Sasquatch Country

Washington State sits at the epicenter of Bigfoot activity in North America. From the dense old-growth forests of the Olympic Peninsula to the volcanic slopes of Mount Rainier, the Pacific Northwest has produced more credible sightings than anywhere else on Earth.

700+
WA State Sightings
#2
Most Sightings (US)
1924
Ape Canyon Incident
1967
Patterson-Gimlin Film
Washington State Hotspots

Western Washington

Ape Canyon, Mt. St. Helens

Site of the famous 1924 attack where miners reported being bombarded by large rocks thrown by ape-like creatures. One of the earliest documented encounters in Washington.

Olympic Peninsula / Hoh Rainforest

Temperate old-growth rainforest with some of the densest vegetation in North America. Multiple sighting clusters near the Hoh River, Quinault, and Sol Duc valleys.

Skookum Meadows, Gifford Pinchot NF

Location of the 2000 "Skookum Cast" — a full body impression found in mud that BFRO researchers consider among the best physical evidence. The Yakama word "skookum" means "strong spirit."

Lewis County / Chehalis

Consistently high sighting density. Rural forested terrain between I-5 and the Cascades. Multiple reports of road crossings, wood knocks, and vocalizations.

Eastern Washington & Cascades

Blue Mountains, SE Washington

Remote wilderness along the Oregon border. The Walla Walla Ranger District has documented encounters dating back to the 1800s. Nez Perce oral tradition includes "Ts'emekwes" (stick Indians).

Mount Rainier National Park

Sightings concentrated along the Carbon River and White River drainages. Dense subalpine forest with abundant water sources and minimal human traffic.

Okanogan County

North-central Washington along the Canadian border. Continuous wilderness corridor allows migration between BC and WA. Multiple multi-witness sightings near Twisp and Winthrop.

Snoqualmie Pass / I-90 Corridor

Major Cascade crossing point. Reports cluster near exits 34-52 where dense forest abuts the highway. Night-time road crossings reported by truckers and commuters.

Living in Sasquatch Country

Growing up and living in Washington State, you hear the stories. Not secondhand internet tales — first-hand accounts from hunters, loggers, tribal members, and hikers who've spent their lives in these woods. People who have no reason to lie and everything to lose by talking about what they saw.

The Pacific Northwest is different from anywhere else in the US. We have more wilderness per capita, more rainfall, more biomass, and more places where a large primate could live undetected than most people realize. The Cascades alone contain millions of acres of roadless wilderness. The Olympic rainforest receives 12 feet of rain per year and has canopy so dense that satellite imagery can't penetrate it.

At BTHL, we take the Sasquatch question seriously. We investigate reports, document evidence, and respect both the witnesses and the indigenous peoples whose oral traditions have described these beings for thousands of years. The truth is in the trees.

Notable Washington Incidents
Mt. St. Helens, Skamania County

The Ape Canyon Attack (1924)

Five miners reported their cabin was attacked by a group of "ape-men" who hurled rocks at the structure throughout the night. Fred Beck claimed to have shot one, which fell off a cliff. The canyon was named after this incident.

July 1924 • Multiple witnesses
Bluff Creek, CA (PNW corridor)

Patterson-Gimlin Film (1967)

The most analyzed piece of Bigfoot evidence ever recorded. Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin filmed a female Sasquatch walking along a creek bed. Despite decades of scrutiny, the film has never been conclusively debunked.

October 20, 1967 • 2 witnesses + film
Gifford Pinchot NF, Skamania County

The Skookum Cast (2000)

BFRO expedition members found a full-body impression in a muddy clearing where fruit bait had been placed. Analysis by Dr. Jeff Meldrum (Idaho State) showed forearm, thigh, buttock, and heel impressions consistent with a large primate.

September 2000 • BFRO expedition team
Skamania County, WA

Skamania County Ordinance (1969/1984)

Skamania County passed an ordinance making the killing of a Sasquatch a felony punishable by 5 years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. Updated in 1984 to classify Sasquatch as an endangered species.

April 1, 1969 • County ordinance #69-01
Olympic Peninsula, WA

Olympic Project Thermal Footage (2013)

The Olympic Project captured thermal imaging footage of a large upright figure moving through dense forest at night. The heat signature and gait analysis were consistent with a large bipedal primate, not a bear or human.

2013 • Thermal camera evidence
Multiple WA counties

Sierra Sounds / PNW Vocalizations

Audio recordings of alleged Sasquatch vocalizations from the PNW have been analyzed by linguists and primatologists. Some recordings show a complex vocal range beyond any known North American wildlife.

Ongoing • Audio evidence
Washington State Bigfoot Resources

BFRO — Washington Sightings Database

Searchable database of all documented Bigfoot sighting reports in Washington State, organized by county. Class A (clear sightings), Class B (sounds/tracks), Class C (secondhand).

bfro.net/GDB →

The Olympic Project

Long-term research initiative focused on the Olympic Peninsula. Camera trap arrays, thermal surveys, track casting, and habitat analysis in Washington's densest forest.

olympicproject.com →

Dr. Jeff Meldrum — Idaho State University

Professor of Anatomy & Anthropology and the leading academic researcher of Sasquatch evidence. Maintains the largest collection of cast footprints. Author of "Sasquatch: Legend Meets Science."

isu.edu →

Sasquatch Chronicles Podcast

One of the most popular Bigfoot podcasts featuring first-hand encounter interviews. Heavy PNW focus with regular Washington State witnesses sharing their experiences.

sasquatchchronicles.com →

WA Dept. of Natural Resources

Trail maps, forest access permits, and wilderness area information for planning field investigations in Washington's state forests and trust lands.

wadnr.gov →

Mount Rainier National Park

One of Washington's top Sasquatch hotspots. Trail conditions, backcountry permits, and wilderness camping info for investigators planning extended field operations.

nps.gov/mora →

Indigenous Perspectives

Washington's indigenous peoples have described large, hairy, bipedal beings in their oral traditions for millennia — long before European settlement. The Lummi call them Ts'emekwes, the Yakama know them as Qah-lin-me, the Salish peoples speak of Sasquatch (from the Halkomelem Sasq'ets), and the Spokane describe the Skanicum.

These traditions are not mythology to be dismissed — they represent thousands of years of observation by people who lived in these forests and knew them intimately. At BTHL, we approach indigenous knowledge with respect and recognize that the oral record may hold keys that Western science has yet to discover.