Josh Turner Shares Family Bigfoot and Dogman Encounters
Posted Saturday, June 20, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
A recent episode of The Cryptid Profiler podcast features a fascinating conversation with Josh Turner, host of Paranormal Roundtable, who shares a chilling personal encounter from his teenage years in Taylor, Texas. Turner opens up about a Halloween night run-in with what he describes as a werewolf-like entity, a memory that has stuck with him for decades and shaped his entire journey into the world of cryptids.
Turner grew up surrounded by stories of strange beings from both sides of his family. His mother, who is Hispanic and Native, and his father, who is of Northern European descent with Scotch and Cossack roots, both had family members who claimed to have seen unusual creatures. His grandparents reportedly spotted a dogman near Alexandria, Louisiana, before he was even born, and his grandfather had an encounter up in Candelaria in the Pinto Canyon area. These weren't just campfire tales either, they were firsthand accounts passed down through generations.
What makes Turner's story particularly interesting is the cultural lens he brings to it. In Hispanic folklore, the creature he encountered is known as the cadejo or hombre lobo, a wolf-like entity that roams the night. His aunt Rosa used to tell him he had "the ojo del diablo," the gift of the eye, which she claimed allowed him to see things others couldn't. Turner admits he always thought of it more as a curse than a gift, especially given the strange experiences he had in various houses his family lived in.
The encounter itself happened when Turner was 15 years old. He and a friend had been out participating in a local tradition in Taylor, Texas, egging cop cars, something that apparently drew 25 to 30 kids each year. Before heading out that night, his mother told him, "I hope you see the devil tonight." Whether it was a curse or just frustration with his rebellious behavior, Turner ended up seeing something that night that he describes as looking like a werewolf. He saw it alongside a friend whose family had also witnessed the creature, and the story was even shared at a gathering of around 50 people during a funeral reception.
Turner also touches on something that resonates with many in the Bigfoot research community, the idea that these beings might not be entirely of this world. He believes they can be flesh and blood but also capable of moving interdimensionally. This perspective aligns with theories some researchers have proposed about Sasquatch and other cryptids potentially slipping between dimensions, especially in areas known for high strangeness or vortex activity.
Adding another layer to the family cryptid history, Turner mentions that his father recently shared a story about seeing a Bigfoot while working on a cherry farm in Washington state. While it wasn't a direct encounter, it's another piece of the puzzle that has shaped Turner's beliefs about these beings.
The episode is worth checking out for anyone interested in how cultural folklore and personal experience intersect with the broader cryptid phenomenon. Turner's background, blending Native, Hispanic, and European traditions, offers a unique perspective on entities that many cultures around the world have reported for centuries. His story is a reminder that these encounters don't just happen to random strangers, they often run in families, passed down through stories until someone finally has their own face-to-face moment with the unknown.
For those curious about the cadejo specifically, it's worth noting that this creature appears in folklore across Latin America, often described as a black or white dog with glowing red eyes that guards travelers or haunts roads at night. Some traditions describe it as a protective spirit, while others paint it as a demonic entity. Turner's distinction between the cadejo and the hombre lobo suggests he believes these are two separate beings, even though his great-aunt treated them as one and the same.
The full conversation dives deeper into Turner's family history, his views on the demonic roots of these creatures, and another encounter he had at 17 that some people confuse with his dogman sighting. It's a solid listen for anyone who enjoys hearing witnesses tell their stories in their own words.