REUTERS NEWS SERVICE 13Jun96 SOUTH
The waterfall called
In 1962 at the nearby Umgeni River, a KZN Conservation Services game ranger, named Buthelezi, saw a creature with a horse-like head on the shore. When he got closer it vanished back into the river.
Johannes Hlongwane claims saw the Inkanyamba twice, once in 1971 and again in 1981. (He was the caretaker of a caravan park near Howick Falls between 1969 and 1985.). In 1981, Johannes Hlongwane was looking into the misty falls when he saw the form of a giant monster, with is neck raised about . thirty-two feet( 10 metres) into the air. He said it had a crest running along its back.
Bob Teeney claimed that in 1995 he saw a 25 feet (8 metres) giant serpent-like creature rise of the depths. He could see it’s head and neck. Bob Teeney has a fast-food shop at the falls claims to have the photographs to prove it. Fuzzy pictures of what he says is the creature rearing its head from the pool line the walls of his shop. One of the pictures, taken by a tourist, shows a pipe-like neck rising from a half-submerged swollen "body." Three smaller "monsters," which look like ducks, are swimming next to it. Teeney says the duck-like objects are baby monsters. Teeny says the monsters belong to an aquatic, snake-like dinosaur family known as the Plesiosaur.
The Inkanyamba are said by sceptics to be not a dinosaur like creature but to be a population of giant migratory, carnivorous eels, which are allegedly indigenious to southern
Article here on monster:
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/SOUTH+AFRICA+HAS+ITS+OWN+LOCH+NESS+MONSTER.%28NEWS%29-a065028463
Richard Freeman claims it is a hoax:
http://forteanzoology.blogspot.com/2009/04/richard-freeman-howick-falls-monster.html
Have a look at the articles and the photo…..what do you think? AS anyone who reads this blog knows I don't believe a dinosaur could have survived all these years in it's original form and would have to have evolved. Therefore it appearing excatly as it does in the text books is very unlikely.
Um, there are no giant carnivorous eels in South Africa.
ReplyDeleteThose who claim there are, either smoked some really good stuff, or like most people who don't live in South Africa, confused our little haven, SOUTH Africa, with big and scary AFRICA.... or perhaps even South AMERICA - who's Amazon jungle does have some nasty carnivorous serpents like the Anaconda.
The closest South Africa has to carnivours eels (note they are not giant though they can grow fairly large) are moray eels in KwaZulu-Natal, which are unlikely to be seen unless pursued into their small nooks ... and they'll bite those who stick a hand in after them.
That being said, I'd love to visit Howick Falls and try and spot the Inkanyamba. ;) After all, what's life without a few good mysteries?