Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Underwater Rides - History of Champ Sightings

Champlain Submarine Cruises - Underwater Rides includes a stop to see the history of the Champ sightings in Bulwagga Bay, Port Henry, NY.
Sightings of Champ, the lake monster

Highlights of Champ Sightings:

* 1819: Bulwagga Bay, Port Henry, NY
* 1871: Horseshoe Bay, riders of the steamship Curlew claimed to see a head and long neck that created quite a wake.
* 1870: Charlotte, Vermont, a full steamboat spotted Champ
* 1873: Dresden, New York, another steamboat full spotted Champ
* 1945: In the middle of the lake the creature was spotted by the famous S.S. Ticonderoga
* 1954: A 14 inch reptile was trapped in Shelburne Bay, possibly a baby…
* 1977: The Mansi photograph was taken by Sandra Mansi, a tourist from Connecticut
* 1984: Off Appletree Point, Vermont. 86 passengers aboard the Ethan Allen spotted 3 to 5 “humps” which disappeared after about 3 minutes due to the approach of a speed boat.
* 1993: Button Bay State Park, Ferrisburgh, Vermont. A baby Champ reportedly swam between two women bathers.
* 1995: Dennis Hall of Champ Quest recorded Champ on video.

Champ, The Lake Champlain Monster - FAQs

The captain of Champlain Submarine Cruises said yesterday that the Underwater Rides in search of Champ has been a huge success! The following are the most popular questions being asked:

What is Champ- a dinosaur, a plesiosaur, a whale?
Plesiosaur image could be Champ, The Lake MonsterWhile some people believe that Champ is a dinosaur that managed to escape extinction, others think Champ is a primitive form of whale called a zeuglodon.
Still others believe Champ could be related to a plesiosaur, a prehistoric water dwelling reptile with a long snakelike head and four large flippers. Plesiosaurs loved fish and other aquatic animals.

How many Champs would it take to continue a population in Lake Champlain?
It would take approximately 50 mature Champs, to have a breeding population in the Lake and 500 to keep the species alive in the long term. Lake Champlain has been around for 10,000 years. It is 120 miles long, 400 feet deep in places and home to a diverse population of birds and aquatic life, which would provide an ideal habitat for such a creature.

Are there any pictures of Champ?
The best picture of Champ is the Mansi photograph taken in the summer of 1977.Champ, The Lake Monster Sandra Mansi and her fiancé Anthony were vacationing on the shores of Lake Champlain when they saw a great head and neck break the surface of the lake. Sandra quickly grabbed her Kodak Instamatic and snapped a shot. That shot is the best evidence that Champ actually exists in Lake Champlain. The photograph has been examined by experts who claim that it has not been altered in any way. The photograph was in the New York Times and Time Magazine among others. Mansi Photograph. There are other purported pictures of Champ but the Mansi one is clearly the best to date.