Bigfoot Researcher Reveals Signs of Sasquatch Activity on Property

Posted Friday, June 26, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

There's something refreshing about a researcher who admits when they can't definitively prove what they're seeing. The Sasquatch Encounter Brigade recently dropped a video that does exactly that, and it's worth your time if you're interested in the methodology behind long-term property monitoring. The host walks through their approach using an EMT framework - "signs and symptoms" - to identify when Sasquatch activity is ramping up on their land. This is actually a smart way to think about it. Most researchers who've spent years in the field will tell you that these beings rarely just appear and do something dramatic. There's almost always a buildup, a series of subtle indicators that something is in the area before any direct encounter occurs. What makes this video interesting is the breakdown of the 2025 season. The host documented a roughly two-to-three week period of incremental steps before things got obvious. The progression went something like this: strange afternoon noises, then what appeared to be markers (sticks deliberately placed in the ground), contractors reporting auditory phenomena while working on the property, intentional breaking sounds, and consistent dog reactions. That last point deserves emphasis. The host calls dogs "the best alarm system ever" when it comes to Sasquatch, and this aligns with countless reports across North America. Canines consistently demonstrate sensitivity to these beings long before human senses pick up anything unusual. Researchers like John Green documented this behavior decades ago, and it remains one of the most reliable indicators witnesses report. The host also addresses a previous video showing what might have been a juvenile arm in a tree. Rather than insisting on a definitive identification, they acknowledge the footage isn't clear enough to prove anything one way or another. In a field where overinterpretation is common, this kind of intellectual honesty is valuable. There's also a great family witness story tucked into the video. Years ago, when nobody believed the host's claims, their brother-in-law left the house after dark and called back to say something very large had followed him down the entire length of the driveway. That kind of unsolicited confirmation from a skeptic family member is the sort of account that adds weight to long-term research. The host also announced plans to start bringing trusted friends and team members onto their property this year, rather than always working alone or at the wildlife management area. They're even considering having someone sneak onto the property to test how the Sasquatch respond to unfamiliar humans. This is a significant development for someone who's been documenting activity in isolation for years. For anyone serious about understanding the behavioral patterns of Sasquatch - the testing phase, the incremental disclosure, the environmental markers - this video offers a practical framework. The host's systematic documentation of how activity escalates over time is something more researchers should be doing. Check it out when you get a chance. The discussion of those subtle pre-encounter indicators might change how you think about your own property observations.