Sasquatch Researcher Details 20 Close Encounters Without Clear Footage
Posted Friday, June 19, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So there's a video making the rounds over on The Sasquatch Encounter Brigade YouTube channel that I just had to talk about because the title alone stopped me in my tracks. "Video of Juvenile Sasquatch in a Tree?…And the Video that Made Me Want To Quit." Yeah, you read that right. This one hits different.
The researcher behind the channel opens up right away about how important this particular piece of content is to him. He's asking viewers to actually watch the whole thing this time, and honestly, after sitting through it, I get why. There's a lot going on here, and it's not just about the footage itself. It's about the emotional journey this guy has been on.
The setup is classic Sasquatch research territory. He's out at what he calls his "sitting spot" — a location he's been documenting activity at for years now. We're talking about a place where he's had somewhere between six and eight separate interactions over the past three years, with around 20 different nights of recorded activity lasting anywhere from five to 30 minutes each. And yet, getting them on video? That's the frustrating part. He mentions how the activity tends to creep up starting in late summer, ramping up through August and September, and continuing on through the year.
What really caught my attention was his breakdown of why there isn't more video evidence out there. He brings up a point that skeptics love to throw around — if these creatures exist, why isn't everyone filming them? His answer is actually pretty compelling. Most people who go looking for Sasquatch aren't recording. Some don't care about proving anything to anyone. Others are so shocked by what they're seeing that grabbing their phone is the absolute last thing on their mind. And then there's the equipment issue. He mentions wanting to eventually record 360 degrees at all times, but admits it's expensive and difficult to pull off.
He also takes a moment to address the Joe Rogan skepticism — specifically the argument that if Sasquatch existed, humans would have hunted them into extinction by now, using their skulls as drinking cups and wearing their teeth as necklaces. The researcher's response? These aren't animals in the traditional sense. He believes they're closer to human than most people want to admit, and that we really don't understand what we're dealing with.
Now, here's where things get really interesting. He talks about an event that took place on November 17th, 2025 — just three days before he recorded this discussion — that shook him to his core. He says he wanted to quit doing Sasquatch research entirely. Not because he stopped believing, but because he felt like he'd been wrong about everything he had assumed about these creatures. He mentions being as prepared as he could possibly be for whatever happened, and yet the experience still hit him in a way he wasn't expecting.
Throughout the video, he describes a series of strange events happening around him. Owls calling. Wood knocks. Something crashing across the creek behind him. An object — what he calls a "throw" — landing just 15 to 20 feet behind him while he was talking. Neighbor's dogs going absolutely ballistic. All of it happening in sequence, almost like a coordinated display. He initially tried to dismiss it as just rain causing things to fall from trees, but the combination of events made that explanation feel pretty thin.
He also touches on the idea that Sasquatch have "special abilities," but pushes back against the more supernatural explanations floating around out there — the cloaking, the vibration shifting, the nephilim theories. He says everything he's witnessed has a rational explanation behind it, even if that explanation is hard to pin down.
The title of the video references a juvenile Sasquatch in a tree, and while the researcher doesn't go into exhaustive detail about that specific footage in this clip, the context makes it clear this is part of a larger body of evidence he's been compiling. The emotional weight of the video comes from the fact that he's not just presenting footage — he's sharing how this research has changed him as a person.
Honestly, this is one of those videos that sticks with you. It's not your typical "look at this blurry thing in the woods" content. It's a researcher being vulnerable about the toll this work takes, while also presenting what he believes is genuine evidence of something extraordinary living right alongside us. If you haven't checked it out yet, do yourself a favor and give it a watch. Just make sure you watch the whole thing like he asks. There's a lot to unpack here.