SASQUATCH CAUGHT Stealing Chickens On Security Camera 
I never imagined I would abandon the land my family fought to keep for five generations.
Not in daylight.
Not with dignity.
Not even with a proper goodbye.
I fled in the middle of the night like a hunted animal, leaving behind everything that made me who I was.
My name is Robert Patrick. I am sixty-three years old. And what I am about to tell you is the reason my ranch now sits empty in the Montana wilderness—rotting, unwanted, and feared by those who know its story.
For forty-two years, my wife Margaret and I lived on 127 acres nestled deep in the Bitterroot Mountains. No neighbors for eighteen miles. No cell service. Just forest, mountains, and silence. We raised cattle, grew vegetables, kept chickens for eggs, and heated our home with wood I cut myself. It was a hard life—but it was honest.
This land was in my blood. My great-great-grandfather homesteaded it in 1887. Four generations of Patricks are buried in the small family cemetery behind the house. Margaret joined them two years ago, taken by cancer far too quickly.
After she died, my children begged me to leave. They said the isolation was dangerous. That one fall, one heart attack, one mistake could kill me out there.
They were wrong.
Isolation wasn’t what nearly killed me.
Something else was.
I always respected the forest. I knew about bears, wolves, mountain lions. I kept a .30-06 by the door and a .44 Magnum on my hip when working outside. Predators exist. That’s part of living where civilization ends.
But the things I began noticing after Margaret’s death weren’t animal.
It started with sounds.
Wood knocks echoing through the trees—sharp, deliberate, repeating in patterns. Vocalizations that weren’t quite animal, and weren’t quite human. Footsteps—heavy, bipedal—moving just beyond the tree line at night.
I told myself it was grief. Loneliness. An old man’s imagination.
Then the signs appeared.
Massive footprints near the creek. Trees stripped of bark eight feet off the ground. Arrangements of sticks and stones that looked… intentional. Ritualistic.
The first kill happened in July. A young bull, dead in the pasture. Its neck twisted at an impossible angle. No feeding. No claw marks. Just death.
Two weeks later, three chickens were found dead—necks snapped clean, bodies arranged in a rough triangle.
That was when my son Michael convinced me to install a trail camera near the chicken coop.
For weeks, it recorded normal wildlife. Deer. Raccoons. Foxes. I started to relax.
That was my mistake.
In October, the forest changed.
The animals vanished. The nights grew unnaturally silent. The cattle huddled near the barn, staring at the tree line like prey that knew something I didn’t.
On the morning of October 24th, I woke to carnage.
The chicken coop had been peeled open like foil. Feathers everywhere. Blood soaked into the dirt. Of the twenty-three chickens I’d put to bed the night before, only four survived—huddled together, shaking.
My hands trembled as I reviewed the trail camera footage.
At 11:47 p.m., something stepped out of the trees.
Nine feet tall. Covered in dark, matted fur. Arms hanging nearly to its knees. No neck. No hesitation.
It examined the wire mesh like a craftsman—then tore it apart with bare hands.
What followed wasn’t feeding.
It was slaughter.
Necks snapped effortlessly. Bodies tossed aside. The creature killed far more than it ate. And then it did something that still haunts my dreams.
It looked directly into the camera.
Its eyes reflected the infrared light like burning coals. Intelligent. Aware.
It knew it was being watched.
And it wanted me to see.
I drove to town with the footage, desperate for help. The ranger dismissed me. A bear, he said. Stress. Grief.
Tom Kowalski—the man who’d known me for twenty years—believed something was wrong. But belief didn’t equal solutions.
For weeks, I lived under siege.
Footprints appeared closer to the house. Trees were damaged overnight. Stone patterns formed in the yard. The sounds returned—louder, closer, coordinated.
Then, one night, they came for me.
I heard footsteps circling the house. Multiple. Heavy. Patient.
When I finally ran for my truck, two of them stepped into my headlights.
Nine feet tall. Upright. Watching me.
One of them raised its arm… and pointed.
Not an animal gesture.
A warning.
I fled.
Months later, I returned once—to retrieve Margaret’s things.
What I found destroyed me.
The house had been systematically demolished. Not weather. Not animals.
Furniture shattered. Walls punched in. Tools twisted like toys. My father’s anvil embedded in concrete.
And in the basement, I found Margaret’s grave marker—smashed into pieces.
That was the message.
You left.
This is the price.
I sold the land. A young couple tried to live there. They lasted less than a year.
Now the property sits empty. Locals call it cursed.
I keep the trail camera footage hidden away. The only proof.
I don’t talk about Sasquatch. I don’t argue with skeptics.
I just know this:
There are places where humans are not welcome.
Where intelligence watches from the trees.
Where territory is enforced with patience… and cruelty.
And once you are noticed—
You are never truly alone again.