Statesville Record & Landmark Article
Surf
the web and you will find the Lake Norman monster
By Cara Froedge
The Statesville Record & Landmark
Published September
14, 2002
For
ages, myths about lake monsters have rippled through
towns. The most popular, of course, is the Loch Ness
Monster in Scotland, which has believers from all over
the world. It has also been the subject of a Learning
Channel special. Move over Nessie; your time's up. There's
a new kid on the block, and its name is Normie. Some
say it's an alligator; some say it's a jellyfish; and
some say it's a catfish mutated by pollution in Lake
Norman. Locals and out-of-towners say they've encountered
the creature. Now, lake-goers can report Normie sightings
on a new Web site, lakenormanmonster.com, created by
Mooresville resident Matt Myers, 28.
Nine
brushes with the fishy sounding mystery have been posted
so far. In all accounts, no one has been hurt. But the
mutant has caused somewhat of a splash. When the Web
site went live, Myers had 27 visitors. That number has
grown to around 9,000. One California man writes that
he and his girlfriend heard what they thought were children
playing in the water. They say that they realized the
splashes couldn't be human and, after shining a flashlight
on the area, they saw something with a nine-inch tail.
One woman said she was standing on the dock at Blythe
Landing and saw a 20-foot catfish jump from the water
to snag a bird. A man from Indian Trail writes that
his boat mysteriously disappeared after the monster
appeared. "Me and my friend was out in my boat jumping
wakes around Marker 13 when we saw what looked like
a large stick come up out of the water. I went over
to check it out, but when I turned the boat was gone,"
he wrote.
Myers,
a Web developer, heard similar tales of the monster
when he moved to the area in 2000. "It's just fish tales,"
he said jokingly. As for Myers, he's never seen any
type of monster in the lake. But there are a few facts
that make him a believer. In 2000, video footage of
an alligator sunning itself was run on a Charlotte television
news station. Fisherman have caught record-breaking
Arkansas blue catfish, which have never been stocked
in the lake. There is even a species of freshwater jellyfish
not indigenous to the lake or its feeder, the Catawba
River.
"There
are strange fish in Lake Norman," said Michael McLaurin,
executive director of the Lake Norman Marine Commission.
"I don't know about a 20-foot catfish, though." McLaurin
said there are "extremely" large fish at the bottom
of the lake where most of the food is found.
Loch
Ness specialist Jan-Ove Sundberg, a crytozoologist (one
who studies creatures whose existence is not proven)
wrote an introduction to the Web site. "Catfish are
big, ugly and mind their own business, but they will
surface when you least expect it; and if you don't know
much about them, they will certainly look like a monster
instead of a known fish species," he writes.
The
Web site offers facts about Lake Norman, Catawba River,
a newsletter and e-cards. Visitors can also buy T-shirts,
hats, mugs, mousepads and coasters.
For
any strange or spooky aquatic encounters, contact the
Lake Norman Marine Commissioner at (704) 372-2416.
This
article is reprinted with permission of The Statesville
Record & Landmark. For weekly news of Statesville
and the surrounding area, call 704-873-1451, Extension
1, to subscribe to The Statesville Record & Landmark.
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