Creek Devil: Bigfoot Caches Belongings and Hides Bodies in Trees

Posted Sunday, July 19, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

There's a fascinating Q&A episode floating around YouTube right now that's got the Sasquatch community buzzing, and honestly, it's the kind of conversation that reminds me why I love digging through these channels in the first place. The hosts over at Creek Devil, including longtime field researcher William Jevning, decided to tackle some of the most intriguing viewer questions from their past episodes, and what came out of it is pure gold for anyone interested in the behavioral patterns of these elusive beings. One of the most compelling stories involves a witness named Joe who had an encounter in Oregon. He and his hiking partner ventured into a remote area, discovered some waterfalls, and turned back. Just ten minutes later, they returned to find a black Victoria's Secret "PINK" hoodie laid perfectly on a sapling right where they'd just been. The condition was almost too pristine to be random. Joe confirmed it was damp on top but completely dry underneath, suggesting it had been placed there very recently. In the middle of winter, in an inaccessible area, with no other people around. The hosts noted this region has had significant activity, and they left it at that, but the implications are pretty wild. What kind of intelligence places an item like that, in that spot, at that exact moment? That story opened up a bigger conversation about caching behavior, and this is where things get really interesting. The hosts shared multiple accounts of Sasquatch leaving or collecting human belongings. One witness named Lee, hiking with his girlfriend, came across a pair of women's panties hanging from a tree branch at about head height. The branch was still moving, there was no wind, and his girlfriend wanted out of there immediately. Smart call, honestly. Then there's the Colorado cache story. A former member of their group, who happens to be a deputy sheriff, was working in an area with heavy Sasquatch activity and stumbled upon a small ravine filled with miscellaneous human belongings. Tents, equipment, all sorts of items from numerous sources, not from a single raid or campsite. This wasn't a homeless encampment. It was a collection point, and it was in a location you couldn't drive to. You had to hike in. The hosts mentioned similar caches spanning decades, with items dating back to the 1920s mining and surveying equipment mixed with more modern things from the 80s and 90s. The historical cataloging aspect of that is mind-blowing when you think about it. Another jaw-dropping account came from a viewer named Rusty Riddle, a former timber faller in Aberdeen, Washington. In the early 70s, a hunter discovered two bodies in a big spruce tree in the upper Queens River area. The sheriff's office ruled it a bear attack, but Rusty knew the deputy involved and was told privately that 22-inch tracks were found at the scene. Sasquatch tracks. The official story was a cover to avoid panicking the public. The hosts pointed out that this caching behavior, putting things in trees, isn't mountain lion behavior. It's not bear behavior. In North America, predators don't haul bodies up into trees like the leopards do in Africa. The caloric expense alone of lifting a human body into a tree is enormous, and there's no biological reason for any known North American predator to do it. Whatever is doing this is operating on a completely different logic. The hosts also touched on a fascinating question about how rogue male Sasquatch find mates. They drew comparisons to gorilla social structures, where groups can contain up to 20 members with subgroups organized by various dynamics. It's an interesting framework to consider, especially given how little we actually know about their social organization. One practical takeaway from the episode, and this is worth repeating: if you're out in the woods and you come across a partially buried deer or any prey animal that's been cached, that's your cue to leave the area immediately. Have bear spray, carry an air horn, and maintain 1000% situational awareness. These aren't just random animal behaviors being discussed. They're patterns that suggest intelligence, intentionality, and a relationship with their environment that we barely understand. The full episode is worth checking out for anyone who wants to hear these stories in the hosts' own words. Creek Devil has built up quite a library of content over the years, and this Q&A format lets them dig into the behavioral side of things in a way that pure encounter stories sometimes don't.