We in the PNW do love our monsters, such as Sasquatch, Bezos, and Cadborosaurus. I am guessing that most people are all too familiar with the first two members of the crowd but suspect that the third beast may not be well-known. Cadborosaurus entered the public conscious of fabulous lifeforms in 1933 when reports appeared in newspapers of a sea serpent popping up in Cadboro Bay on the southeast end of Vancouver Island. Mythically big, it had a head like a horse, or perhaps a camel; fangs and a mane; a serpentine body; smooth skin, or perhaps it was rough and spiny, or maybe even hirsute; and had red flesh, a sure sign, according to one early expert, that the great marine animal was warm-blooded.
I forgot to mention that in November 2016, I was lucky to be able to go down into the Locks during the time when the Army Corps drains them for cleaning. I was told that during the draining they found a live white sturgeon, which they rescued and released below the gates in Puget Sound. No one knows how long the fish had been there.
I forgot to mention that in November 2016, I was lucky to be able to go down into the Locks during the time when the Army Corps drains them for cleaning. I was told that during the draining they found a live white sturgeon, which they rescued and released below the gates in Puget Sound. No one knows how long the fish had been there.