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Cadborosaurus:
Vancouver biologist Dr. Edward L. Bousfield and Dr. Paul H. Leblond,
a professor of oceanography at the University of British Columbia
have created a composite description of the creature based on numerous
sightings:
1.
It's dimensions, ranging from 5 to 15 meters in length;
2.
It's body form: snake-like, or serpentine, with extra ordinary flexibility
in the vertical plane;
3.
The appearance of it's head, variously described as resembling that
of a sheep, horse, giraffe or camel;
4.
The length of it's neck, elongated, ranging from one to four meters;
5.
The vertical humps or loops of the body, arranged in tandem series
directly behind the neck;
6.
The presence of a pair of anterior flippers; posterior flippers
absent or nearly fused with body;
7.
The tail; dorsally toothed or spiky, and split horizontally or fluke
like at the top;
8.
The very high swimming speed, clocked up to 40 knots at the surface.
Victoria
Times-Colonist August
9, 1997 
Cadborosaurus,
British Columbia's seagoing dinosaur, was seen twice during July
by a family in Mill Bay, B.C.
Timothy
and Laurice Mock, and their 14-year-old son, Christopher, were cruising
up Princess Louisa Inlet in their 24-foot powerboat. "Laurice
was scanning the shoreline for bears while Tim was at the wheel,
watching for logs. The sea was glassy, and since the sun had not
risen above the mountains, the channel was still in shade. Tim noticed
a large log up ahead and altered his course accordingly. Suddenly,
the 'log' split into three pieces."
"'As
we ran past it, it disappeared,' Tim said, 'And all that was left
was a swirl in the water, a mini-whirlpool. The log was gone.'"
The
second July sighting occurred as the Mocks "were dropping anchor
near Homfray Channel, adjacent to Desolation Sound. Once again,
the sea was flat calm and the surrounding water was exceptionally
deep--in some places up to 700 meters (2,310 feet)."
"'We
were dropping anchor, and we were all on the foredeck. We had been
poking along in the area for hours with no traffic," said Tim.
Son Christopher said, 'What's that at the entrance?' When he looked
up, Tim saw an unusual wake going back and forth with a parallel
set moving along beside it."
"'It
was weird. It (the wake) wasn't diminishing, and it wasn't in the
direction it should have been. It was going along the shore rather
than towards it.'"
Then
Laurice Mock got a close look at the creature with her binoculars.
"I got a good look at it," she said, "It had its
head close to the water. It was like someone doing the breast stroke,
like a snake."
Dr.
Ed Bousfield, a retired cryptozoologist with the Royal British Columbia
Museum, calls Cadborosaurus "a Mesozoic relic" and believes
"the females come to shores of shallow estuaries to bear live
young (similar to garter snakes)."
Dr.
Bousfield has collected over 200 accounts of Cadborosaurus sightings
over the years (See the Victoria, B.C. Times-Colonist for August
9, 1997).
Victorian Colonist July 1997
A snorting,
20-foot-long "sea monster'' was spotted by two university students
off the shores of a Pacific coastal beach in Victoria, British Columbia,
the pair said Friday. Ryan Green, 18, a Simon Fraser University
business student, described the rocky-faced creature as a twin-humped,
round-bodied monster that swam across Telegraph Bay near suburban
Saanich. It was about 49 feet from the rock Green and his friend,
Damian Grant, were sitting on. Green said he and the 19-year-old
general arts student at the University of Victoria saw the heavy-breathing
creature surface twice before it disappeared into the calm waters.
"All of a sudden, this head comes up, like a whale with no
spray. And then this hump, the size of an inner tube in diameter.
And then another hump. It's nothing I've ever seen before,'' said
Green. He stressed that the puzzled pair was sober at the time of
the sighting. Ed Bousfield, a biology research associate with the
Royal British Columbia Museum, said the reptile-like creature is
probably a cadborosaurus, one of the last living dinosaurs. I phoned
these two chaps and let them do the talking, and their observations
absolutely tally with the classical profile of the cadborosaurus,''
Bousfield said. Bousfield, who is writing a book on the deep-sea,
predatory cadborosaurus with scientist Paul LeBlond, said about
160 recorded sightings of the swift-swimming monster have been reported.
Due to "incredibly bad luck'', there are no such animals in
captivity or museums, and a 1937 photograph is the only visible
recording of the beast. "We get half a dozen records of sightings
up and down the (Pacific) coast every year. All these people say
the same thing about the animals, so there's got to be something
there.'' He said the cadborosaurus was named in the 1930s after
sightings in nearby Cadboro Bay.

Cadboro Bay Beach - Oak Bay is just moments south
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