Bigfoot Researcher Finds Feeding Station Raided After Two-Week Absence
Posted Wednesday, June 17, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
If you've ever wondered just how clever Sasquatch can be when they really want a snack, you need to check out this latest footage from the YouTube channel Squatch'ya doin?. Angie over there has been running a feeding station experiment, and the results from this round are honestly some of the most fascinating behavioral evidence I've seen in a while.
So here's the setup. Angie left out a bucket with summer sausage and a plastic jar of dry roasted peanuts, both sealed up tight with lids and freshness seals. The idea was simple: see what happens when something comes through and tries to get to the goods. When she came back after being laid up for two weeks with brutal allergies, the bucket was empty. Lid off, water inside from rain, but everything gone. That's already a win for any researcher, but what she found scattered around the area is what really makes this video worth your time.
First off, the peanut jar wasn't just missing. It was moved. And not just a few feet. Angie found it all the way down at a structure she calls "the blind" — a spot where Sasquatch had bent trees over and placed a branch across them to create a hidden little hideaway. She even mentions this blind in several previous episodes, and the fact that the jar ended up inside it is wild. Her theory? They were sitting in their own little people-watching spot, eating her peanuts where nothing could see them. Honestly, that tracks. If you're smart enough to build a blind, you're smart enough to use it for snacking in peace.
Now, here's where it gets really interesting. The jar itself tells a story. The lid was still on it, but there were clear bite marks around the edges, like something tried to pry it off with its teeth. And the freshness seal? Still completely intact. So they never actually got the lid off the proper way. Instead, they ripped the entire bottom of the container wide open. Angie points out puncture marks and a massive hole, and her best guess is that they shook the nuts out through the bottom while sitting in that blind. The fact that they tried biting the lid first, gave up, and then went straight through the bottom instead of just walking away? That's problem-solving. That's intelligence. And it's exactly the kind of behavior that researchers have been documenting in feeding station studies for years.
Then there's the sausage wrapper. This one had two holes — one big one and a smaller one at the other end. Angie poses the question to her viewers: why two holes? Were they eating from both ends? Was it a family affair with mama on one side and a juvenile on the other? Could they have just slid the sausage out of the big hole? The mystery of the dual openings is one of those little details that keeps you thinking long after the video ends.
What really got me, though, was Angie's observation about the blind itself. She thought it would only last one season because the trees were broken, but the leaves came back in the spring. The trees are still alive. How did they know exactly how much they could bend and break the trees without killing them? That's not just instinct. That's an understanding of living material, of cause and effect, of planning for the future. It's the kind of thing that separates Sasquatch from every other forest-dwelling animal people try to compare them to.
Angie's already set up a new round of bait — a cantaloupe and three nectarines (which the store sent instead of peaches, but hey, nectarines might be even better). Cantaloupe has long been a favorite offering at Sasquatch feeding stations, and there's plenty of anecdotal evidence from researchers across the country suggesting they go crazy for it. If you're curious what happens next, definitely head over to Squatch'ya doin? and subscribe. This channel consistently puts out some of the most thoughtful, evidence-based feeding station content on YouTube, and Angie's approach of documenting everything — the wrappers, the bite marks, the structures — is exactly the kind of citizen science that moves the conversation forward.
Trust me, you don't want to miss what happens with that cantaloupe.