Bigfoot Researchers Share Alaska Sightings and Oklahoma Carcass Mystery
Posted Sunday, June 21, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
If you've ever wondered what's really happening in the remote villages of Alaska when it comes to Sasquatch sightings, a recent roundtable discussion over on the Creek Devil YouTube channel is worth carving out some time for. Host William Jevning sits down with Fred, a researcher based out of Alaska, along with Chuck and Forest, for a laid-back "Campfire Talk" that covers some genuinely compelling new evidence coming out of the Last Frontier.
Fred has been busy collecting reports and physical evidence from native hunters across the region, and he's starting to share more of it publicly. One of the most interesting pieces is a set of trackway photographs sent to him by Vincent Wasley out of Nunapitchuk. Vincent and some hunting partners were about 42 miles north of the village near the Kuskokwim Mountains when they initially mistook the tracks for bear. Once the trail broke out into the open on the other side of the brush, the true nature of the trackway became obvious. They snapped photos and wisely decided to leave the area. Fred mentions that Vincent's sister and a cousin had a separate encounter a year or two prior in a more southern location, watching one of these creatures moving up and down a ridge at a 45-degree angle and pausing by a tree. The remoteness of these locations makes hoaxing virtually impossible, as Fred points out. Why would anyone trek into the middle of nowhere, west-northwest of Bethel, to fake tracks when there's no audience?
Fred also mentions a short video clip from Selawik showing one of these creatures moving at a good pace across the screen. The footage was captured on a cell phone and had to be zoomed in due to distance, but it's another piece of the growing puzzle coming out of the Alaskan villages.
The conversation takes a wild turn when Chuck shares a story from Oklahoma that will leave you scratching your head. A friend of his in Kansas received a call from a woman whose mother had been driving and spotted what she described as a dead chimpanzee on the side of the highway along one of the mile markers. Chuck, being the dedicated investigator he is, drove an hour and a half at about 80 miles an hour with his teenage son in tow to check it out. When he arrived, there was nothing there, but he noticed fresh pickup truck tire tracks in the ditch at that exact mile marker. His theory? Someone came along and hauled whatever it was away. Inside a nearby convenience store, he encountered three tribal police officers and a Kansas state trooper. When he showed them his researcher business card and mentioned the report, they weren't willing to chat about it, but the fact that they were there at all raises questions. Chuck also mentions finding 23-inch tracks in a lady's backyard in one of the towns in that area, which is massive when you consider the average Sasquatch track falls somewhere in the 15 to 18-inch range.
The discussion also touches on the sheer scale of Alaska, which is something people in the lower 48 often fail to grasp. As Forest mentions, you could superimpose Alaska over the continental United States and it would stretch across the entire map. The weather patterns are equally extreme, with warm winds from Japan capable of melting three or four feet of snow one week only to freeze solid again the next. This kind of environment provides perfect cover for Sasquatch populations to thrive undetected.
Fred wraps up by mentioning that people flying in small planes and village basketball teams traveling between remote communities to play games are constantly seeing things they don't talk about publicly. The evidence is accumulating, and researchers like Fred are working hard to get witnesses to come forward and share their stories.
This is one of those videos that reminds you why the work being done by independent researchers matters so much. The full conversation is worth watching over on the Creek Devil channel, especially if you're interested in what's coming out of Alaska right now.