Bigfoot Saves Pregnant Couple Trapped by Wolves in Montana Snowstorm
Posted Wednesday, June 24, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
Came across a video on YouTube the other night that I couldn't stop thinking about, and figured it was worth sharing here.
The video, hosted by Victor on the Sasquatch Story channel, tells a fictional tale inspired by the rich Bigfoot legends of the Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies. Right up front, the host makes it clear this is a creative work of fiction, with AI-generated imagery bringing the story to life. But that doesn't make it any less compelling.
The setup is simple but powerful. A man named Tom and his pregnant wife Lisa are driving from Missoula to Whitefish, Montana in mid-December. Lisa's mother Eleanor is in the hospital with only weeks left to live, and they're racing to get there in time. The forecast calls for light snow, nothing serious. But Montana weather in December has a way of ignoring forecasts.
The story takes its time building the tension. There's the phone call from the doctor, the packing of the car, the quiet conversations about baby names. Tom and Lisa are debating between June and Cora, but they keep putting off the decision because they want Eleanor to be the one to hear the name first. That detail alone hits hard.
Then comes the storm. Highway 2 through Marias Pass is no joke when the weather turns. Anyone who's driven that stretch knows how quickly the elevation can flip a calm drive into a white-knuckle situation. The car gets stuck. The gas gauge drops. The cell signal disappears. And by 10 PM, a wolf pack has them surrounded in the dark.
This is where the Sasquatch element enters the picture. Something large steps out from the treeline. Not to attack. Not to threaten. For a reason the story suggests we may never fully understand.
What makes this video worth watching isn't just the dramatic encounter. It's the way the story frames the Sasquatch as something protective rather than monstrous. There's a long tradition in Indigenous and witness accounts of these beings showing up in moments of genuine human vulnerability, and this story leans into that idea pretty heavily. The host even opens the video by asking whether we've ever done something purely on instinct, something reason couldn't explain.
The AI-generated visuals are worth checking out on their own. The snowy Montana landscapes, the dark forest, the tension of the car scene, it all comes together to create a mood that feels closer to a short film than a typical YouTube storytime.
If you're into Sasquatch lore and enjoy a good narrative that treats the subject with respect, this one's worth the watch. It's not a sighting report or a breakdown of evidence, but it's the kind of storytelling that reminds you why these legends have stuck around for generations.
Check it out on the Sasquatch Story channel and let me know what you think.