Bigfoot Researchers Capture Thermal Image During Live Field Investigation
Posted Saturday, July 18, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So there's this wild live stream that popped up on YouTube featuring four separate teams out in the field simultaneously, all hunting in some of the most active Sasquatch hotspots across the country. The host was battling a tropical storm rolling through her area, losing power multiple times, but she refused to let that stop the show. That kind of dedication right there tells you everything you need to know about the Sasquatch research community.
The stream kicked off with some news clips about sightings in various areas. One witness described seeing something massive, around 10 feet tall, moving through their area. A sheriff's office even posted safety tips on social media about encounters. When local law enforcement is putting out advisories about Sasquatch, you know the activity is real.
First team up was Jason Monk, posted up in Mystic Springs. This guy is doing some fascinating work. He captured a thermal image back on June 29th that has the community buzzing. Some folks tried to debunk it as a great horned owl, but Jason broke down the analysis during the stream. He measured the heat signature against a tree limb, and the math puts the figure somewhere between seven and eight feet tall. Standing about five feet behind the tree, the subject appears to be well over seven feet. That's not an owl, folks. Owls don't have that kind of thermal mass or that vertical profile.
What really stood out about Jason's approach was his ritual before heading out for the night. He performed a Muscogee Creek opening ceremony, singing a traditional welcome song from the Mvskoke tribe. Then he set out offerings: corn, strawberries, coffee, beans, and a cigar to share. This is the kind of respectful, ceremonial approach that more researchers should be adopting. Building a relationship rather than just trying to capture evidence.
The second team was in what's called the Green Swamp, an area they've nicknamed the Red Zone because of the intense activity. Jared has been researching this location for seven months, and things really ramped up in April. He's had things thrown at him from behind the campsite, captured vocalizations, screams, and knocks on audio. His teammate Blake had a chilling moment about two months ago when he spotted a tall, dark, shadowy figure that definitely wasn't human while backing up a truck on a trail.
But the encounter that really got everyone talking came from an unexpected visitor. A guy named Dakota showed up at their campsite, and when Jared found out he was also a researcher, Dakota shared a childhood experience from the East Tennessee Appalachian Mountains. He was about 10 or 11 years old, playing manhunt on about 50 acres of woods, when he tripped and fell. When he looked up, there was a solid black figure standing over him, somewhere between seven and eight feet tall. This being picked him up, set him on his feet, turned around, and walked away. Dakota said you couldn't even hear the footsteps. That encounter is what sparked his lifelong interest in Sasquatch research.
Stories like Dakota's are exactly why this subject deserves serious attention. A seven to eight foot tall bipedal being that can move silently through dense forest, picking up a child without harm and setting them down gently? That's not aggressive behavior. That's something else entirely.
The stream was cut short due to the storm, but the content that did make it through was absolutely worth checking out. Multiple active investigations happening simultaneously, thermal evidence analysis, ceremonial approaches to fieldwork, and a firsthand encounter that spans decades. This is the kind of grassroots research the community needs more of.
Definitely worth watching if you want to see how modern Sasquatch investigation actually works in the field.