Podcast Hosts Investigate Listener's Bigfoot Encounter Near Military Base
Posted Friday, June 19, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
A recent episode of The Eerie Travels Podcast featured some seriously compelling listener tales, and one in particular caught my attention. A traveler from South Georgia shared an experience that has stuck with them for two years, and honestly, it's the kind of story that makes you pause and think.
This person lives on land bordering a massive military base—somewhere between 28,000 and 80,000 acres—and there's a 200-acre pond about a mile into the base from their property. They're 50 years old, have spent their entire life in the woods, and know the sounds of coyotes, bobcats, and owls like the back of their hand. So when they heard something they couldn't explain, they knew it wasn't any of those.
What really got me was the detail about their three grown pitbulls. These are tough dogs, and they were whining and scared—just like their owner. When animals that are bred to be fearless react that way, you pay attention. Pitbulls don't whine over nothing.
Then there's the trap incident. This past January, they went to check a trap and found it empty—but the end had been ripped open. For anyone familiar with trapping, you know that's no small feat. These devices are specifically designed to be difficult to open, which is exactly why they're used. Something with serious strength and determination got into that trap, or got something out of it.
The hosts brought up some interesting points. One mentioned that traps essentially serve as dinner bells for opportunistic predators—bears are known to rip them open to access whatever's caught inside. But the combination of the unexplained vocalizations and the terrified dogs suggests something more than your average black bear rummaging through a trap.
The peanut butter trick was mentioned as a potential way to attract whatever's in the area, which is a classic method researchers have used for decades when trying to draw Sasquatch into an area for documentation. If this person is willing to try it, they might just get some answers.
Living adjacent to a military base adds another layer of intrigue. These areas often have restricted access, which means whatever's roaming those woods has a lot of room to operate without being seen by the general public. Large, undeveloped tracts of land near water sources are exactly the kind of habitat that Sasquatch researchers consider prime territory.
The traveler mentioned they've never actually seen anything—just heard it. But sound alone can be incredibly telling. Vocalizations that don't match known wildlife, combined with physical evidence like a destroyed trap and animal behavior changes, paint a picture worth investigating.
If you want to hear the full story and the hosts' breakdown, definitely check out the episode. It's a good reminder that encounters are still happening, and sometimes the people experiencing them are the most level-headed witnesses we could ask for—folks who know the woods, know the animals, and know when something doesn't fit.