Oregon Woman Tracks Sasquatch Signs Before Terrifying Yard Encounter
Posted Wednesday, July 08, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's a new interview floating around on YouTube that every serious researcher needs to carve out time for. A woman named Wednesday, living out in Oregon's PNW, sits down with the A Flash of Beauty: Bigfoot Revealed channel to walk through what might be one of the most layered personal encounters to surface in a while. And honestly? The more she talks, the harder it is to look away.
What makes this one stand out isn't just one moment. It's the accumulation. Wednesday's story stretches across years, starting back in Pennsylvania when she was a teenager. She describes softball-sized rocks being hurled at her group to push them out of an area they were partying in. At the time, it made zero sense. Looking back now, with everything she's learned, she knows exactly what that was.
Then there's Oakridge, Oregon. She pulls over to let her dogs out, and not ten yards from her truck, a thunderous yell erupts from a bush. She describes it as something that sounded like manipulated weather or a freight train blowing past. The kind of vocalization that leaves you auditorily stunned. She hurries her dogs back into the truck and spends years afterward asking experienced outdoorsmen what could possibly produce a sound like that. Nobody gave her an answer that stuck. Until she found her answers.
The real awakening came when a knee injury forced her to start looking at the ground differently during her usual walks with the dogs. That's when she spotted the tracks. Not the cliché 19 or 20-inch prints you see splashed across documentaries, but feet that dwarfed her own 10.5-inch shoes. Her first thought? Monkey feet. And that was the moment the penny dropped.
But here's where things get genuinely fascinating for anyone who's spent time in the field. Wednesday started noticing straight lines in the woods. Nature doesn't work in straight lines, and she knew it. What she stumbled into looked like some kind of elaborate navigation system, branches emphasizing cardinal directions, larger branches pointing toward specific paths. She pulled out her compass and everything aligned. For anyone familiar with the research coming out of the Pacific Northwest, this kind of intentional ground structure has been reported by others, including researchers who've documented what appear to be wayfinding systems left behind in remote areas.
Then came the jackpot. A megalithic wood structure on someone's property, surrounded by three other wood structures, with discarded spare tires incorporated into the build. The orientation? Orion's belt. The alignment of Sasquatch-associated sites with Orion has been a thread running through multiple witness accounts and researcher observations over the years, and Wednesday's discovery adds another data point to that growing body of evidence.
Now, here's where Wednesday gets brutally honest, and it's the kind of honesty that actually earns respect. She admits she decimated the site. She left dog treats and a dog toy, thinking she was dealing with monkeys in the woods. She's ashamed of it, and she says so plainly. That kind of self-reflection matters, because it shows someone who came in with the wrong mindset and learned from it.
That night, her house shook. Three tremors, no traffic, no noise, nothing to explain it. She brushed it off and went to bed. By morning, her dogs were scouring the yard like hounds on a hot trail. Her neighbor's meticulously maintained property was tossed. River rocks, shrubbery, debris scattered everywhere. Fifteen-foot branches snapped and left hanging in trees. Something had come through, and it wasn't subtle about it.
The turning point in her understanding came when she discovered Ron Morehead and the Sierra Sounds. For anyone unfamiliar, Morehead's recordings from the Sierra Nevada mountains are considered some of the most compelling audio evidence in Sasquatch research, capturing vocalizations that no known animal can replicate. Wednesday started playing those sounds off her back porch at night and leaving gifts, tasty cakes, summer sausages, the kind of offerings that researchers have long suggested could open a line of communication.
What happened next is the moment that elevates this entire account. Around 10:30 at night, a Sasquatch came through her neighbor's yard and triggered the motion lights. As one light flicked on, the figure bounded to the other side of the yard, triggering the second light. And then, after the lights shut off, it ran up the fence line with its shoulder leaned into it, creating a wave effect that rippled down the fence like a stadium crowd doing the wave. She tried to recreate it the next day with a friend. Impossible. The size and speed of whatever hit that fence couldn't be replicated by a human.
The encounter didn't end there. Her boxer, an athletic and agile dog, started behaving strangely on their walks. What looked like zoomies at first turned out to be something else entirely. The dog was tucking her legs and butt underneath her, taking full strides, cutting tight turns in a way that risked injury. Wednesday and her wife realized the boxer was being chased. The running pattern was pure evasion.
This is the kind of testimony that sticks with you. Wednesday isn't selling anything. She's not performing. She's walking through a series of events that fundamentally changed how she sees the woods around her, and she's doing it with the kind of raw honesty that researchers crave. The structures, the Orion alignment, the vocalizations, the fence wave, the dog behavior, it all builds into something that demands attention.
Do yourself a favor and track this one down. It's worth every minute.