| There's something
strange and mysterious in Turtle Lake.
Th e fish aren't talkin'.
And judging by the descriptions from the people who've
seen it, it's anywhere from three to nine metres in
length (10 to 30 feet), with or without a dorsal fin,
smooth or scaly, with a head resembling either a dog, a
seahorse or a pig.
It's no new phenomenon
to Turtle Lake, located 120 kms (74 miles) northwest of
North Battleford. It's been there for as long as anyone
can remember -well before the lakeside bar might have
provided an explanation. Indian legend holds that people
who ventured into its territory were never seen again.
No one's blamed it for
any recent disappearances. Again, the fish aren't talkin.
But each year, on average, one boater returns to
shore with a wide-eyed tale about a goose-bumpy
encounter with something from the deep. Something with
mass. Something big.
It's not a large
tourist attraction like "Nessy", of Loch Ness, Scotland,
or "Ogopogo", of Lake Okanagan in British Columbia. Yes,
there is the odd ball cap and restaurant place mat
signaling the unusual occurrences to unwary visitors.
But it's a low-key thing; local color rather than
feature attraction at the small, resort community.
Saskatchewan people are
a down-to-earth lot uncomfortable about hyping
something
they believe has to have a simple, rational explanation.
Many think it's nothing more than a giant sturgeon who,
by choice or circumstance, abandoned his normal river
habitat for Turtle Lake.
But there's a problem
with that one. Although sturgeon can live to be 65 years
old and grow to four metres (12 feet) in length, they
live and feed on the bottom. It's not likely they'd
choose to loll about on the surface of a deep lake. Not
impossible, but not likely.
A former school teacher
from the region has another theory.
Millions of years ago,
Saskatchewan was covered by a sea. In that body of water
lived a variety of aquatic dinosaurs, including one
called plesiosaur. Perhaps, says Ben Blatz, a few
plesiosaurs adapted and survived in the depths of Turtle
Lake. And one of their descendants is responsible for
frightening the tan off the occasional boater.
Perhaps. A few
years ago I talked to a man who saw it while fishing
with his daughter and grandson.
Gordon Watt, who farms
about 200 kms south of Turtle Lake, was casting from his
boat when he spotted something in the water about 12
metres (13 yards) off the bow.
"Its head came up, its
back came up and it sort of rolled over -we never saw
the tail," he said. "Its head looked like a seahorse."
Members of the fishing
party were "thunderstruck" and "amazed", said Watt. Yet,
once their astonishment subsided, they cranked up the
boat motor, zipped over to the area where the thing
slipped under and tried to snag it.
Could have been quite a
ride.
Watt said maybe it was
a sturgeon, "but I'm not convinced."
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