Canadian Filmmaker Shares 2024 Bigfoot Encounter and Evidence Review
Posted Wednesday, July 01, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So there's this Canadian filmmaker named Robert who had a run-in with a Sasquatch back in 2024, and instead of just keeping it to himself, he decided to dive headfirst into researching these beings and sharing what he finds with the world. His channel is packed with videos digging into the evidence, and one of his longer pieces lays out a pretty compelling case for why Bigfoot is real — covering everything from eyewitness accounts to footprint analysis to audio recordings.
What really stands out about his approach is how he breaks down the sheer volume of credible sightings. We're talking over 10,000 reports across North America alone, and that's not counting similar accounts from other parts of the world where unknown hairy humanoids have been spotted. The descriptions are remarkably consistent too — creatures standing between 6 and 10 feet tall, with massive shoulders and chests, practically no visible neck, a cone-shaped head like the top of a gorilla's skull, and arms that are proportionally way longer than a human's. And the witnesses aren't just random people — they include police officers, park rangers, military personnel, hunters, lawyers, and judges. Pretty much every walk of life is represented.
Robert highlights a few specific witnesses that carry a lot of weight. There's Dr. John Bindernagel, a seasoned wildlife biologist who described seeing a large upright figure swaying gently near a fence before retreating into the woods, with a long arm swinging back as it walked. Then there's retired US Army Sergeant Todd Nees, who reported seeing three of these beings back in 1993 from several hundred meters away — close enough to know they definitely weren't human. And Officer Chris Miller from North Carolina had an encounter in the 2000s where he heard whispers in a language he couldn't understand, then shined his flashlight and saw a tall dark figure disappear behind a tree that was way too big to be any human he knew.
The footprint evidence is where things get really interesting, and Robert spends a good chunk of time on this. Thousands of documented casts exist, many from extremely remote areas where it would be practically pointless for a hoaxer to bother planting fake tracks. What makes these prints stand out is the recurring morphology — specifically the mid-tarsal break, which is a natural flex point found in great apes like gorillas but absent in human feet. Some of these prints measure up to 18 inches or more. Dr. Jeff Meldrum, an anthropologist and expert in primate locomotion, has done extensive work on this, noting details like flexible soles and visible signs of movement — toes gripping harder on slippery or sloped terrain, but relaxed on flat smooth surfaces, exactly like a real creature would do.
The dermal ridges are another fascinating detail. Those tiny lines on your fingertips? They exist on the soles of your feet too, and on chimpanzees, gorillas, and koalas — and apparently on Sasquatch as well. Police fingerprint expert Jimmy Chilcut pointed out that if someone faked these, they should be counterfeiting money instead because nobody can carve realistic dermal ridges with that level of precision. Dr. Grover Krantz from Washington State University also weighed in, stating that you simply can't fake pressure ridges — the impressions show a living, flexible foot, not a carved wooden mold.
One of the most compelling footprint cases Robert mentions is from 1951, when climber Eric Shipton was attempting to scale Everest and discovered roughly 13-inch prints deeply marked in the snow at 19,000 feet above sea level. That's not exactly a casual hike for someone looking to pull off a hoax. The prints also had a big toe that splayed outward, similar to known great apes.
On the audio side, Robert covers the famous Sierra Sounds captured by Ron Morehead and Al Berry in the 1970s in the Sierra Nevada mountains. These recordings have been analyzed by experts and contain distinct language-like sequences with pitch variation far beyond what human vocal cords can produce. Then there's the Ohio Howl — a deep, almost siren-like call captured from hundreds of meters away that gives most listeners chills. Definitely not your average forest noise.
Robert's whole perspective comes from someone who experienced this firsthand, and his channel is worth checking out for anyone who wants a thorough rundown of the evidence. He's got a whole library of related videos that go deeper into specific cases and topics, so there's plenty to explore if this kind of deep-dive content is your thing.