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The Search For "Champ" – Lake Champlain Creature

July 7th, 2009 admin No comments

The 109 mile long Lake Champlain is located on the boarders of New York and Vermont. Throughout the years it has been the home of a long time lake monster nicknamed Champ . The first sighting of champ in Lake Champlain was likely in 1819 by settlers to the area of Port Henry , New York. Sightings of champ continued on throughout the years with another documented sighting in 1883 by Nathan Mooney a county sheriff who was quoted as seeing ” an enormous water serpent or snake approximately 25-30 feet in length”.

One of the most famous documented champ sightings were by the Mansi’s in 1977. Sarah Mansi and her husband on vacation in Vermont close to the Canadian border and while watching over the lake seen the creature. This sighting also produced one of the best lake sighting photo’s to date known as the mansi photo (photo above). The Mansi photo has been analyzed by various scientist and was concluded that it was not a fake but a creature that could possibly be a plesiosaur surviving from centuries ago.

Lake Champlain is said by many to be an ideal lake to sustain such a creature with depths in the ranges of 400 ft and being an outlet to the open Atlantic Ocean. The lake also contain a viable source of food along with a steady enough water temperature and underwater habitat with many archeology sites and sanctuaries to sustain a creature of great size.

The hunt for champ continues in Lake Champlain with more sighting and even reports of smaller creatures being seen along with the larger ones possibly pointing to a breading population of what ever creature inhabits the waters there. Scientist agree that there would have to be a breading population in the lake to cover the span of reports throughout the years. As of today there have been 130 or more documented sightings of champ since 1982.

Will the myth of champ finally be proven ? Is there a monster inhabiting the waters of Lake Champlain yet to be discovered ?

“The Search Never Ends”

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Classic Bigfoot Video Footage

June 2nd, 2009 admin 3 comments

Here is a interesting You Tube video that puts together some of the classic and interesting photos of bigfoot into one location..

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Strange creature in northern lake a bryozoan: scientists

June 2nd, 2009 admin 1 comment

Scientists are researching the origin of a type of bryozoan that has developed recently in a 70-hectare lake in the northern province of Vinh Phuc, killing the fish and leaving local residents very worried. 

Bryozoan are invertebrate animals that reproduce by budding.

The creatures appeared in the Rung Lake in Tu Trung Commune in the province’s Vinh Tuong District last May, but have proliferated on a large scale recently.

The provincial environmental research center, which is also tasked with preventing diseases at fisheries informed the Binh Minh Cooperative, which manages and exploits the lake, that the creatures are a fresh water bryozoan named Pectinatella magnifica.

The tiny colonial creatures generally build mucilaginous (moist and sticky) structures of gelatin with 99 percent water, that look like a flower with a diameter of up to two meters, the center reported.

The structures can stick to underwater plants and move at a speed of 1-1.5 millimeters a day.

The center’s director, Phan Thi Van, said she had instructed local authorities not to drain water out of the lake to prevent the spread of the bryozoan.

Le Thanh Luu, director of the Research Institute for Aquaculture No. 1, said this is the first time the creature has been found in Vietnam.

Phan Thi Xuan, chairman of the Binh Minh Cooperative said the fresh water lake collects rainwater with an average depth of 3.5 meters, with its deepest point at eight meters.

The Rung Lake is the irrigation source for farms in four communes of Vinh Phuc Province’s Vinh Tuong District – Tu Trung, Tam Phuc, Phu Da and Ngu Kien. It also supplies water to some smaller lakes and pods.

“It’s very important to prevent the spread of the creatures as the lake is a source of water for many places,” Xuan said.

Strange creatures

She said she thought it was an impact of changing weather when fish in the lake started to die in large numbers last October.

Last month, the cooperative started to collect fish in the lake and caught around two tons of the “strange” creatures. Most of the fish in the net weakened before dying.

“Not only did the fish die, many people who touched the creatures suffered itchiness and sore eyes,” she said.

 

“We didn’t know if they were animals or plants and began called them the “strange creature,” Xuan said.

She showed a bucket containing some bryozoans, adding that they had died after being caught a day earlier.

Yen, a worker at the cooperative, said the strange creatures stick themselves to the plants, bags, or the lake floor. He also said some were as small as a finger-tip but others weighed almost a kilogram.

Researchers feel the fish may have died after coming into contact with the bryozoans, causing the mucous substance to stick to their gills.

They have found that the water in the lake is not polluted and is suitable for breeding fish.

Further studies are being carried out to verify the creatures’ possible toxicity as well as their origin, she said.

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Reported Chupacabra Sightings

May 12th, 2009 admin 1 comment

In July 2004, a rancher near San Antonio, Texas, killed a hairless dog-like creature, which was attacking his livestock. This animal, initially given the name the Elmendorf Beast, was later determined by DNA assay conducted at University of California, Davis to be a coyote with demodectic or sarcoptic mange. In October 2004, two more carcasses were found in the same area. Biologists in Texas examined samples from the two carcasses and determined they were also coyotes suffering from very severe cases of mange.  In Coleman, Texas, a farmer named Reggie Lagow caught an animal in a trap he set up after the deaths of a number of his chickens and turkeys. The animal was described as resembling a mix of hairless dog, rat, and kangaroo. Lagow provided the animal to Texas Parks and Wildlife officials for identification, but Lagow reported in a September 17, 2006 phone interview with John Adolfi, founder of the Lost World Museum, that the “critter was caught on a Tuesday and thrown out in Thursday’s trash.”

In April 2006, MosNews reported that the chupacabra was spotted in Russia for the first time. Reports from Central Russia beginning in March 2005 tell of a beast that kills animals and sucks out their blood. Thirty-two turkeys were killed and drained overnight. Reports later came from neighboring villages when 30 sheep were killed and had their blood drained. Finally, eyewitnesses were able to describe the chupacabra. In May 2006, experts were determined to track the animal down.

In mid-August 2006, Michelle O’Donnell of Turner, Maine, described an “evil looking” rodent-like animal with fangs that had been found dead alongside a road. The animal was apparently struck by a car, and was unidentifiable. Photographs were taken and witness reports seem to be in relative agreement that the creature was canine in appearance, but in widely published photos seemed unlike any dog or wolf in the area. Photos from other angles seem to show a chow- or akita-mixed breed dog. It was reported that “the carcass was picked clean by vultures before experts could examine it”. For years, residents of Maine have reported a mysterious creature and a string of dog maulings.

In May 2007, a series of reports on national Colombia news reported more than 300 dead sheep in the region of Boyaca, and the capture of a possible specimen to be analyzed by zoologists at Universidad Nacional of Colombia.

In August 2007, Phylis Canion found three animals in Cuero, Texas. She and her neighbors reported to have discovered three strange animal carcasses outside Canion’s property. She took photographs of the carcasses and preserved the head of one in her freezer before turning it over for DNA analysis.  Canion reported that nearly 30 chickens on her farm had been exsanguinated over a period of years, a factor which led her to connect the carcasses with the chupacabra legend. State Mammologist John Young estimated that the animal in Canion’s pictures was a Gray Fox suffering from an extreme case of mange. In November 2007, biology researchers at Texas State University–San Marcos determined from DNA samples that the suspicious animal was a coyote.  The coyote, however, had grayish-blue, mostly hairless skin and large fanged teeth, which caused it to appear different from a normal coyote. Additional skin samples were taken to attempt to determine the cause of the hair loss.

On January 11, 2008, a sighting was reported at the province of Capiz in the Philippines. Some of the residents from the barangay believed that it was the chupacabra that killed eight chickens. The owner of the chickens saw a dog-like animal attacking his chickens.

On August 8, 2008, a DeWitt County deputy, Brandon Riedel, filmed an unidentifiable animal along back roads near Cuero, Texas on his dashboard camera.  The animal was about the size of a coyote but was hairless with a long snout, short front legs and long back legs. However, Reiter’s boss, Sherrif Jode Zavesky, believes it may be the same species of coyote identified by Texas State University–San Marcos researchers in November 2007.

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What is the Chupacabra?

May 12th, 2009 admin No comments

History of the Chupacabra

The first reported attacks occurred in March 1995 in Puerto Rico. In this attack, eight sheep were discovered dead, each with three puncture wounds in the chest area and completely drained of blood. A few months later, in August, an eyewitness, Madelyne Tolentino, reported seeing the creature in the Puerto Rican town of Canóvanas, when as many as 150 farm animals and pets were reportedly killed.  In 1975, similar killings in the small town of Moca, were attributed to El Vampiro de Moca (The Vampire of Moca).  Initially it was suspected that the killings were committed by a Satanic cult; later more killings were reported around the island, and many farms reported loss of animal life. Each of the animals had their bodies bled dry through a series of small circular incisions.

Puerto Rican comedian and entrepreneur Silverio Pérez is credited with coining the term chupacabras soon after the first incidents were reported in the press.  Shortly after the first reported incidents in Puerto Rico, other animal deaths were reported in other countries, such as the Dominican Republic, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Brazil, United States, and Mexico

Appearance of the Chupacabra

The most common description of Chupacabra is a reptile-like being, appearing to have leathery or scaly greenish-gray skin and sharp spines or quills running down its back.  This form stands approximately 3 to 4 feet (1 to 1.2 m) high, and stands and hops in a similar fashion to a kangaroo.  In at least one sighting, the creature was reported to hop 20 feet (6 m). This variety is said to have a dog or panther-like nose and face, a forked tongue, and large fangs. It is said to hiss and screech when alarmed, as well as leave behind a sulfuric stench.[19] When it screeches, some reports assert that the chupacabra’s eyes glow an unusual red which gives the witnesses nausea.

Another description of Chupacabra, although not as common, describes a strange breed of wild dog. This form is mostly hairless and has a pronounced spinal ridge, unusually pronounced eye sockets, fangs, and claws. It is claimed that this breed might be an example of a dog-like reptile. Unlike conventional predators, the chupacabra is said to drain all of the animal’s blood (and sometimes organs) through a single hole or two holes

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