Showing posts with label Episode. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Episode. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2011

Don't forget to watch tonight at 9/8c, Caddy the Sea Serpent

Pat Spain Caddy
Sea Serpent of the North
For generations, fishermen have told tales of sea monsters. One of the world's most legendary monsters is a sea serpent known as Cadborosaurus, or "Caddy," which has been reported off the coast of British Columbia for more than a century. But to science, it doesn't officially exist. Now Pat travels to Vancouver Island to track it down. He questions eyewitnesses, explores the myths of the coastal people who have occupied the area for more than 5,000 years and confers with top oceanographers.

Friday, March 11, 2011

New Beast Hunter Tonight at 9/8c

Beast Hunter Sketches
A new episode of Beast Hunter airs tonight. This episode is about the Mokele-mbembe, which is a "river monster".
Swamp Monster of the Congo
Ever since the earliest missionaries and explorers returned from Africa, stories have been told of strange water-dwelling monsters living in the Congo Basin. The native Pygmy tribes speak of the Mokele-mbembe, an animal with a long, thin neck and a body the size of an elephant that seems to resemble a sauropod dinosaur. Could there be a population of dinosaurs living in the remote jungle?

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Next weeks episode of Beast Hunter

Beast Hunter Pat Spain
I hope everyone liked the show last night. I've heard good reviews of the show so far. Next weeks episode(Fri March 11) will be featuring a creature called the Mokele-mbembe, which is basically an alleged lake monster. Heres the decription from the Nat Geo website.


Swamp Monster of the Congo
Ever since the earliest missionaries and explorers returned from Africa, stories have been told of strange water-dwelling monsters living in the Congo Basin. The native Pygmy tribes speak of the Mokele-mbembe, an animal with a long, thin neck and a body the size of an elephant that seems to resemble a sauropod dinosaur. Could there be a population of dinosaurs living in the remote jungle?