Lincoln Times-News Article
Lake
Norman's Normie
Popular Web site tracks antics of legendary monster
By
Jacob Rudolph
Staff Writer
How
many times have you been swimming in the lake and felt
something long and slimy brush against your leg?
You
have probably chalked it up as a misguided fish or turtle.
But what if it's something bigger? What if there's a
monster lurking in the depths of Lake Norman?
That
is exactly the question that a popular Web site asks
its visitors to speculate upon. The question, though,
doesn't seem to be whether a Lake Norman monster exists,
but where it will be sighted next.
The
monster is known affectionately as Normie
not unlike Loch Ness' Nessie. The Web site is www.LakeNormanMonster.com.
The man responsible for both is 28-year-old Mooresville
resident Matthew Myers.
"I
was out on the water, fishing with friends and the idea
came up," Myers said. "I thought, 'I might
as well start an urban legend.'"
What
started out as a joke among fishing buddies has turned
into fodder for worldwide speculation. Normie has been
researched by Swedish cryptozoologist Jan Sundberg and
mentioned in an ABC News story on Bigfoot.
However,
the most telling aspect of Normie's growing legendary
status is the Web site's numerous monster sightings.
"I
was looking out over the lake when all of the sudden
this big, dark looking creature stuck its head up out
of the water," N. Nichols of Huntersville recorded
on the site. "It had a long, narrow head and long
neck. The portion of the creature I saw was approximately
5 feet or so long."
Myers
credits the fueling speculation to curiosity, or what
he calls "the X-files factor." The page is
celebrating its first year on the Web and receives 120
unique visitors a day.
At
first, he didn't expect the site to attract as much
attention as it has, but Normie, he said, is slowly
becoming a household name.
"A
lot of the people that I meet recognize Normie,"
Myers said. "It's becoming popular."
The
venture is a part-time gig for Myers, a Web designer.
In addition to monster sightings, the site contains
history and information on Lake Norman, as well as souvenir
t-shirts, mugs, hats and more.
Lake
Norman experts don't automatically discredit Myers'
and his visitors' claims. After all, everybody thought
the numerous alligator sightings of 2000 were a joke
until video footage was delivered to a Charlotte news
station.
However,
most experts swear it must be a gar, freshwater jellyfish
or oriental snake-head fish, all of which have appeared
on the lake, Myers said. Or maybe it's flotsam, or debris.
Even
the man behind the monster can't quell the suspicions.
Nor can he say whether or not Normie exists.
When
asked whether he thinks there is a monster lurking
in the waters of Lake Norman, Myers answers only with
a shrug.
This
article is reprinted with permission of the Lincoln
Times-News.
Staff Writer Jacob Rudolph can be reached
at 704-735-3031 or jacobrudolph@ltnews.com.
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