Mountain Biker Captures 8-Foot Bigfoot Following Him Through Forest
Posted Thursday, July 09, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
So I just stumbled across something that's been sitting with me all morning, and I had to share it with anyone who appreciates a good trail camera story. A mountain biker exploring some seriously remote, abandoned logging roads in the Pacific Northwest ended up capturing footage that, honestly, gave me chills the moment I saw it.
The rider, a guy named Ethan who runs his own outdoor adventure channel, decided to tackle one of the oldest logging trails in his state. We're talking about a route that hasn't been officially maintained since the early 1980s, after landslides made it too dangerous for the trucks. The kind of place where nature has been slowly swallowing everything back up, with old saw blades rusting under blankets of moss and collapsing cabins hidden among the trees. Sounds like the perfect setup for something interesting, right?
Things started getting weird around noon. Ethan rolled over a massive footprint pressed deep into the muddy path. At first glance, he figured bear, but the details didn't match. No claw marks. Five long toes, a defined heel, and an arch exactly where a human foot would have one, except this print measured nearly 18 inches long. For anyone who's spent time researching Sasquatch reports, that size range lines up with countless witness accounts over the decades. Eighteen inches is right in that sweet spot that keeps showing up in footprint casts from places like the Pacific Northwest, the Appalachians, and even parts of Canada.
He found more prints crossing the trail before they disappeared into the dense forest, and not long after, he came across several young pine trees that had been twisted completely around until their trunks snapped. Fresh splintered wood, pale beneath the bark, meaning it happened recently. This kind of tree damage is one of those classic indicators that researchers have documented for years. It's often referred to as "tree structures" or "tree breaks," and there are several theories about why a Sasquatch might do it. Some researchers believe it's territorial marking, others think it might be related to feeding behavior, and some suggest it could simply be a display of strength or even a form of communication. Whatever the reason, it's a pattern that keeps appearing in active sighting areas.
By late afternoon, the wildlife just... stopped. No squirrels, no deer, and the birds went completely silent. Anyone who's spent time in the woods knows that sudden absence of animal activity is one of the biggest red flags that something larger is moving through the area. Deer especially are incredibly sensitive to predators, and a mature Sasquatch would absolutely register as something worth avoiding.
Then came the howling. A deep, low-pitched sound that Ethan could actually feel vibrating through his handlebars, followed by an answering call from somewhere behind him. That kind of vocalization has been described in Sasquatch encounters for generations. The low frequency, almost infrasonic quality matches reports from places like the Skookum Cast in Washington State and various witness testimonies from the Ohio River Valley. Some researchers have even suggested these vocalizations might serve as long-distance communication between family groups or as territorial announcements.
The part that really got me, though, was the footsteps. Ethan kept hearing something following him, matching his pace perfectly. Every time he stopped, the footsteps stopped too. Then came the wood knocks. Three sharp knocks from the woods to his left, followed by three answering knocks from the opposite side of the trail. For anyone familiar with Sasquatch research, wood knocking is considered one of the most reliable indicators of an active encounter. Dr. Jane Goodall herself noted that great apes engage in similar behavior, and researchers like John Bindernagel have documented wood knocking as a potential form of communication or warning signal in Sasquatch territory.
The most fascinating part of the whole video is what Ethan's helmet camera apparently captured without him realizing it. While he was stopped at a creek refilling his water bottle, the camera was angled past his shoulder toward the trail behind him. According to the footage analysis, an enormous figure, well over eight feet tall and covered in dark brown fur, silently stepped out from between the pine trees about 50 yards behind him. It paused in the middle of the trail, watching him disappear deeper into the forest, and then apparently followed him for miles.
Eight feet tall, dark brown fur, bipedal, moving silently through dense forest. That description matches the general consensus morphology that researchers have pieced together from thousands of witness reports. The Pacific Northwest is absolutely prime habitat, with the kind of old-growth forest, abundant water sources, and remote terrain that would support a large, elusive primate.
Honestly, this is one of those videos that makes you want to grab your backpack and head straight for the mountains. The combination of physical evidence (the prints, the tree damage), auditory evidence (the howls, the footsteps, the wood knocks), and now apparently visual evidence captured on a helmet cam is exactly the kind of multi-layered encounter that researchers dream about. It's rare to get all three in a single incident.
If you haven't seen the footage yet, definitely track it down. The way the tension builds throughout Ethan's ride is genuinely gripping, and knowing that something was following him the entire time adds a layer of unease that you don't usually get in these kinds of videos. It's the kind of content that reminds you why people keep exploring these old, forgotten trails in the first place. Sometimes the forest still has secrets.