Noah Recounts Multiple Bigfoot Encounters on Family's Wooded Property
Posted Friday, June 19, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's something about a family encounter story that hits differently, and this one from the Entering The Unknown Podcast is no exception. The hosts Todd and Adam bring back a past guest named Noah, who first connected with them about three years ago after experiencing something on his family's property that he just couldn't shake. What unfolds is a layered account of vocalizations, missing vegetables, and a nighttime encounter that left him questioning everything he thought he knew.
Noah's family moved to their property in May of 2018, and from the very first night he spent there, something felt off. The property backs right up to thick woods, and it didn't take long before the strange noises started. Whoops, whistles, and sounds that couldn't easily be explained away as critters or homeless campers. The whistling, in particular, became a consistent feature of their nights. Anyone who's spent time researching Sasquatch behavior knows that whistling is one of the most commonly reported vocalizations, often described as a form of communication or even a warning signal.
Then things escalated. Vegetables started vanishing from the garden. Other items went missing too. They had ducks at one point, and those disappeared as well. The family kept trying to rationalize it all, blaming coyotes or bears, but the pieces weren't quite fitting together.
The real turning point came one night around 1:30 to 2:00 in the morning. Noah's dog, Dakota, a pitbull-mastiff mix with a bark that could scare the bravest soul, was standing over him in full protective mode, staring out the window. When Noah looked outside, he saw something massive hunched over a dead rabbit in the yard. His brother and a friend had been hunting rabbits with pellet guns, so the carcass made sense, but what was next to it did not. Noah describes the figure as pure muscle, something that looked like it was one hundred percent muscle with nothing wasted. The moment he turned on the porch light to get a better look, the figure took three steps and vanished completely into the woods.
The adrenaline rush Noah describes is something many witnesses relate to. He compares the feeling to the shock of going from a bad sunburn into an intensely cold space, that sensation of your skin wanting to peel off your bones. It's a visceral, primal reaction that goes beyond simple fear.
What makes this account even more compelling is that Noah isn't the only family member who's had experiences. His mother has had her own encounters, though she prefers to play them off as homeless individuals, perhaps because a person feels like something a 22 or 9mm could handle, whereas something of that size would be a different story entirely. His father had an encounter that's hard to dismiss. He spotted someone standing at the edge of the property line where the woods begin, walked toward the figure to confront what he assumed was a trespasser, and realized the person was roughly three feet taller than him. The figure turned and disappeared into the brush within seconds, though my father could still hear the footsteps through the thick vegetation.
The whistling exchange is another fascinating detail. Noah describes a back-and-forth where the creature whistled, he whistled back, and it responded again. This kind of vocal mimicry or interaction has been reported in Sasquatch encounters for decades, with researchers noting that these beings seem to occasionally engage with humans in this manner. The hosts even share their own whistling story, where Adam's wife pointed out a silhouette before the creature whistled at him, though she now only remembers the heavy footsteps walking through the creek nearby. Selective memory, as they put it, or perhaps a mind protecting itself from something too frightening to fully process.
The garbage can raids continued after the main incident, and the family found trash scattered across the yard repeatedly. This kind of behavior, rummaging through human refuse, is well-documented in Sasquatch reports and often attributed to curiosity or opportunistic foraging.
This is one of those interviews that really sticks with you. Noah comes across as genuine and grounded, not someone looking for attention but someone trying to make sense of something that fundamentally challenged his understanding of the world around him. The fact that multiple family members have had independent experiences on the same property adds significant weight to the account.
Definitely worth checking out the full interview over on the Entering The Unknown Podcast channel. The conversation goes deeper into the details, and the hosts bring their own perspectives and experiences to the table that complement Noah's story beautifully.