Florida Bigfoot Researcher Retrieves River Game Cameras, Shares Captured Footage
Posted Sunday, July 12, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's a video floating around YouTube right now from a channel called Tim T in Florida, and honestly, it's one of those clips that sneaks up on you. At first glance, it looks like just another game camera review, but buried in there is some genuinely compelling stuff for anyone serious about field research.
The video is essentially a walkthrough of Tim retrieving his game cameras from a river spot he's been monitoring for a while. He and his buddy Joey head out, swap memory cards, and then walk viewers through everything the cameras captured over several months. Turkeys, deer, hogs, fishermen in kayaks, cold fronts rolling through, even a curious turkey hunter who tried to pry the camera open and got foiled by a padlock. Standard trail cam stuff, right? But then Tim starts talking about why he runs these cameras in the first place, and that's where things get interesting.
Tim makes a strong case for game cameras being one of the most underrated tools in Bigfoot research. He points out that most researchers are out in the field during the day, but a lot of the activity, whatever it is, happens at night. Trail cams fill that gap. They capture the animals in the area, the human traffic, and occasionally, something else entirely. He mentions catching orbs on his cameras before, which a lot of people dismiss, but he's seen enough weird stuff over the years to keep an open mind.
Then he drops the story that really caught my attention. He talks about a friend of his, a guy he calls Bigfoot Dave, who doesn't run a YouTube channel, doesn't post anything online, and only shows people footage in person on his phone. Tim says he was actually with Dave when they set up some cameras, and one of those cameras caught something extraordinary. According to Tim, the footage shows a Sasquatch coming around from behind a tree on a small trail cutting through the swamp. And here's the kicker, it reached its hand around the tree to block the camera as it passed. You can supposedly see the hand, the arm, and the back. Tim says the back looks just like Patty, as in the famous Patterson-Gimlin Patty from 1967. That level of anatomical consistency with the most iconic Bigfoot footage ever captured is exactly the kind of detail that makes researchers pay attention.
Tim also goes into a fascinating tangent about the military origins of infrared technology. He explains that modern IR game cameras borrow heavily from military imaging systems, which themselves were inspired by owl vision. The reasoning is that owls are basically nature's most advanced nocturnal predators, with retinal receptors and feather structures designed to minimize light scattering and maximize image clarity in near-total darkness. Military engineers studied owl eyes to develop better night vision systems, and that tech eventually trickled down into the trail cams sitting on trees in Florida swamps today. It's a wild connection when you think about it, the same biomechanics that let a great horned owl spot a mouse in pitch black are now helping researchers document potential Sasquatch activity.
Another detail worth mentioning is something Tim noticed in the environment around his camera site. He points out a cluster of trees that were completely dead and bare when something, he doesn't say what, lit the area up at some point. Now those same trees are green and growing again. He specifically says whatever it was seemed to be targeting those trees. That kind of environmental anomaly, dead vegetation followed by regrowth, has been reported in other hotspots too, and researchers have speculated about everything from electromagnetic effects to unknown biological factors. Tim doesn't try to explain it, he just notes it and moves on, which honestly makes it land harder.
He also spends some time educating viewers on the Osceola turkey, Florida's native subspecies, named after the famous Seminole leader in 1890. It's a nice touch because it shows the kind of baseline ecological knowledge that serious researchers bring to their work. Knowing what's normal in an area is the only way to recognize what's not.
The video itself runs pretty long and covers a lot of ground, literally and figuratively. But the Bigfoot Dave story alone is worth the watch. If that footage is real, and Tim seems to believe it is, it's one of the clearest captures of a Sasquatch deliberately interacting with a camera that anyone has described in recent memory. The fact that Dave keeps it close and only shares it in person adds to the mystique. Whether you trust that or not, it's the kind of firsthand account that keeps the conversation alive.
Definitely worth checking out if you're into trail cam research or just want to hear a researcher talk about why game cameras should be standard equipment for anyone serious about this stuff. Tim T in Florida has more videos on the channel too, so there's plenty to dig through.