June 5, 2009

ABC News On Champ Video + New Enhancements

The so-called “Champ video” is no longer available for embedded viewing. However, the versions below actually now show more. Please note, you still may find the video here.

This is extremely useful footage, worthy of serious cryptozoological study, as an unknown, a “lake cryptid.”

The following stabilized version of the Eric Olsen-obtained video was produced by John Donald Carlucci of Darke Media.

Next, here are two new versions of digital enhancements of the video by impossiblevisits.

Thanks to John Carlucci’s excellent stabilization of the Olsen footage, one is able to zoom in, fiddle with the cotrast, speed up the video slightly, and better discern the movement and flexibility of the animal’s neck. Notice especially, in the last still image, the water between the head and the rest of the visible body/neck.

ABC News called yesterday, and I was interviewed for the following article by Ms. Ki Mae Heussner. I supplied her with contact info for the now-famed photographer from 1977, after checking in with Sandra Mansi. It was good to see she checked in with Cryptomundo’s old skeptical buddy. But I don’t know, maybe it’s just me; does Ben Radford’s tone sound a bit harsher than usual? 🙂


Video Revives Lake Champlain Monster Mystery

“Champ” Has Been Spotted 300 Times, Local Watchers Say

By Ki Mae Heussner
June 5, 2009—

Has the so-called Loch Ness Monster of North America reared his head, again?

For hundreds of years, residents of New York and Vermont have swapped stories of a mysterious underwater creature living in the expansive Lake Champlain. Although locals say it has been spotted more than 300 times, it has only been caught on camera once, decades ago. So skeptics abound, wondering how so many people can believe in something that has never provided proof of its existence.

But a cell phone video taken earlier this week of a creature apparently swimming in the lake has revived talk of the legendary “Champ.”

Captured by Burlington, Vt., resident Eric Olsen, 37, and posted to YouTube May 31, the nearly two-minute video of the lake at sunrise shows an unknown object moving across, and ducking below, the surface of the water.

“I was just filming the water when, out of the corner of my eye, I saw something move, and I turned toward it and tried to zoom in on it,” Olsen told the Burlington Free Press, which first reported the story Wednesday.

Along with the video, the Web site developer and musician posted the following comment to YouTube: “I shot this video (with cellphone) of SOMETHING in the lake at Oakledge Park on Sunday (05/31/09) early am (0530 or so). Was anyone else out and about around Oakledge on Sunday just after sunrise who saw this as well?”

YouTube Video Attracts Leading Cryptozoologists

In the past few days, the video, titled “Strange Sighting on Lake Champlain in Burlington, VT,” has attracted more than 59,000 views.

Olsen did not immediately respond to requests from ABCNews.com for comment, but told the Burlington paper, “You can see that it is moving both horizontally, across the water, and vertically, going under the surface and coming back up. … It struck me as something that was long, that it didn’t have much girth.”

The new video is already causing a stir among local residents and leading cryptozoologists, who study animals whose existence has not been proven, or “hidden” animals.

“If this pans out, this will be the most convincing moving picture of this creature,” said Loren Coleman, a leading cryptozoologist and author of The Field Guide to Lake Monsters. “And that’s the kind of evidence we need to get closer to what these things really are.”

P.T. Barnum Helped Spark Interest in Lake Monster

Although no one can pinpoint the first sighting, according to local lore, the native Abenaki people told Samuel de Champlain (the Lake’s namesake) of its presence in the early 19th century.

In the 1880s, P.T. Barnum helped ignite interest when he offered a $50,000 reward for the capture of “Champ” or “Champy,” dead or alive.

Although some think the Lake Champlain monster is a dinosaur-type creature or primitive whale, Coleman thinks Champ is likely a kind of unknown seal, and one of several have been spotted in different lakes across the region.

“The theory that it’s a dinosaur is just ridiculous,” he said. “This video reinforces the direction that a lot of people have been going in. That it’s more like a mammal than a reptile.”

Forensic analyses are needed to determine more about the creature, Coleman said. Later this week, a few of his colleagues intend to measure the buoys in the background of the film to get a better sense of the creature’s size, he said.

To date, the most famous photograph of “Champ” is a 1977 image taken by Bristol, Vt., resident Sandra Mansi and published in Time magazine and The New York Times.


Sandra Mansi took this image in 1977 on the shores of Lake Champlain.


Lake Creature Photographed in 1977

The daughter of a Vermont fisherman, Mansi, now 66, said she grew up hearing the stories of the lake monster but “didn’t believe it anymore than I did the tooth fairy.”

But while picnicking with her family one afternoon on the shores of Lake Champlain, Mansi and her family saw what they thought was a head and neck emerge from the water.

“I’m turned around and I’m looking at it and my knees gave out,” she said. “At this point, the rationalization in my mind is that it’s Champ.”

Although Mansi didn’t see the creature swimming, she said the subject in Olsen’s video appears to have a similarly shaped head. The neck, however, seems longer than the one from her memory.

She has never spoken with Olsen but said, “I would love to welcome him to the club. It’s a very small, exclusive club.

“For 30 years, I’ve been telling people that the lake holds a gift,” she said. “It’s just more proof that there is something there and we need to preserve the lake.”

Biologists, Skeptics Say It’s Local Wildlife

But area biologists aren’t convinced the creature in the video is anything more exotic than the local wildlife.

“My guess is that it’s a decent-sized animal, probably a deer or moose,” said Professor Charles Kilpatrick, a biologist at the University of Vermont.

From watching the video, he guessed that a tired mammal was struggling to get its head out of the water.

Ben Radford, managing editor of the magazine The Skeptical Inquirer and co-author of Lake Monster Mysteries, has investigated claims of lake monsters across the world and is convinced that the video shows nothing more than an elk or deer in the water.

It’s ignorance, not evidence, that continues to fuel the myth of lake monsters, he said. Just as unknown creatures on land become “Bigfoot,” and unidentified objects in the sky become UFOs, mysterious characters in the water become lake monsters.

“It shouldn’t be surprising that people are still seeing things in the lake,” Radford said. “It requires little or nothing — anytime anyone sees anything that they can’t identify on the lake, it becomes Champ.”

In previous investigations of sightings on Lake Champlain, he said, floating logs, waves and other animals have been revealed as “Champ.”

No Hard Evidence Supports Existence of ‘Champ’

“There’s no hard evidence,” he said. “No teeth, bones, skeletons, or dead ones that wash up. At some point you ask, Why is that?'”

And, he added, it’s not like there can just be one. A whole breeding population of Champs would have to exist.

But despite the dearth of evidence, the myth of the Lake Champlain monster persists. The creature has even become something of a local mascot, appearing on endless tourist T-shirts and with a minor league baseball team named for it.

“They make a lot of money on their Champ T-shirts, Champ boards and sandwiches,” Radford said. “Not that there’s anything wrong with that but there’s definitely an incentive to keeping the idea alive.”

But it’s not just economics that drives the legend of the lake monster.

In 1982, the Vermont House of Representatives went so far as to pass a resolution protecting Champ “from any willful act resulting in death, injury or harassment.” The New York State Assembly has adopted a similar measure.

Lake ‘Monster’ Inspires Interest in Environment

In educating youth and visitors about the lake and conservation efforts, environmental groups often rely on Champ to start conversations.

Linda Bowden, lifelong learning coordinator for ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center at the Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, said her center engages visitors with discussions on Champ that present both sides.

Although hard evidence supporting the creature doesn’t exist, she said the Megamouth shark was once embroiled in a similar debate until the body of the 15-foot shark emerged in 1976. The 25-foot-long giant squid was also considered mysterious until photographs were taken by Japanese scientists in 2004, she said.

As potential support for the lake creature, Bowden also points to a 2003 study by the non-profit Fauna Communications Research Institute that conducted audio research in the lake. Using sonar equipment, researchers found evidence of echolocation, biological sonar commonly used by whales and dolphins, which do not live in the lake.

That study, combined with eyewitness accounts, she said, “make you question.”

Regardless of whether Champ exists, she said, it inspires interest. “We embrace the stories,” she said. “We think it’s great for people to take good care of the lake. It’s a great habitat.”

Also, the Burlington Free Press has a new article by Sam Hemingway, with updates on expert opinions, Cryptomundo, and media attention.

See full item here: Lake video creates a stir

Some quotes include…

* * *

“I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s gotten 2 million hits so far,” said Loren Coleman, a Maine-based cryptozoologist whose own Web site, www.Cryptomundo.com, has been abuzz with discussion about [Eric] Olsen’s video over the past three days.

* * *

Cedric Anderson, a moose specialist with the state Fish and Wildlife Department, said he has studied Olsen’s video and concluded that the image in the water was not a moose.

“The head shape is not right for a moose, and the body’s too long,” Anderson said. “Also, there’s no ears that I can see. Moose have ears that look like donkey ears.” He also said the creature was not an abnormally large sturgeon or a deer.

Instead, Anderson speculated it was some other four-legged animal that had been chased into the lake by dogs or other predators.

Olsen’s video ends with the creature near the shore. Olsen has said he stayed for a half hour after filming the creature and did not see any animal emerge from the water.

Coleman, on his Web site, offers viewers two adjusted versions of Olsen’s video. One “stabilizes” the footage so any up-and-down movement caused by Olsen as he pointed his cell phone toward the object is eliminated. The other “enhanced” version attempts to focus in on the creature’s head, but the image is still inconclusive.

Coleman said he was invited to appear on two nighttime nationally syndicated talk radio shows Thursday night to discuss Olsen’s video, including the Coast-to-Coast show hosted by George Noory that is aired on four AM radio stations around the state.

Meanwhile, the examination of the video is ongoing.

Ogopogo researcher/filmmaker Sean Viloria has forwarded the following enhanced enlargements of the clips from the footage. Please click on them to bring them up on your screen into a larger size.


Brought to Cryptomundo’s attention via “boyinthemachine,” from Jason Ficks of West Coast Sasquatch, here are a few stills from the “Champ video,” taken on May 31, 2009:


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Loren Coleman About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct). Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015. Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.

Filed under Breaking News, Cryptomundo Exclusive, Cryptotourism, CryptoZoo News, Lake Monsters, Photos, Videos