The Daily Item, Sunbury, PA

Sports

August 15, 2009

Mystery of the ‘thing’ deepens

For those of you who missed the “most mysterious sighting” question asked of The Daily Item’s Great Outdoors panel, I told of a large creature that I saw swimming in the Susquehanna River.

I have to say that I received several comments concerning my eyesight, mental state, and imagination. Well, I saw what I saw, several times actually. I don’t know what it was and I have thought about it quite a bit.

The other day an acquaintance who shall mercifully remain nameless came up to me and told me he read of my experience in the paper, and he was amazed because he witnessed the same mysterious sighting. His sighting was a couple of miles downstream from the area where I saw it. We discussed it at length. He felt that because of the size of it, it was a mammal of sorts, similar to a seal or otter.

I felt it was a fish of some kind. After much discussion, we sort of agreed that it must be a fish because the head never comes out of the water. I have witnessed seals, otters and beavers swimming, and the head always comes out of the water somewhere along the line.

Now, as to how this all started. About eight years ago, a good friend of mine told me about this “thing” he saw swimming in the river. He described a small submarine about to surface.

Of course, I thought he was nuts. Then one evening we went fishing and the “thing” showed up. At first I thought it was a deer swimming across the river, then it turned and came upstream. When it got closer, there was nothing sticking out of the water. It pushed a wake that made waves that lapped up on the shoreline. At about 50 yards, it sank out of sight. Creepy. Over the next year or two, I saw it several times and it always sank out of sight before it got close enough to be seen clearly.

The only fish I can think of that could create this disturbance is a huge carp. I’ve never seen a carp act like that, but what else could it be? It’s not a mammal because nothing ever comes out of the water. Between those of us who have seen it, we think it must be at least five or six feet long, which is far larger than any carp I’ve ever seen.

Before you jump in your boat and go looking for it, sightings are rare. I haven’t seen it for years, although last summer a guy told me about a very similar sighting in the same general area.

We live in a very civilized area. How could any creature live around here, on land or water, that we don’t know about?

Well, we don’t know everything. When darkness falls, the forest turns into a very different place. Many hunters have seen and heard things in the pre-dawn darkness that are hard to understand or explain. Coyotes, for example, are very common around here, yet many people have never seen one. Who would have ever thought someone would catch a gar out of the river? We have pictures of that.

The outdoorsman Izaak Walton said it best: “Rivers and the inhabitants of the watery elements are meant for wise men to ponder, and fools to pass by.”

-- Ken Maurer, Herndon, is a licensed fishing guide and a regular contributor to the Outdoors section.

Text Only
Sports
  • Harold Raker's column on high school wrestling: And the crowd went wild

    In my years of covering high school sports, I could not tell you how many times a coach would tell me after a game or match, "It is a shame that someone had to lose."

    February 3, 2012

  • Rangers' Hamilton confirms alcohol relapse

    Texas Rangers outfielder and recovering drug addict Josh Hamilton said Friday that he had a relapse that started with "three or four" drinks at a Dallas-area bar this week.

    February 3, 2012

  • CSS2CED.jpg High School Swimming: Central takes a pair from Danville

    DANVILLE -- All it takes are a few key moments in a dual meet to swing things in either direction. In Thursday's Heartland Athletic Conference boys dual between Danville and Central Columbia, the freestyle events were the deciding factor.

    February 3, 2012 1 Photo

  • CSS2D0D.jpg High School Wrestling: Shikellamy holds off Selinsgrove

    SELINSGROVE -- Tanner Fasold was behind 5-0 and nearly cradled for a pin at the end of the first period. So, a one-point deficit with 14 seconds left was not going to faze him. In a 126-pound bout that had more twists and turns than Joey Chestnut's stomach, the Braves' senior scored a takedown at the edge of the mat against Selinsgrove's Tom Kramer as time expired for an 11-10 win.

    February 3, 2012 2 Photos

  • High School roundup: Bench play sparks Dragons to win

    LEWISBURG -- Players coming off the bench played a big role for Lewisburg in its 69-50 victory over Mount Carmel in a Heartland Athletic Conference matchup on Thursday. Junior forward/center Erich Kline tallied 15 points in a supporting role for Lewisburg (13-3, 7-2 HAC-II), while senior forward/guard Ryan Flannery contributed 10 points.

    February 3, 2012

  • Todd Stanford's column on boys basketball: Back in the spotlight

    There was a day, in my youth, when myself and a friend were filmed for a news segment on WGAL-TV in Lancaster. It was one of those "Back to School" stories that local TV news programs run every August, and my friend and I happened to be at the local Kmart when the cameraman and a producer showed up.

    February 3, 2012

  • Jim Tressel hired at Akron as vice president

    AKRON, Ohio -- Through it all, Jim Tressel never lost his charm. As he worked the room the way he did for a decade as Ohio State's coach, delighting students and faculty members, school trustees and Akron's president with stories of past successes and plans for the future, Tressel felt like he had come back home.

    February 3, 2012

  • Super02 Super profiles of Super Bowl players

    INDIANAPOLIS — Projected starters and key players for the Super Bowl:

    NEW YORK GIANTS

    OFFENSE

    Eli Manning, QB (10), 6-4, 218, 8th season, Mississippi

    February 2, 2012 1 Photo

  • Bob Garrett's Talking Points: A limit to porcupine hunting

    "To cite a single passage is to pull one quill from the porcupine." The game commission ran into a prickly issue recently when they lifted the ban on porcupine hunting. It turns out that there's something of a black market for the rodents' meat in Southeast Asia. Reports are that people were seeking Pennsylvania porcupines to sell illegally for human consumption in Vietnam.

    February 2, 2012

  • CSS249A.jpg Hynoski returns triumphantly to Indy's field

    INDIANAPOLIS -- As he walked onto the Lucas Oil Stadium turf for media day, Henry Hynoski was struck by the fact that the site of the most humbling event of his football life would now be hosting his proudest moment. "Everything has come full circle," said the Pennsylvania native with a smile, looking around. "This is something I truly never expected."

    February 2, 2012 1 Photo

The Daily Marquee
Local Sports Video
Seasonal Content
National Sports Video
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.