The pattern is no longer linear. What began as a concentrated surge of sightings moving eastward through Portage County has now expanded in multiple directions, suggesting a pattern far more complex than that from a single roaming animal, or a single nomadic group.
Jeremiah Byron at Bigfoot Society is reporting that within 24 hours, investigators confirmed Sighting #7 near Tinkers Creek and Sighting #8 near Lake Milton - two encounters that may redefine what is happening across Northeast Ohio. Taken together, these reports point toward coordinated movement, multiple individuals, and possibly a structured migration through what researchers are now calling “The Corridor.”
Incident #7 - Roadside Encounter on Route 303 Near Tinker's Creek (8:00 PM)
The western edge of the surge lit up again Monday night, March 9 around 8:00 PM when a mother and daughter traveling westbound experienced an encounter at shockingly close range. Driving near Tinker's Creek between Streetsboro and Hudson in a low-lying forested region on Route 303, the vehicle approached a wooded stretch of roadway, the witnesses suddenly observed a figure walking directly into oncoming traffic. They passed within a few feet of the subject. The passenger later stated she felt she “could have hit it.”
The creature was described as being approximately 6.5 feet with a lean, brown colored figure. Interestingly, it was also described as walking "stilt-like" - the same descrription detailed by a different witness, also on March 9 near Hankee Road on Headwaters Trail in Portage County. In this latest account, the face was described as being "blurred," with lighter hair framing the face. No eyes were visible. The unusual gait description is particularly important. This marks the second independent report during the current surge describing a stiff, elevated walking motion - a detail rarely shared between witnesses unless observed firsthand.
Notably, this individual differs dramatically from the towering 10-foot “Alpha” previously tracked near Garrettsville and Newton Township. The size difference strongly supports the growing hypothesis of a family unit or multi-generational group moving through the region. Investigators believe the Tinkers Creek wetlands may serve as a concealed travel corridor, allowing subjects to move between forest patches while avoiding human detection.
Motorists traveling Route 303 are urged to remain vigilant, as these sightings suggest the subjects are currently moving along active roadways rather than remaining deep in forest cover.
SIGHTING #8 - Lake Milton (10:30 AM)
Less than a day later, the surge expanded southeast. At 10:30 AM on March 10, 2026, a highly credible witness observed another subject in broad daylight from her home near Lake Milton - marking the eighth high-confidence report in the ongoing wave. The witness watched the figure for roughly 30 seconds as it moved across her property toward wooded terrain near a local pond. It was not a fleeting glimpse - it was a sustained observation.
She described the figure as being about 7 feet tall with a heavy muscular frame and "big, fat, round arms." It seeemed to be leaning forward as it ran at a very high speed. The witness emphasized the creature’s powerful motion, describing how it ducked effortlessly beneath branches and heavy underbrush before disappearing into the woods.
“It didn’t seem like no deer,” she explained, also ruling out a black bear due to the upright posture and muscular arm structure. "I felt curious as to what the heck it could have been."
With these two sightings added to the growing dataset, investigators are now observing what appears to be a multi-route advance across Northeast Ohio: The massive 10-foot black subject moving through Newton Falls, a heavy, reddish-brown individual pushing toward Lake Milton and West Branch State Park and the lean “blurred-face” subject utilizing swamp coridors near Tinkers Creek.
Rather than one animal wandering randomly, the evidence now suggests distributed movement along waterways, particularly the Mahoning River watershed and connected pond systems. These act as natural travel paths offering hydration, cover, and navigation landmarks. With this in mind, perhaps the most striking development is behavioral.
Multiple witnesses report subjects appearing near roads, in daylight, and close to residences. This is a departure from traditional Bigfoot reports characterized by stealthy deep-forest avoidance. Something seems to be pushing these subjects into human spaces, whether it's environmental (weather), seasonal migration, or social dynamics within the group. The reason remains unknown.
If current patterns hold, Northeast Ohio may be witnessing one of the most concentrated and structured waves of Sasquatch activity we've seen in decades.
Reports can be submitted anonymously to Jeremiah at bigfootsociety@gmail.com.
You can also listen to the Ohio sightings report on the Bigfoot Society podcast where Jeremiah has been providing updates as he gets them.

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