Washington State appears
to be the home of many lake monsters over the years.
Omak Lake
Omak
Lake is eight miles long, two-thirds of a mile wide and about 325 feet deep at
its deepest point. The
Okanagan people once believed that Omak Lake was inhabited by spirits, and
avoided the area.On Aug. 27, 1944, M.L. Little,
a Tonasket man, wrote a letter to the editor of the Spookane Newspaper relaying
the tale of a sea serpent in Omak Lake.
Little said he was
traveling to Omak with Fred Howard and saw “what appeared to be two large long
logs lying close to shore. Seconds later, another look showed one of these to
be swinging around and heading out into the lake.”They were 12 to 16 feet long,
2 feet in diameter and submerged just under the water’s surface.“The rough
blotch of the body remained quite visible and the water in turmoil during its
passage,” Little wrote. The head broke the surface a few times, and it was the
size of 30-gallon drum. The men “easily followed its progress the entire
distance to the cliffs at the far end of the lake where it splashed for a very
few seconds, then disappeared from view.“I should be greatly pleased if any who
may have seen this creature would write me,” he wrote, and included his mailing
address.
There are no modern
sightings however some believe caves and tunnels beneath Omak Lake lead to
Okanagan Lake over the border in Canada.
Lake Okanagan in Canada
is said to be the home of a water monster called Ogopogo The lake is
approximately 120 kilometres long; 3.5 kilometres wide and is 235 metres at its
deepest point. Indigenous people have legends about a monster in the lake.
Sightings are reported of a creature 20 to 50 feet long, with a horse shaped
head and an undulating serpent like body. The first recorded sighting was by
John Allison in 1872.Sightings continuing to this day.
Rock Lake
A decade later, on May
15, 1956, another letter to the editor, this one from C.F. Dement, brought up
the storied monster of Rock Lake, a deep, cliff-lined lake in the Scablands, also
in Washington State.
Dement’s grandfather
purchased some land near the lake in 1890, and Dement spent several summers on
the lake as a child.“It was during these visits that I heard stories of a huge
prehistoric monster which lived in Rock lake, and it was said that the Indians
shunned the location,” he wrote. “My sis owns property on one of the lake’s
points,” a local landowner and hobby historian of the area anonymously told the
paper. “One evening, she was rounding the point into a bay when she saw
something huge on top of the water suddenly splash and go under. I asked her
how big it was. ‘It was as big as a tree and stretched further across than my
living room,’ she said. I think it was a sturgeon myself.” Monster or no, the
article quoted a scientist, leaving a more harrowing note on the notoriously
dangerous lake.“Once a body gets down 200 feet or so, it will just stay there,”
said Bob Peck, a Washington state Department of Fish and Wildlife fisheries
biologist, describing the potential fate of careless boaters on Rock Lake. “I
hear they stay in a pretty good condition too, until someone pulls them up –
then they just fall apart.”
In 1995, The
Spokesman-Review profiled the lake, mentioning the “Indian and urban legend”
that the lake is home to a monster.
So are all these lake
creatures related or the same creatures or
family of creatures roaming from lake to lake perhaps because of food sources
or the weather? There are probably more lakes with sightings of strange creatures .An interesting question for someone who lives in Washington
State to investigate. Do we have any volunteers?
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