Georgia Property Owner Details Years of Bigfoot Encounters

Posted Tuesday, July 07, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

So there's this interview that recently popped up on the Sasquatch Theory YouTube channel, and honestly, it's one of those conversations that sticks with you long after it's over. A guy named Neil, who runs bigfoottalk.com, sits down to share what he's been experiencing on his rural property in North Georgia, and the details are wild. Neil bought this land about ten years ago. It had been abandoned for nearly a decade, had two streams running through it, and an old dried-up pond. Sounds like paradise for a nature lover, right? Well, it didn't take long for him to realize something was off. Despite having perfect habitat with clear water and all the browse deer could ask for, the deer just weren't there. And Neil grew up in the woods, so he knows animal behavior inside and out. His mom used to ring a bell to call him home because he'd be so far out exploring. The first red flag came when he started bush hogging the property. At the edge of the woods, he found a trail that made absolutely no sense. This thing was a foot and a half wider than his shoulders on each side, and Neil is 6'4" with wide shoulders. Everything on the trail was crushed and pulverized, not just snapped. He couldn't figure out what animal could do that. The only thing he could compare it to was a pack of elephants, and we all know there aren't wild elephants roaming Georgia. Then he found three massive logs on the other side of the creek that had been snapped clean. No axe marks, no chainsaw marks, no machinery marks. These things were as big around as his waist, and they were placed in a row across a bulldozer cut, almost like they were deliberately blocking the path. No root holes on either side, nothing to explain where they came from or how they got there. Now here's where things get really interesting. Neil planted fruit trees, peaches, figs, persimmons, the whole deal. He put deer netting around them with T-posts over six feet tall. Some of the peaches were growing 10 to 12 feet up. He even put fabric on the ground to catch anything that fell so nothing would rot. And the fruit just... vanished. Not eaten, not partially consumed, just completely gone. No peels, no bits, nothing. The persimmons were twisted off the limb, not bitten or pulled, twisted until they snapped. You need hands for that. Around Christmas 2019, Neil's kids bought him a life-size Bigfoot cutout for the backyard. He put it near the edge of the woods. Not long after, his wife heard four whistles at 1 AM while he was asleep. The dogs went absolutely ballistic. She described it as something she'd never heard before, and Neil knows his animal sounds. He'd heard a matriarchal doe whistle before, but this was within five yards of the dog pen, which deer would never do. Then there was the two-toned howl. One night Neil heard something that had both a bass vibration similar to an alligator and a tenor high note at the same time. No animal can do that. No person can do that. The dogs ran out of their shed and started barking frantically in that direction. Two weeks after the whistling incident, something hit the side of their bedroom so hard the whole house shook. For anyone familiar with Sasquatch research, a lot of what Neil describes lines up with documented behavior patterns. The gifting of river rocks is something researchers have noted for decades, with witnesses reporting smooth stones appearing in odd locations on their property. The knocking on structures is another well-documented behavior, often described as Sasquatch communicating their presence or expressing displeasure with something, like a camera or a new structure on their territory. And the vocalizations, whistles, whoops, and unusual two-toned calls, these are consistently reported across different regions, not just the Pacific Northwest. What makes Neil's account particularly compelling is the consistency over years. This isn't a one-time sighting. It's ongoing activity on a property he's been documenting for nearly a decade. The combination of massive trails, snapped and placed logs, hands-only fruit theft, vocalizations, and physical contact with the house paints a picture of a family group that has been living there long before Neil arrived. The full interview is worth checking out on the Sasquatch Theory channel. Neil goes into even more detail about his sightings and the interactions he's had over the years. It's the kind of testimony that reminds us these encounters are happening everywhere, not just in the Pacific Northwest. Georgia has a rich history of Sasquatch reports, particularly in the Appalachian foothills, and Neil's property sounds like a textbook example of an ongoing habitation site.