Montana Hunter Describes Bigfoot Attacks and Sapling Barricade Warning
Posted Wednesday, July 01, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
If you've ever wondered what it feels like to get a warning from something you can't quite see, then you need to check out this recent episode from the Creek Devil YouTube channel. Host William Jebning, a two-time witness and field researcher with 43 years under his belt, sits down with Wyn, a member of the Flathead Nation in western Montana, and the stories that come out of this conversation are absolutely wild.
One of the most jaw-dropping moments involves Wyn's truck getting pelted with a chunk of wood while driving through a remote area. Not just once, but twice. The first time, a log was chucked at his vehicle. The second time, he was riding with his cousin, looked in the side mirror, and watched a four-foot branch come flying out of nowhere and slam into the side of the truck sideways. As Wyn pointed out, if you run over a stick, it doesn't hit the truck completely sideways like that. Something threw it with intention.
But that's just the beginning. Wyn also described a situation where he drove up a road and found hundreds of small ponderosa pine saplings, all between four and six feet tall, uprooted and laid perfectly across the road for about 20 to 30 feet. These weren't just knocked over randomly. They were arranged deliberately, lined up sideways with the road. Wyn took it as a clear message: stay the hell out. Did he listen? Nope. He just ran right over them. And he hasn't been back since.
What makes this even more fascinating is the detail about tree breaks. Wyn noticed that whenever he followed tree breaks (where large pines were snapped up high, around seven or eight feet), there would almost always be a smaller tree nearby, broken over and pointing the same direction. His theory? A younger Sasquatch was mimicking what it saw the adults doing, struggling to snap those green trees because they don't break clean, they splinter and wiggle. William chimed in with his own similar observation from a mountain encounter, where a 2.5-inch diameter tree about seven feet tall had been snapped over within a week of his last visit, with everything else around it completely untouched.
This kind of behavior, the deliberate placement of saplings, the thrown sticks, the tree-breaking patterns, fits into a broader pattern that researchers have been documenting for decades. Territorial displays. Warning signs. The kind of intelligence that suggests these beings are far more aware of human activity than most people realize. And when you combine that with Wyn's hunting story, where his family's usual elk spot suddenly went completely dry, no elk, no deer, nothing, and they realized a family of Sasquatch had essentially claimed the area as their home, it paints a picture of creatures who are actively managing their territory and the resources within it.
The Flathead Nation connection adds another layer of credibility here. Indigenous communities across North America have carried oral traditions about these beings for generations, and Wyn's firsthand accounts align with those ancient stories in ways that are hard to ignore.
Do yourself a favor and go watch this one. The conversation between William and Wyn is the kind of raw, unfiltered witness testimony that you just don't come across often enough. Stick-throwing, tree barricades, and elk displacement, all in one episode. Creek Devil continues to deliver some of the most compelling Sasquatch content on YouTube.