Saturday, 31 May 2014

BEEBE'S SERPENT

A creature described by William Beebe was thought to have been the result of  a mistaken observation.  Then it was rediscovered.
(This article is in Italian; if you don't speak it, you'll need a translation engine).

WILD MEN IN SOUTH AMERICA

While there may not be Bigfoots per se in Patagonia, humanoid creatures definitely figure in the legends of the region.

now read on.....

UNUSUAL ANIMAL STORIES

Here we have a bevy of unusual animal stories, including one of historical import, shedding light on Winston Churchill's turn of phrase.





now read on.....

BLACKBEARD'S ENCHANTED WATERS

Blackbeard
Blackbeard the Pirate was the name by which Edward Teach (died 1718) was more generally known.  A legend tells how, after his final battle, when his head was cut off, it fell into the water and circled the ship seven times.  It was in fact hung from the bowsprit of one of the ships which had overcome him.

Blackbeard made his ships avoid what he termed 'enchanted waters'.  He himself claimed to have seen mermaids, which he reckoned to be bad luck.  Therefore, he avoided water in which he suspected them of dwelling.  The idea that mermaids were better avoided was widespread among sailors at the time.

BIGFOOT WITH BIG CLAWS

Dug from the archives is this story of a Bigfoot with big claws.
Bigfoot a-strolling

now read on....

LEGENDARY HUMANOIDS - THE SEEAHTIK

The legendary Seeahtik Indians were said to be semi-human, but to have the powers of ventriloquism and hypnosis and the ability to make themselves invisible.  

now read on....

ON TODAY IN WEIRD


On This Day in Weird, May 31...

1965: Seraphine Jasper saw a tall, black Sasquatch crossing a field in daylight, on Nicomen Island near Mission, British Columbia



1978: James Jenks watched a Sasquatch enter a shed on his property at Mason, Michigan.


Friday, 30 May 2014

NON-HUMAN GIANT SKULLS?

This article argues that the elongated skulls found in South America are not the skulls of Homo sapiens.

now read on....

LONE PINE MOUNTAIN DEVIL

This creature is said to be one of the more frightening cryptids, but one legend avers that the species attacks only those who desecrate the wilderness, preying on humans, bobcats and coyotes.

There have been reports of this creature, also called the California Mountain Devil, since the 19th Century.  Its range is said to extend from the south-west USA into Mexico.  It is said to be winged with fur, talons and poisonous fangs.  A number of them are supposed to have attacked a coachload of settlers in the Sierra Nevada in 1878.  37 of them are said to have been killed, the only survivor being a priest who witnessed the massacre and described the attackers as "winged demons".

No sightings of these creatures have been reported since 1928.  Zoologists tend to be dismissive of the creature's existence, regarding it as folkloristic in nature.
Sierra Nevada

STRANGENESS IN FRESNO

One of the strangest monsters in cryptozoology must surely be the Nightcrawler, which has appeared in indistinct videos (two of them) taken in the region of Fresno (California).  It is very slender and does not appear to have arms.  The suggestion that what the videos show is a pair of trousers hanging on a line cannot be ruled out.  However, it is said to feature in the folklore of the local Indians.

There is, of course, a kind of earthworm called a nightcrawler, used as fish-bait, with which the above creature should not be confused.

WHERE DOES WATER COME FROM?

Frog
If ever you've wondered about the origins of water, the Chumash Indians have an explanation for its presence.  It comes, their legends inform us, from frogs.  Yes, it is frogs' urine.  Think of that next time you quaff a cool glass of water.

Actually, the water on earth remains constant.  This means that when you drink water, it has already passed through countless animals, including dinosaurs, for the same water has always been here.  Now, there's a link with the past you probably didn't know you had.

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD



On This Day in Weird, May 30...

1979: Trucker Bill Iffttiger sees an eight-foot Sasquatch cross U.S. 395 outside Bridgeport, California.




Thursday, 29 May 2014

ALIEN ABDUCTION?

This curious story is to be found in Phantoms and Monsters.
(Image courtesy Lon Strickler)


THE LION OF AMERICA

American Lion
America once had its own species of lion (Panthera leo atrox) which roved the United States and extended into Mexico.  However, received wisdom says it became extinct in Pleistocene times.

However, there have been occasional sightings of lions in America and Loren Coleman has suggested that these may not be African lions, but rather a surviving population of the supposedly extinct American species.

Indians told the Dutch settlers on Manhattan Island of the existence of cats with manes.  Reports of lions came in from New York state and Pennsylvania in the 18th Century.  In 1836 a lion was reported in what is now West Virginia.  

In the 20th Century the following reports surfaced:

1917 - two lions, one male, one female (Illinois)
1948 - report from Elkhorn Falls (Indiana)
1959 - Ohio sighting
1960 - sighting in Ontario
1971 - sighting in Ohio
1977 - sighting in Ohio
1978 - report from Florida
1984 - Ohio sighting
1985 - Texas sighting
1992 - Ohio sighting

Striped lions have also been reported:

California - 1868
Mexico - 1940
Pennsylvania - 1986

It was formerly suggetsed that the American lion was actually a tiger, but this opinion is no longer held.  It is harder for lions to keep a low profile than pumas, not alone because of their size, but because of the considerable distances their roar carries.

BIG CAT SIGHTINGS?

Puma/cougar/mountain-lion
A possible puma has been seen and photographed in Minnesota.  The sighting occurred in Mower County recently.  Unfortunately, the photographic image was too blurred for the animal to be identified with certainty.

In England a wild beast, variously identified as a big cat or a wolverine, has been reported in Cornwall.  A wolverine, the largest member of the weasel family, would be a most unpleasant creature to run into.
Wolverine

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD



On This Day in Weird, May 29...

1973: Witness Anthony Dorsey reports seeing a Sasquatch with luminous eyes near Sykesville, Maryland. The sighting follows reports of a UFO dropping some unknown object into a local reservoir. Other witnesses subsequently log sightings of an eight-foot-tall hair biped around Sykesville.




Wednesday, 28 May 2014

RESPECTFUL ANTS

Did you know that ants respected their elders' wisdom?  Well, they do, so there.

now read on...

THUNDERBIRD - NATIVE TRADITIONS

Down below you will find an article on the Thunderbird.  We thought we would give you some Native American traditions of this bird.

Thunderbird carrying whale
The Sioux believed in a chief Thunderbird called Wakinyan Tanka.  He was the Thunderbird of the West.  In days agone he lived on Harney Peak in the Black Hills of Dakota.  He had a beak, wings and claws, but, as far as I can discover, no other corporeal features.  He was the Thunderbird of the West.  There were also Thunderbirds of the North, South and East.

According to the Shawnee, Thunderbirds fight with the Great Horned Serpent.  This creature had managed to obtain some power from the Creator.  The Creator wanted it back and snatched off the Serpent's head.  The Serpent had to take the head off a deer to replace it.

THUNDERBIRD!

Thunderbird
There is no doubt that the Thunderbird was used among Native Americans to explain the thunder.  The question into which the cryptozoologist must look is whether an actual large bird lies behind the legend.  It would be not unnatural for tribesmen to ascribe thunder to such a bird, if this were the case.

The idea that Thunderbirds could carry off whales probably stemmed from the finding of whale bones on mountain tops.  The idea that a bird large enough to actually carry off a whale could exist unnoticed is, of course, ludicrous.

As to the question of where the Thunderbird actually lived, the Passamaquody had a legend concerning this.  Two Indians wished to discover the origin of thunder.  They ventured west and came to  two mountains, which clashed into and recoiled from each other continuously.  The first Indian managed to rush between them before they clashed together.  The second wasn't so lucky.  On the far side of the mountains he found the Thunderbirds - an ordinary tribe of Indians who, when they decided to make thunder, donned bird costume and flew through the sky.

It is said that some Thunderbirds assumed human form and became the ancestors of certain families.  A number of families claiming Thunderbird descent are found on Vancouver island.

Turning to the Passamaquody again, this tribe spoke of an enemy of the Thunderbirds called Wochwosen, who hailed from the south.  He seems to have been a bird who caused winds.  So troublesome did he become that Glooskap, a deity, had to break the wings.  However, as complete lack of wind led to stagnant and oppressive air, Glooskap had to partially repair his handiwork.

The Cashmawa Indians in distant South America believed in a thunderbird type creature called the xeuxeu.

Could belief in the Thunderbird be based on an actual creature?  There have been a number of sightings of mysterious Big Birds in North America in modern times.  The largest authenticated wingspan of any modern bird is 12', yet these birds' wingspans are sometimes said to exceed this.

An Indian called White Bear, who died in 1905, claimed he was carried off by a Thunderbird and brought to its nest, from which he managed to escape.  In 1948 a large bird, at first mistaken for an airplane, was sighted at Overlook (Illinois) and later at Alton, in the same state.  In the same year one was sighted at St Louis (Missouri).  There were a number of sightings in Pennsylvania in 2001 and at San Antonio (Texas) in 2007.

However, the most astonishing report involves the carrying off of Marlon Lowe at Lawndale (Illinois) in 1971.  True, the mighty bird concerned did not succeed in carrying him very far, but to be able to carry him at all is beyond the capacity of any known bird.  It might be added that frontiersman Daniel Boone (1734-1819) said he had once seen a child carried off by a Big Bird.  A child or, indeed, an adult such as White Bear, is too heavy for any known bird to carry off and would even be too much for prehistoric teratorns.  It has been rumored that there are surviving pterosaurs in North America, but the Big Bird descriptions seem to lack reptilian features.  Yet one has to ask, if huge birds exist in North America, how come they have so far avoided the vigilant binoculars of bird watchers?

The whole question of Big Birds is, so to speak, up in the sky.  Unless they occasionally stray out from hidden fastnesses, it is difficult to see how they can exist.  There is also the problem of food.  They must need a goodly amount of sustenance and one has to ask how they can keep so low a profile and yet obtain it.  The mystery continues. 

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD


On This Day in Weird, May 28...

1431: Ecclesiastical authorities declare that Joan of Arc has "relapsed" into heresy by donning male clothing, thereby justifying her fiery execution. She dies suitably dressed.



1923: U.S. Attorney General, soon to be driven from office in a corruption scandal related to Prohibition, declares it illegal for women to wear trousers anywhere, anytime.








Tuesday, 27 May 2014

UNUSUAL PETS

If you're interested in unusual pets, such as skunks and capybaras, have a look at this article.


IS IT CANNIBALISM TO EAT YOURSELF?

Well, I suppose it is.  Norwegian artist Alexander Selvig Wengshoel had to have a hip bone removed surgically.  He boiled the bone, removed the flesh and ate some of it with a glass of wine.  I am reminded of Hannibal Lekter.

MOBY DICK

Moby Dick
Probably the most famous whale ever to grace a novelist's page is Moby Dick, who appeared in Herman Melville's novel of 1851.  Many consider him to be a white whale, but in fact in the story his skin is white with some gray intermingling.  He has become so famous that his name is known by thousands who have never opened Melville's book.  He is, however, quite fictitious - or is he?

Melville says that sperm whales can attain a length of ninety feet and Moby Dick was the longest of any of them.  However, no sperm whale of quite that length is to be found in the record book.  The book is named after the whale as the pursuit of the whale is the theme of the story, even though the creature appears in only three chapters of the work.  He is, however, the work's focus.

However, almost as monstrous as the whale himself in a way is Captain Ahab, who pursues him in his ship the Pequod.  Ahab does not appear when the ship sets sail, but lurks in his cabin, unseen but present, like some Lovecraftian monster sleeping at the bottom of the sea.  When he finally appears he cuts an eerie figure, with a false leg made from the bone of a whale.  He is obsessed with Moby Dick and the prime aim of his grim voyage is to slay the mighty cetacean.  He makes a speech worthy of Demosthenes in which he enlists the support of the crew for his purpose.  He is supported by some shadowy figures whom he has smuggled onto the ship.  A Zoroastrian named Fedallah utters dire prophecies about the outcome of the voyage.  He hangs about Ahab like a shadow.

While Ahab has no real life prototype, there was a whale on which Melville based Moby Dick.  This was an actual fully white whale called Mocha Dick, which lived in the South Pacific.  Mocha Dick was generally of tractable bent, often swimming peacefully alongside vessels.  Whalers who tried to kill him, however, soon found he could be both ferocious and crafty, generally able to hold his own against them.  He was finally killed in 1838.  A year later Jeremiah N. Reynolds chronicled his career.



GAULEY MARSH MYSTERY


Gauley Marsh Mystery Solved?
by
Michael Newton

I came across the following cryptid report while wrapping up my latest installment of the Strange Monsters series for Schiffer Books, due out early next year. The book covers reports of strange creatures in West Virginia, and this one certainly fits the bill. I'm pleased to offer a possible solution to the mystery, 132 years after the fact, and leave it open for debate.
In 1882, first a dog, then a horse, were found dead on the fringes of Gauley Marsh, in Pocahontas County. In each case, the victims were unmarked beyond a pair of wounds resembling widely spaced fang marks, thus ruling out attack by known carnivorous mammals. At the same time, the space between punctures—three and one-quarter inches—eliminated West Virginia's only venomous snakes, the timber rattler and the northern copperhead, as potential culprits. Hunters brought a hound to track the killer, and while the dog appeared to catch a scent, it refused to give chase.






Gauley Marsh Today


Frustrated on that front, locals focused their suspicion next on newcomer James Brooden, who had settled in the swamp. He had examined the dead horse's wounds and suggested it was bitten by some deadly unknown snake. The horse's owner, Jonas Heeb, suspected Brooden of involvement in that case—and when Heeb died in turn near the marsh, with identical puncture wounds on his wrist or throat (reports differ), Brooden was charged with his murder.
The "evidence" against him was an arrowhead, one of many he possessed, that seemed to match Heeb's wounds. Brooden claimed he used the arrowheads for hunting, shunning firearms, and while no trace of any poison was discovered at his camp which might have caused Heeb's death, the murder trial proceeded, climaxed by a field trip to the site where Brooden and Heeb were last seen quarreling. There, near a wall at one edge of the swamp, the judge, jurors and lawyers found a hired man burning logs and trash, oblivious to their proceedings.
While the prosecution and defense were bent on scoring points, a "low humming wail" distracted them, coming from the far side of the wall. Suddenly, a beast appeared, described as having "a club-like body four feet long. It possessed a large heart-shaped head, broader than a hand. It was colored as to disguise its presence in nature."
Brooden sprang into action, grabbing the hired man's pitchfork to skewer the creature and fling it onto the nearby fire, where it wriggled and died. Pulled from the flames when it was clearly dead, the creature was examined cautiously. Those present peered into its mouth and "teeth were found that matched the known wounds. Poison sacs were seen there also containing a straw-colored venom."
Brooden's murder charge was dismissed on the spot, and he wisely left the county. Folklorist G. D. McNeil, writing in 1940, summarized local opinions of the creature.

Some explained that the Marsh was but a remnant of a greater marsh which in another age had harbored many monsters now extinct; and, it was argued, the peculiar snake-like thing was the lone survivor of a dread species that had infested the big marsh thousands of years ago. Others maintained that the creature was no more than a monstrous deformity born from a mating of rattlesnakes.

We are hampered, in attempting to identify the creature, by a dearth of physical description. Did the beast have legs? Did it have scales? There is no reason to believe a "lone survivor" of some ancient species, so aggressive in its final days, went undiscovered from the county's settlement, in the 1750s, until 1882. A "monstrous mutation" is always possible, but there may be another explanation, as well.
Our brief description of the Gauley Marsh creature—snake-like, with a "club-like" body, broad "heart-shaped" (i.e., triangular) head with fangs and venom sacs, camouflage coloration—matches in all respects a stout-bodied viper, though not one of a domestic breed. Two species that immediately match the general description are the puff adder (Bitis arietans) and Gabon viper (B. gabonica), both native to Africa, with the puff adder's range including the southern Arabian Peninsula.
Puff adders kill more humans each year than any other venomous snake in Africa. The largest specimen on record measured six feet three inches long, with a girth of sixteen inches, "club-like" enough with the body extended. Its color pattern varies geographically, with the ground-color ranging from straw yellow to reddish brown, overlaid with a pattern of dark brown to black bands extending from the neck to the tail.






A puff adder strikes


Gabon vipers, native to eighteen countries in Central and West Africa, are the continent's heaviest venomous snakes, holding a record confirmed weight of twenty-five pounds with an empty stomach. That specimen, caught in 1973, measured five feet nine inches in length. Girths of 14.65 inches are confirmed, and Gabon vipers pack the longest fangs of any known venomous snake, measuring up to 2.2 inches. The standard color pattern consists of pale sub-rectangular blotches running down the center of the back, interspersed with dark, yellow-edged hourglass markings. Rhomboidal shapes mark the flanks, ranging from tan to brown, the overall pattern providing excellent forest floor camouflage.






A Gabon viper displays its forest camouflage


Neither viper can produce a "low humming wail"—nor can any other snake, since they lack vocal cords—but puff adders derive their name from the loud hissing sounds they emit when disturbed. As to how either species might have made the trip from Africa to West Virginia in the 19th century, we may only speculate. A long shot solution perhaps, but still more logical than a lone prehistoric survivor inhabiting Gauley Marsh for generations, unnoticed.
In October 2012, the Pocahontas County Opera House presented a play based on the Brooden murder trial, performed outdoors on the boardwalk of the Cranberry Glades Botanical Area. Director Emily Newton fairly summarized the history of Gauley Marsh, telling reporters, "We live in a pretty mystical place. You don't actually know what is around every corner of every trail."

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD



On This Day in Weird, May 27...

1911: Future movie star Vincent Leonard Price Jr., known for his many roles in horror and suspense films, born in St. Louis, Missouri.





1922: Horror/fantasy film great Christopher Lee born in London.





Monday, 26 May 2014

OLD SLIPPERYSKIN

If you look into the folklore of Vermont, you'll see one of the largest creatures is Old Slipperyskin, called by the Indians Wejuk.  He is usually described as a gigantic bear, but we will need to look further into this.  This huge animal was a pest to human settlers.  He would frighten people and animals, establish himself on a height and throw pinecones at passers-by, stampede cattle, drag trees through cornfields and throw stones at children.

He seems to have been particularly active in Essex and Orleans counties.  He was reported to have thrown pinecones at an expedition in 1759.

The story is told that Governor Jonas Galusha (1753-1834) had a plan which he regarded as both novel and ingenious to catch Old Slipperyskin.  He doused himself in a solution which stank of female bear and stationed a hunting party nearby.  He entered the woods and in due course he exited them rather quickly, with Old Slipperyskin in pursuit.  The hunters, who should have shot at the beast, instead fled, so the plan came to naught.

On another occasion a hunting party is said to have searched for him on the road leading to Elon Mountain.  Old Slipperyskin is said to have rolled a large tree downhill towards them and they perforce had to scatter.

Writer Joseph Citro says there might be descendants of Old Slipperyskin still around.

There are some features about Old Slipperyskin which may make us doubt that he was a bear.  First of all, he threw things, a task for which a bear's paws seem to me unsuited.  Secondly, he always stood on his hind legs, which is not something a bear will do for more than a short time.  He doesn't seem to have preyed on cattle, however much he annoyed them.  Although the tales told about him may sometimes be mere yarns, he does definitely seem to have existed, though the endeavors of more than one animal may have been laid at his door.  If he was a bear, he seems to have been a singular one.  The question that must be asked is whether he was something else and, if so, what.

In Vermont they drink Old Slipperyskin Pale Ale, which may be purchased at Jasper Murdoch's Alehouse (The Norwich Inn). 

Galusha House, residence of Jonas Galusha

FEMALE OF THE SPECIES

What do you call the males and females of the following species?:

                       male                                 female

Sheep              ram                                  ewe
Badger            boar                                 sow
Bear                boar                                 sow
Elephant         bull                                  cow
Whale             bull                                  cow
Fish                 milter                              spawner
Fox                 dog-fox                           vixen
Deer                buck                               doe
Deer (Red)      stag                                 hind
Horse              stallion                            mare
Peafowl          peacock                          peahen
Cat                 tom-cat                           queen
Rabbit            buck                                doe
Hare               jack                                 jill
Ferret             hob                                  jill
Rat and
   Mouse         buck                               doe

HORSE AND CAMEL


A rather heartwarming piece of footage: a horse and camel once were kept together, then separated.  See their reaction when they were reunited.

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD


On This Day in Weird, May 26...

1913: Future film star Peter Wilson Cushing born in Kenley, Surrey, U.K. Among horror/fantasy fans, he is best known for repeat portrayals of Victor Frankenstein, Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Who, and Professor Van Helsing, frequently appearing opposite Christopher Lee.



Sunday, 25 May 2014

NEW BOOKS ON BIGFOOT

A couple of recently published titles.




Encounters by Dina Palazini 104pp
Createspace $10.53


Bigfoot: exploring the myth and discovering the truth  264pp.
Llewellyn $13.07 (Kindle $10.83)

LISTS OF CRYPTIDS

The website Phantoms and Monsters is giving the names of cryptids with accounts of them in a new series.  To see it you need to go to phantomsandmonsters.com and see their page for May 24th.

UFO?

For those of you interested in UFO sightings, here is an account of  an alleged one that occurred in daylight in Canada two days ago (23rd May).

CAN ANIMALS TALK?

This is a question many ask.  It is clear animals can communicate with each other, even if this only amounts to a hostile growl, but do they talk in the sense of conversing as is the case, say, in the Dr Dolittle books?

Konrad Lorenz, Nobel Prize winner and animal psychologist, points out we may mistake some animal communications for speech.  For example, a bird may utter an alarm call if it sees a predator.  While this alerts other birds in the vicinity to danger, it is not true language because the bird will still utter the call even if there are no other birds nearby who might hear it.  The call is merely an evolutionary development.

However, some animals can be taught a certain amount of human speech.  Your dog will have acquired a vocabulary of human words and will understand what you mean by them: he will not just infer your meaning from the tone of your voice.  However, no dog that I know of has ever actually managed to reply.

Parrots can imitate human words.  Sometimes, they can actually understand the meanings of these words.  Famous in this respect was an African gray parrot called Alex who was said to be able to say 100 words and apparently to understand them.  He even coined a new word bannery for an apple, by apparently combining the words banana and cherry.  Unfortunately, he died at the age of 30, young for a gray parrot, and may not have realized his full potential.  Another gray parrot, Nkisi, was said to understand 950 words and to know how to change tense.  When he met Jane Goodall he asked her, "Got a chimp?"

Studies by A. Turkaio have indicated a similarity between elephant calls and human speech.  Batyr, an elephant in a Kazakhstan zoo, was said to be able to utter a number of human words with comprehension.

Amongst primates, Koko, a gorilla, was able to learn 1000 signs in American Sign Language.  She also kept kittens as pets.  Michael, another gorilla, mastered a vocabulary of 600 sounds.  Kanzi, a bonobo, was able to learn to communicate by means of a lexigram.  His vocabulary was 200 words.

Research of this nature continues.  Where it will end, we cannot say at this juncture.  Perhaps eventually some animal will end up able to communicate animal perspectives fluently with us.  Watch this space.
African Gray Parrot

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD



On This Day in Weird, May 25...

1955: Motorist Robert Hunnicutt sees three short bipedal creatures, each about 40 inches tall, with wide mouths and "lopsided chests" standing beside a road in Branch Hill, Ohio. One of the creatures brandishes a "sparkling" rod overhead, emitting an alfalfa-almond odor.


Saturday, 24 May 2014

AN AUSTRALIAN NOTE

Canberra
When the Australians decided to have a federal capital, they decided to build Canberra.  However, there was some debate over what the name of the new capital might be.  Zoological interests were represented by those who wanted to call the new city Kangaremu, but this was not to be and in 1913 the city received the official name of Canberra.

The city contains Lake Burley Griffin, named after the city's architect.  The lake is artificial, created in 1963.  This was done by the damming of the River Molongo.  Despite this body of water's artificiality and comparatively recent construction, it has been suggested that it contains an unknown animal.  Strange turbulence was observed in the lake in the year 2000.  Could some creature that had been in the Molongo have been trapped in the lake?  In 1886 a strange animal the size of a dog had been reported in the Molongo.  Could a creature of this species be found in Lake Burley Griffin?

NEW BOOK BY JOHN KEEL

Yes, a new collection of pieces
by John Keel is currently available.

Published by Createspace at $19.99 [cheaper at Amazon.com]

BRAZILIAN CHUPACABRA?

A creature called the bicho is the subject of belief in Brazil.  It is said to be dark grey and reptilian, walking on two legs.  Brad Steiger has suggested it is identical with the chupacabra.  In Latin America the term bicho, from Latin bestia, is used with many different meanings, some of them obscene.

LAKE CHAMPLAIN MONSTER

Port Henry on Lake Champlain
Probably one of the most famous of North American lake monsters is that of Lake Champlain, nicknamed "Champ".  There is a mistaken belief that Champlain himself saw this monster, but in fact he saw another mystery creature, referred to as the chaousarou.  Indian tradition knew of a monster in the lake called the tatoskok.  The first white man to claim a sighting was Captain Crum and this trusty salt averredd he saw an animal 187 feet long in Bulawagga Bay in 1819.  The monster is supposed to have started coming ashore in 1873 and it started feasting on livestock.  Hunters tracked it to a cave, but were too frightened by it to do anything about it when they arrived there.  Gunfire from a ship later wounded the beast.  In 1883 Nathan H. Mooney, a sheriff, reported seeing a monster 26'-30' in length.

In 1887 a group of picnickers, relaxing on the beach, saw Champ heading in their direction.  The monster did not come ashore this time.  In 1915 it stranded itself in Bulawagga Bay, but managed to regain the water.  There were sightings in 1939 and 1945.  However, the monster really hit the headlines when Sandra Mansi's photograph was published.  This apparently showed a head and neck and behind it a hump.  B. Radford suggested it was a log with tree stump.  It has been said that the neck and back are not actually joined to one another, the neck being further away.  In all, though at first glance the photograph looks convincing, it cannot be said to 
prove the monster's existence.  However, publication of the photograph led to a flood of sightings.

In Port Henry (NY), they hold a Champ Day each year.  The town has a sign listing 132 alleged sightings.  In 2003 sounds of what resembled whale communications were heard by echolocation in the lake.

As to what the monster could be, although a plesiosaur has been put forward as a candidate, it seems unlikely that this saurian could actually raise its head out of the water, because of the stiffness of its neck.  A eunuch eel, of the type Richard Freeman suggests is in Loch Ness, is more plausible.  A completely unknown animal cannot be ruled out.  That there is or at least was something menacing there would seem to be almost established because of the multiple witnesses of the early encounters.

Strangely enough, in 1775 there was a boat called Lake Monster plying the lake.  

THERMAL IMAGE OF BIGFOOT?

A piece of interest to Bigfoot investigators.

now read on....

WAS SASQUATCH CAPTURED IN 1907?


There was a capture of what was possibly a Bigfoot in 1907.






now read on....

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD



On This Day in Weird, May 24...

1958: Happy birthday to Dr. Don Jeffrey Meldrum, Full Professor of Anatomy and Anthropology and a Professor of the Department of Anthropology at Idaho State University, also a renowned Bigfoot researcher.



Friday, 23 May 2014

A WHALE OF A FACT

Humpback Whale
Studies indicate that there may be three separate subspecies of Humpback Whale, a thing that had not hitherto been considered.  Those in the North Atlantic, North Pacific and Southern Hemisphere keep apart from each other and as a result may constitute separate subspecies, scientists inform us.

BEWARE OF THE CYCLOPS

Cyclops having a look around.
What is the origin of the legend of the Cyclops, the great one-eyed giant of Greek mythology.  We cannot say with certainty.  Initially, there were only three of them.  However, the story most people remember is the encounter Ulysses/Odysseus had with one of them, an inhospitable chap called Polyphemus.  This was supposed to have taken place on an island called Trinacria, which the ancients identified with Sicily.  The idea that Sicily once harbored gigantic humanoids may have come from the finding of elephant skulls with what was taken to be a single eye socket in the front, which resembled gigantic human skulls.  Actually, the "socket" was in fact where the trunk connected to the skull.  The eye sockets were around the side.

It is actually possible for a human to be born with cyclopeanism, one eye in the center rather than two in the usual places.  Often this condition means that you have no nose.

THE MYSTERIOUS MANTICORE

Manticore

Ctesias (5th Century BC) was an Ancient Greek.  I don't mean he himself was ancient, but he came from Greece in ancient times.  However, he traveled eastwards to Persia (Iran) and wrote about India and other topics.

He describes a creature he calls the martihora, but this word was later corrupted to manticore,its common name today.    He said it had the face of a man, the body of a lion and a sting on the end of its tail.  It could shoot out spines and these spines were deadly, unless you happened to be an elephant.  Commentators generally think Ctesias was describing a tiger, because there was a belief that this beast could shoot its whiskers at adversaries.  However, I assume he was working only from descriptions and not very good ones if that was the case.

MATAH KAGMI

The Matah Kagmi are creatures of the Bigfoot kind.  However, they may not be quite the same as your average Bigfoot.  They are said to live in the region of Mount Shasta (California).  This mountain itself is the focus of a number of strange beliefs.  This story tells of Matah Kagmi-human interaction.

now read on.....
Mount Shasta

THE MELON-HEADS

One of the creepier legends of the United States is that of the Melon-Heads.  Variants of the legend are found in Ohio and Michigan.  Here we have a detailed account of the gruesome tale. 

now read on.....

ORANG DALAM OF JOHOR


Further footprints in the state of Johor, Malaysia, testify to the possible presence of the Orang Dalam, a well-known cryptid of that area.  The Orang Dalam is a creature of the Bigfoot kind, said to reach a height of 20 feet.

SOLWAY SPACEMAN


Fifty years ago the Solway Spaceman photograph was taken.  Although unseen by the photographer at the time, this spaceman came out on the print.  The publication of the photograph was followed by a visit from Men-in-Black-type persons.
now read on....

ON THIS DAY IN WEIRD


On This Day in Weird, May 23...

1971: Two married couples out for a moonlight drive see a Bigfoot-type creature cross the highway in front of their car, near Fouke, Arkansas.



1976: A Baptist minister tells police that a red-eyed, hairy bipedal creature ran beside his car for a mile outside Dothan, Alabama.



1977: After their van breaks down, four travelers see a "Skunk Ape" seven to eight feet tall cross the highway near LaBelle, Florida.