Rancher Shares 13-Year Journey Raising Young Sasquatch in Trinity Mountains
Posted Thursday, June 25, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
If you've ever wondered what it would actually look like to raise a young Sasquatch from infancy, there's a video floating around YouTube right now that might be the closest thing we've ever gotten to an answer. And honestly, it's one of the most detailed first-person accounts I've come across in a long time.
The video comes from the Bigfoot Sightings Canada channel, and it's framed as a direct retelling from a man named Roy Owens, who claims he found an orphaned Sasquatch cub in the spring of 1979 and raised it for 13 years in the Trinity Mountains of Northern California. The story is told entirely in his voice, and it's the kind of slow, careful, deliberate narration that makes you lean in rather than scroll past.
Roy sets the scene right away. He grew up in Trinity County, born in 1951 in Weaverville, and inherited a 340-acre cattle ranch from his grandfather along the lower Hayfork Creek drainage, about nine miles south and east of Hyamp. The property backs up against national forest land that climbs into the high country of the Trinity Alps, peaks above 9,000 feet, with Douglas fir, sugar pine, white fir, and incense cedar so thick the canopy closes overhead like a ceiling. If you know anything about Sasquatch habitat preferences, you already know why this region keeps showing up in sighting reports. Trinity County has been on the radar of researchers for decades, and the rugged, low-population-density terrain Roy describes is exactly the kind of country where you'd expect a reclusive population to persist.
The inciting incident happens on April 5, 1979. Roy is driving back from a timber job and comes around a switchback to find a logging truck pulled over with hazard lights blinking. The driver, Jean Platt, tells him he hit something large and upright that ran out of the timber into the road. Roy goes down the embankment and finds tracks, barefoot impressions around 18 inches long, sunk two inches into soft soil, with a stride of better than four feet. Then he hears a keening sound, high, thin, and distressed, coming from behind a fallen fir. What he finds there is a young Sasquatch, dark chestnut brown hair, loose-limbed proportions of something very young, on its back in the dirt with its knees drawn up. When Roy moves toward it, the small fingers uncurl and reach blindly in his direction.
He describes the face in careful detail. Heavier brow than any infant he'd ever seen, flat broad nose, wide jaw, but the eyes, dark brown and deep-set, fixed on his with a focus he says no animal that young should have. Not instinct, he says, but attention. An infant recognizing that it was looking at a living thing that might help.
What follows, according to Roy, is 13 years of living alongside a being he named Buck. The video spends time on what adolescence did to their relationship, and Roy is upfront that the title's word "terrifying" isn't because Buck became dangerous, but because of what Roy himself felt watching the change happen. Fear of losing what they'd built. Fear of his own inability to understand what he was watching. It's a striking reframe, and it tracks with a lot of what longtime researchers have said about long-term contact situations, that the psychological weight almost always falls on the human side.
The Trinity Alps region has a long history in Sasquatch lore, and stories like this one, whether you take them as literal biography or as oral tradition passed down through ranching families, are part of why. The country is remote, the population has always been thin, and people who live there tend to stay there for generations. That continuity is exactly the kind of environment where family stories about strange encounters get preserved rather than dismissed.
The video is worth the time. Roy's voice has the cadence of someone who has thought about this for decades and decided to say it out loud, and the level of environmental detail, the logging roads, the drainage names, the specific acreage, gives the account a texture that a lot of similar stories lack. Whether you read it as testimony or as folklore, it's a compelling piece of Sasquatch storytelling.
Go watch it. Then come back and tell me what you think.