, fecal matter, rotten eggs. It's always there. You can't make that stuff up. Then there's the elephant in the room that nobody can quite explain. Where are the bodies? Maxim brings up a really good point about decomposition. He lives in Florida part of the year and watched a wild pig carcass on the side of the road disappear in about a week and a half thanks to turkey buzzards and the sun. Imagine what happens in the deep forest with every predator in the area. Nature doesn't leave much behind. And then there's that theory about Sasquatch potentially burying their own dead, which would explain why we never find remains. He also touches on the Albert Ostman case from 1924, which is one of my favorite stories. A Swedish Canadian trapper who got snatched up in his sleeping bag by a family of Sasquatch, a mother, father, son, and daughter. They kept him for days, fed him sweet grass, and watched him curiously. Ostman eventually escaped by getting the papa Sasquatch sick on chewing tobacco. I mean, you can't write this stuff. The whole interview is worth checking out if you want to hear the full breakdown of why that documentary got it wrong and what the biomechanical evidence actually shows. Maxim goes deep into the research, the footprints, the witness accounts, all of it. It's the kind of conversation that reminds you why this subject has captivated researchers for decades. If you're looking for something to watch tonight that might shift your perspective a little, this one's definitely worth your time.