Airing Of Alaska Cadborosaurus Footage Back On?
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on October 14th, 2010
Now that the lawsuits have been resolved and production resumes, will the footage be aired soon?
Inquiring minds want to know…
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on October 14th, 2010
Now that the lawsuits have been resolved and production resumes, will the footage be aired soon?
Inquiring minds want to know…
Posted by: Loren Coleman on October 9th, 2010
Mr. Baker said it followed him to the shore, and made at times a fearful noise.
Read: Bay of Quinte Sea Serpent »
Posted by: Loren Coleman on September 23rd, 2010
An eyewitness has had a new sighting of some interest. Images.
Updated with drawings
Posted by: John Kirk on September 22nd, 2010
John Kirk weighs in with an update.
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on September 22nd, 2010
I know that Cryptomundians are waiting with “baited” breath for word on when and where this much discussed footage will be shown.
John Kirk offered here on Cryptomundo that the footage was to air on the Discovery Channel’s Deadliest Catch.
Is that now in jeopardy with this latest news?
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on September 16th, 2010
John Kirk is elated when an unusual blip registers on the fish-finder.
“Whoa, hello!” the scientist calls out as he studies the sonar screen with colleague Adam McGirr. Both men are researchers with the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club — monster-hunters, in other terms.
Read: Monster hunt: freaky fish may lurk in the depths of Vancouver Island Lake »
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on September 13th, 2010
A team has been sweeping Lake Windermere with sonar to try and find England’s very own Loch Ness Monster.
In the past four years there have been seven sightings of the mysterious creature, which eyewitnesses say is some sort of long humpbacked animal.
Read: England’s Nessie »
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on September 11th, 2010
British Columbia lake monster sighting from last month.
I hear John Kirk is looking into this. Hopefully he will update us Cryptomundians.
Read: ‘Creature’ at Ootsa Lake »
Posted by: Loren Coleman on September 7th, 2010
Have cryptozoologists Karl Shuker and Markus Hemmler partially solved this old mystery? Images.
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on September 6th, 2010
Syfy will premiere Beast Legends, a new six-part series which journeys around the world using scientific data to reconstruct what mythological monsters, from Krakens and Griffins to Fire Dragons, would have looked like.
The debut of Beast Legends on Thursday, September 9, at 10PM (ET/PT) follows the fourth season return of Destination Truth at 9PM (ET/PT).
Read: Coming Thursday: Beast Legends »
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on August 30th, 2010
“Sea Serpent” says a headline in a September edition of The Augusta Chronicle.
What followed was an account of the remarkable discovery of something in the river that no one could identify.
Posted by: Loren Coleman on August 28th, 2010
The book covers much more than the state’s most infamous creature, the Jersey Devil. Images.
Read: Monsters of New Jersey Is Out »
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on August 27th, 2010
Video of a New York Lake Monster? Or is it a hoax?
Watch the video here and decide for yourself…
Read: Introducing Neckie, Seneca Lake, NY’s answer to the Loch Ness Monster »
Posted by: John Kirk on August 25th, 2010
A team of monster hunters will return to Cameron Lake next month to search for a creature that locals have swapped stories about for years.
The B.C. Scientific Cryptozoology Club first visited the area last September after an invitation from Oceanside Tourism to probe for evidence of the Cameron Lake monster.
Read: BCSCC Seeks Lake Cameron Monster »
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on August 24th, 2010
The UT Dallas alumna and five other long-distance swimmers completed a relay swim Aug. 5 of Scotland’s murky Loch Ness to raise money for the Afghan Mother and Child Rescue (AMCR) charity.
The six women traversed the 23-mile length of the lake, known to most as the supposed home of the Loch Ness Monster, in 13 hours and 23 minutes.
Although there was no sign of the legendary creature, the swimmers had to contend with something monstrous in its own right: bone-numbing cold water. The lake never gets much more hospitable than 41-45 degrees, even in August.
Read: Loch Ness Monster a No-Show »
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