Retired Timber Cruiser Documents Mysterious Signs on BC Property
Posted Sunday, June 28, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So there's this video that popped up on YouTube from a channel called A Friend In The Pines, and honestly, it's one of those accounts that sticks with you long after you've finished watching. A 69-year-old retired timber cruiser sits down at a kitchen table and starts telling a story that spans three generations of his wife's family, and by the time he's done, you're left just sitting there processing what you just heard.
The guy spent 31 years measuring timber in interior British Columbia. We're talking hundreds of thousands of acres between the Nechako and the Parsnip rivers. When a man with that kind of background tells you something doesn't add up with the tracks he found, you listen. Timber cruisers don't guess. They measure, they document, they write down exactly what they see. That's their whole thing.
Here's the short version of what he shared. His wife Marta's grandmother, a woman named Ujanei, homesteaded 340 acres about 60 kilometers north of Prince George back in 1948. For 76 years, the family left provisions at the edge of the timber on that property. Not for deer. Not for cattle. For something Ujanei refused to name in any language because, as she put it, the language everyone uses for it is wrong.
The narrator didn't push for answers early in his marriage. Marta told him on their third date that her family "kept a promise" on that land, and he let it go. It wasn't until 2019, eight years after he and Marta inherited the property, that things got real for him.
In the first week of May 2019, he found a section of fence along the north end pulled apart in a way he'd never seen. Not broken, not knocked down. The wire had been folded back deliberately. Wooden posts lifted rather than snapped. Staples drawn out with considerable force applied in a specific direction. No hoof prints on either side.
Three weeks later, in the old growth spruce on the north end, he found something even harder to dismiss. Someone or something had cleared a section of ground at the base of a roughly 120-year-old spruce, stacking the deadfall neatly against a blowdown about eight feet to the north. Functional, not tidy. The kind of clearing that suggests intent.
Then came the tracks. Two partial prints in a soft patch of ground, 17 inches long and 7 inches across the ball of the foot. He measured them twice because the number didn't feel right to write down without checking. A third track found later measured 18 inches. The stride length between prints came out to around 62 inches. The narrator is 5'11" with a normal walking stride of about 29 inches. You do the math on what kind of being takes a stride that long.
For anyone who's spent time in Sasquatch research, footprint evidence like this lines up with a lot of what's been documented across the Pacific Northwest and interior BC. The 17-to-18-inch range, the wide ball of the foot, the unusually long stride, these are consistent with reports that go back decades. What makes this account different is the multi-generational family component. This isn't a single sighting or a single set of tracks found by a hiker. This is a family that has apparently maintained some kind of relationship, or at least a protocol of leaving food, with these beings since 1948.
The video itself is worth watching because the way the narrator tells it carries weight. He's not selling anything. He's not trying to convince you of anything. He's just laying out what he found, what he measured, and what his wife's family knew. The discussion cuts off mid-sentence, so there's clearly more to the story that didn't make it into the captions, which is all the more reason to go watch the full thing over on A Friend In The Pines.
Accounts like this one are why the interior of British Columbia remains one of the most compelling regions for ongoing Sasquatch research. The density of old growth forest, the remoteness, the history of Indigenous knowledge about these beings, and the steady stream of credible witnesses from the timber and resource industries all point to something being out there that deserves serious attention. A retired timber cruiser with 31 years of measuring trees doesn't have a reason to exaggerate what he found in his own backyard.
Go find the video. It's the kind of testimony that reminds you why this subject matters.