Grandmother's Tin Box Reveals 30 Years of Mountain Encounters
Posted Tuesday, July 07, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's something about Appalachian storytelling that hits differently when it comes to Sasquatch encounters. The mountains have a way of keeping secrets, and sometimes those secrets end up tucked away in old tin boxes in dusty attics. That's exactly the kind of tale that recently crossed my radar, and it's one worth paying attention to.
A video posted to YouTube tells the story of Clare Ashworth, a reporter from Nashville who returns to her small Appalachian hometown of Harland County after her grandmother Ruth passes away at 87. Ruth wasn't just any grandmother — she was the town librarian for 40 years, the kind of woman who knew every child's name, every anniversary, and every borrowed book that never made its way back to the shelf. When Clare arrives to clean out the old family home, she expects to find everything neatly labeled and organized, because that's exactly how Ruth lived her life.
And she does — until she finds the green tin box.
Sitting in the farthest corner of the attic, hidden beneath an old gray wool blanket, is a small moss-colored tin with a tarnished brass lock. The key is still in the lock, as if Ruth never meant to keep anyone out — only to keep herself from opening it on sleepless nights. There's no label, which is strange, because every single other box in that attic has one. Ruth Ashworth didn't forget things. She was the woman who tracked due dates for every library book in town for four decades without missing a single day. The box had no label because Ruth didn't want it to have one.
Inside, Clare finds 30 yellowed sheets of paper, one for each year from 1993 to 2023. Each sheet records the events of a single year, and each one ends with the same chilling line: "It came again."
For 30 straight years.
Now, anyone who's spent time researching Sasquatch sightings in Appalachia knows this region has one of the densest concentrations of reported encounters in North America. The Appalachian Sasquatch — sometimes called the "Wood Booger" or "Yahoo" in older folklore — has been part of these mountains' oral tradition for centuries, long before the term "Bigfoot" ever became popular. Native American tribes like the Cherokee, Shawnee, and Seneca all passed down stories of large, hairy wild men living in the deep woods. When European settlers arrived, they brought their own versions of wild man legends that blended with the indigenous accounts.
What makes stories like this one particularly compelling is the consistency. Thirty years of the same creature returning to the same place — a church door, according to the video's title — suggests something far more deliberate than a random wandering animal. Researchers who've studied long-term Sasquatch activity often point to patterns like this as evidence of intelligence, territorial behavior, and even something resembling curiosity or ritual. If a Sasquatch is leaving something at a church door every winter for three decades, that's not a beast stumbling through the woods. That's a being with purpose.
The video itself is narrated by someone named Victor, who recreates the story from what he describes as the haunting oral tradition of the Appalachian Mountains. Names and places have been changed, but the mystery inside that tin box is presented as very real. The storytelling is slow, atmospheric, and deeply rooted in the kind of quiet dread that mountain folks know well — the feeling that something has been watching from the woods for longer than anyone wants to admit.
The video cuts off just as Clare is about to open the first sheet of paper, so the full story of what was left at that church door each winter remains to be heard. But honestly, that buildup is part of what makes it worth watching. There's a reason Appalachian ghost stories — and Sasquatch stories — have survived for generations. They're told with a kind of reverence for the unknown that you don't find in faster-paced content.
If you're someone who believes there's something out there in the dark woods, and you've ever felt that pull to keep reading even when every instinct tells you to close the book, this one will resonate. The full video is worth your time, especially if you appreciate the slower, more atmospheric side of Sasquatch storytelling.
Check it out and see what you think. And if you've got your own family stories about something coming back to the same place year after year, you know where to find me.