Bigfoot Live Show Welcomes Appalachian Bigfoot Hunters from East Tennessee
Posted Monday, July 13, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's something genuinely refreshing happening in the Bigfoot research community right now, and a recent live stream from the Dirt Road Bigfoot YouTube channel captured it perfectly. The episode featured an interview with a relatively new group calling themselves the Appalachian Bigfoot Hunters, and the chemistry between the hosts and guests made for one of those warm, community-driven conversations that reminds you why this field is so special.
The main host, who clearly has a gift for making everyone feel like family, spent the first portion of the show welcoming viewers into the chat room one by one. It was like watching a high school reunion unfold in real time, with familiar names like George Lambert, Steven Hicks, Bill from Finding a Trackway, Van Edwards, Joanne Glass, and many others getting personal shoutouts. That kind of camaraderie is rare and worth noting because it speaks to the tight-knit nature of serious Bigfoot research.
The co-host, known as the Bigfoot Florida guy Richard, also shared an update on his recently adopted rescue puppy. The poor dog had been violently attacked during a walk, grabbed and flung around like a ragdoll by something that came out of nowhere. Richard described it as a very violent moment, and while the puppy is now eating and drinking again, it remains tender and slow on its feet. The host's reaction was telling, because in the Bigfoot research world, stories like this aren't dismissed. They're taken seriously. When a dog is attacked with that kind of force in a rural area, questions get asked.
Then came the main event, the introduction of Andy Isaac and Journey, the Appalachian Bigfoot Hunters. The host had previously helped Old Bear's Den of Bigfoot interview this duo and was clearly thrilled to have them on his own show. Technical difficulties delayed things, as they always do with live streams, but once the audio sorted itself out, the conversation promised to be a good one.
What stood out most was the host's genuine enthusiasm for this group. He described them as a new collective, one that hasn't been doing this together for very long, but he clearly sees something special in their approach. He was careful not to give too much away, wanting the hunters to tell their own story on their own terms, which is the mark of a respectful interviewer.
The hunters are based out of East Tennessee, somewhere around the Johnson City and Kingsport area, near the North Carolina border. That region is absolutely steeped in Bigfoot lore. The Appalachian Mountains have long been considered prime territory for Sasquatch activity, with countless reports of strange vocalizations, wood knocks, and unusual tree structures coming out of those woods for generations. The Cherokee people have their own longstanding traditions regarding these beings, and modern researchers continue to find evidence that keeps the mystery alive.
The host also dropped a tantalizing hint about a strange treebow (a bent or manipulated tree structure) located just ten minutes from his own home, near a spot where footprints and handprints have been observed. He promised to explain that one another day, which is exactly the kind of breadcrumb that keeps viewers coming back.
For anyone interested in how grassroots Bigfoot research actually works, this stream is worth watching. It's not flashy. It's not produced. It's just real people sharing real experiences and building connections in a field that often gets dismissed by outsiders. The Appalachian Bigfoot Hunters represent the next wave of investigators carrying the torch, and based on the host's reaction, they're doing something right.
Check out the full episode on the Dirt Road Bigfoot YouTube channel and see for yourself why this community continues to grow.