Bigfoot Researcher Reports Seven Beings During Arizona Night Sit

Posted Wednesday, July 08, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

So there's this video that recently popped up on YouTube from a channel called The Arizona Four Sasquatch Experiencers, and honestly, it's one of those uploads that makes you stop scrolling and pay attention. The host walks through what he describes as one of the most profound nights he's ever had out in the field, and the combination of phenomena he and his team witnessed is genuinely hard to wrap your head around. The setup is pretty standard for serious night sit work. He'd been up at a spot he calls "the null" for a couple of days when two other guys, Wayne and Robbie, showed up to join him. For anyone unfamiliar with the term, a "night sit" is basically when researchers stay out in a known activity area after dark, remaining still and quiet, hoping to observe whatever might be moving around them. It's a practice that's been used in Sasquatch research for decades, and when it works, it can produce some really compelling results. And this night apparently worked in a big way. According to the host, the activity started almost immediately. He describes twinkle lights, static discharge, distortions, and these black wisps that were moving around the area close enough that all three men could see them with the naked eye. Black wisps, for those who haven't encountered the term in Sasquatch literature, are those shadowy, smoke-like anomalies that witnesses often report seeing right before or during a visual encounter. They're one of the more consistent pieces of the phenomenon that researchers have documented over the years. But the real meat of the Sasquatch portion came when he was standing between his tent and his canopy and watched a tall, slender figure run from left to right about 40 yards behind a white aspen tree. He describes it as absolutely rock solid, no question in his mind about what he saw. That's the kind of visual that researchers live for, a clear, unambiguous sighting of an individual moving through the environment. Then there's the telepathic communication, or "mind speak" as the Sasquatch research community often calls it. He mentions hearing the name "Rickett," which he identifies as Andy's grandson, and says he hadn't heard that particular response in a long time. He also mentions "Eaden Gen," described as Indy's mate. When the group asked how many were present, they got the number seven repeated several times. The host initially thought they might just be echoing the number of people in the group, but Robbie apparently got a strong sense that there were far more individuals around than that, more than he'd felt in the area since the notification of Indie's passing several years prior over at a location they call Crazy Town. For anyone who follows this kind of research, names like Indie and Andy are familiar. Andy is a name that comes up frequently in Sasquatch encounter literature, often associated with a particularly tall, protective individual. The idea that these researchers have ongoing "relationships" with specific named Sasquatch families is something that mainstream media tends to ignore, but it's a cornerstone of how a lot of long-term researchers operate. Now, here's where the video takes a turn that you don't see every day. After the group had been standing around talking about past experiences, including some unexplained visuals in the sky they'd witnessed at Crazy Town years ago, something caught the host's attention overhead. He looked straight up and saw what he initially thought was a comet, then realized it absolutely was not. What all three men watched, according to the host, was a massive cylindrical object moving across the sky from north to south. He managed to pull out his camera and get a night photo of it, which he says is posted on the channel's page and their Facebook page. In the photo, it apparently shows up as a small streak in the center of the frame, but when you zoom in, the cylindrical shape becomes visible. The host is pretty clear about his assessment. All three of them agreed the object was outside the atmosphere. They agreed it was traveling at least as fast as satellites, probably much faster given the apparent size. It blocked out a star as it passed in front of it, which is a detail that really stands out because that suggests something with actual physical mass moving between the observer and a known stellar object. There was absolutely no sound, which rules out conventional aircraft. And he specifically mentions he's seen Starlink trails about nine times and this was nothing like them. His estimate, if the object was right outside the atmosphere, is that it could have been somewhere between 50 and 100 miles long. That's a staggering size, and he acknowledges it's speculation, but the witnesses were unified in their assessment that this was something genuinely anomalous. The host closes the video by mentioning that this is only the third event in his life powerful enough to rank alongside two others, a triangle craft he saw over Lynx Lake in Prescott around 1973-1975 when he was about six or seven years old, and a planetary body he and his wife observed as the sun was setting. For someone who's been doing this kind of work for as long as he clearly has, that's saying something. Honestly, the combination of phenomena in this one video is unusual. You've got documented Sasquatch activity with multiple witnesses, telepathic communication, visual confirmation of an individual, and then a separate, independent UFO event with photographic evidence captured during the same night. The host himself says it's going to take him a long time to process everything that happened. If this kind of field reporting interests you, the video is worth the watch. The host has a way of describing what he experienced that feels honest and unfiltered, and the photo of the cylindrical object is something that deserves a closer look. Sometimes the most interesting content on YouTube isn't from the big channels with millions of subscribers, it's from small groups of dedicated researchers out in the field documenting what they actually see.