Michigan’s Upper Peninsula cryptid capital • 95,455 acres of remote wetlands • Verified Sasquatch sightings from Air Force officers, civilians & BFRO Class A files.
A 2026 search of U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service records, BFRO database, Detroit Free Press archives, and every paranormal database. The only consistent, documented phenomenon? Michigan’s highest concentration of Bigfoot/Sasquatch reports in the refuge and along the Seney Stretch. Here is the complete breakdown.
Seney National Wildlife Refuge has credible reports of Bigfoot/Sasquatch related. The refuge’s remote jack-pine wetlands and the adjacent Seney Stretch (M-28 highway) are repeatedly ranked as the top Bigfoot hotspot in the entire state of Michigan.
Established December 10, 1935 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as Seney Migratory Bird Refuge (renamed 1937). The land was once the Great Manistique Swamp. Heavy logging 1880–1910 cleared the forests; failed farmland drainage attempts left abandoned canals and ditches. Civilian Conservation Corps crews in the 1930s created the current 7,000+ acres of managed pools. Includes the 25,150-acre Seney Wilderness Area and Strangmoor Bog National Natural Landmark. No historical tragedies or Indigenous lore linked to any paranormal claims.
Additional credible reports include wood knocks and shadowy figures in the marshes, all confined to the refuge and Seney Stretch corridor.
Town of Seney (adjacent): Historic logging town with folklore about “The Ogre of Seney” (P.K. “Snapjaw” Small) — real eccentric known for grotesque feats in the early 1900s. Oral stories claim he “still wanders Seney,” but this is purely local legend and unrelated to the refuge or any documented haunting.
Seney Stretch (M-28): 25-mile isolated wetland highway between Seney and Shingleton — exact location of nearly every documented Bigfoot sighting in the area.
All data sourced directly from U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service official records, BFRO.net database, Detroit Free Press archives, and cross-verified historical sources. Bigfoot reports remain anecdotal with no physical evidence recovered. The refuge operates today as a premier migratory bird sanctuary with no official cryptid or paranormal references on federal websites.
📍 View Seney Refuge Bigfoot Sightings on the Interactive Phantom-Finder MapReport compiled by Phantom-Finder Meticulous Research Team • March 26, 2026 • Sources: U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, BFRO.net, Detroit Free Press, UPTravel.com.