Bigfoot Investigator Spots Gorilla-Like Figure at Canadian River State Park
Posted Sunday, June 28, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's a video making the rounds right now from the YouTube channel Real Eyes Tv that has the Sasquatch community buzzing, and honestly, it's one of those clips that gives you chills the longer you watch it.
The footage comes from a guy who decided to spend his lunch break exploring a state park along the Canadian River. The area sits near a housing development and golf course, but the park itself is thick, wild, and clearly not somewhere most people wander into on a whim. He mentions there are teepee structures and lean-tos near the river, and along the trails he's spotted some seriously impressive rock cairns, the kind that take real skill to balance. Some of them are shaped like arches and look almost impossible to have been built by anyone casually stacking stones.
But here's where it gets really interesting. This isn't his first rodeo in this park. He describes a previous encounter, probably a year and a half ago, where he was hit with what he believes was infrasound. For those unfamiliar, infrasound refers to low-frequency sound waves, typically below 20 Hz, that humans can feel but often can't consciously hear. Researchers have studied how infrasound can cause feelings of unease, nausea, disorientation, and even visual disturbances. Some scientists have theorized that large bipedal primates could potentially produce these frequencies, and many witnesses report eerily similar symptoms during close encounters.
He says he was deep in the park, off the main trail, when crows suddenly started going absolutely berserk right above his head. Then the feeling hit him. He describes an overwhelming heaviness, dizziness, and a sensation of being completely lost in an area he knew well. He snapped out of it, kept walking in one direction, and said it felt like walking out of a bubble. He even found a footprint during that encounter.
Fast forward to this latest visit. He's walking through a newly cleared area near the river, filming on his phone, when he spots something through the trees. He describes seeing what looks like a head and shoulders, something he says resembles a classic gorilla silhouette with a cone-shaped head. And then it moves. He can see it with his own eyes, not just through the camera. A bird starts going off nearby, which adds to the creepy atmosphere.
Then comes the audio. Sticks breaking. Brush moving. Something that sounds like a stick being thrown. Stomping sounds that seem to shift position, almost like whatever it is is circling or moving parallel to him. At one point he hears something behind him and gets genuinely spooked. He mentions that uncomfortable feeling creeping in, the kind that tells you it's time to leave.
He also discovers what appears to be a structure made of twigs deep in the thick brush, and notes that running through that terrain while being chased would be absolutely terrifying.
The Canadian River corridor runs through parts of Oklahoma and has long been considered active territory by researchers. The combination of thick cover, water access, and relative isolation from major population centers makes it ideal habitat. Add in the rock cairns, which some researchers believe could be markers of some kind, and you've got a location worth paying attention to.
The video is worth watching all the way through. The raw, unfiltered nature of the footage, the guy's genuine reactions, and the audio cues in the background make it one of those clips that sticks with you. Whether you believe it's Sasquatch, a person, or something else entirely, it's a fascinating look at what someone experiences when they venture into the right kind of wilderness alone.