Originally Posted by Huntster
For the record, I don't know what to think about "lake" monsters. Lakes are extremely limited habitat, even large lakes.
I suspect lake monsters are large species of known animals that people mistake for "monsters."
If we give the lake witnesses the same benefit-of-doubt that Bigfoot believers give each other - then we have true lake monsters that are not misidentifications. How does it go?..."
If only 1% of the witnesses are correct then..."
That's right. I don't fully discount the possibility.
However, it's fair to point out that there are lots of different critters that a lake monster might be mistaken as; seals, otters, big fish, or even whales. It's even possible for a big known fish to be way out of it's habitat.
My father-in-law showed me a photo of a large dorsal fin that looked like a shark's that he swears he saw in Kenai Lake, some 80 miles from salt water.
A couple of years ago, while floating Twentymile River near Anchorage on a moose hunt, I saw a pod of several beluga whales miles up the river. Whales. In a fairly small river.
The Kvichak River, which drains Lake Illiamna into Bristol Bay, and has the most tremendous sockeye salmon run in the world, is 50 miles long. Lake Illiamna (the largest lake in Alaska) has a reputation of a
"monster".
With sasquatch the list of known animals it can be mistake with is a bit more restricted. It's either a bear, man in a suit, or an escaped ape. The sightings which report bipedal locomotion kick the bears and apes out of the equation.
And lake monsters don't leave footprints.