metronews.ca
Loading....
Loading...
Local
Loading...
|
Canada
Loading...
|
World
Loading...
|
Business
Loading...
|
Sports
|
Entertainment
|
Movies
Loading...
|
Columns
Loading...
|
Blogs
Loading...
|
Life
|
Games
|
x

Tracking monsters in the world of man

Cryptozoologist John Kirk believes there are many undiscovered wildlife in the forests and lakes of B.C.


METRO CANADA
August 31, 2009 5:43 a.m.
       Text size          
Throughout his career, John Kirk has made a living as a journalist and working for the government.

His other occupation doesn’t make him much money — in fact it costs him — but he still can’t give up the hunt for undiscovered wildlife.

It all began when Kirk first emigrated from Hong Kong in 1987. As a new resident to Canada, he went in a tour of B.C. He was passing by Sproat Lake on the way to Nanaimo when he saw two humps coming out of the water.

A month later, he saw a massive reptile head in Okanagan Lake. It seemed it was Ogopogo, the lake’s famous, and yet to be proven, sea monster.

Kirk took a job in Ontario, but visited B.C. again a year later, hoping for another glimpse of these rare animals. In 1989, he moved to the city of Richmond in the province.

“I wanted to investigate this mystery, so I moved out there. Twenty-two years later, the mystery still hasn’t been solved.” While Kirk experienced 11 sightings on B.C. waters over a two-year period, he hasn’t seen anything since 1990.

Kirk soon met up with others in the area who were interested in cryptozoology too. While some were laymen, the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club also included university professors.

The club organizes outings. Sometimes they take boats onto B.C. lakes with equipment to try to see and document creatures.

As well, there have been numerous Sasquatch sightings in B.C. forests, so Kirk and others look for these creatures on days off too. They put out cameras and do night outings with infrared cameras.

It’s a time consuming and often expensive passion. Kirk has seen it break up families. Not him though: He met his wife at a Sasquatch conference.

Kirk’s second career has taken him all over the world: He’s looked for living dinosaurs in Africa and visited Loch Ness in Scotland several times.

When he’s not out on the bush or on a lake, he’s writing up the association’s newsletter and looking at evidence of sightings (his colleagues do the same and they talk later to determine if photos or videos have been faked, or if there’s really something there).

It’s a sometimes frustrating passion. “Some people are nuts about this,” says Kirk, and become obsessive and competitive. And the academic mainstream looks down on professors who dabble in the field.

But the existence of the gorilla was only confirmed in 1902. The Okapi in 1912. Creatures are being discovered all the time. In the thick forests and deep lakes of B.C., Kirk thinks is a wealth of rare animals that inevitably will be formally discovered.

Don't be greedy, share this article:                                       

User Comments & Ratings Comment as guest
more comment stories

Mom, daughter, 14, killed in E. Ontario; 18-year-old faces murder charge

BELLEVILLE, Ont. - A teenager faced first-degree murder charges in the deaths of a mother and her daughter at their family home in the small eastern Ontario community of Mountain View, police said Friday.

Police confirm two dead, one injured in Edmonton car dealership shooting

EDMONTON - Employees and customers of an Edmonton car dealership were struggling to deal with a shooting Friday morning in which two men were killed and a third man sent to hospital.

Ontario Const. Vu Pham remembered at his funeral as modern-day hero

WINGHAM, Ont. - A provincial police officer who died after a gun battle on a rural southwestern Ontario road was remembered as a "modern-day hero" and a great father at his funeral on Friday.

N.L. premier calls offshore chopper crash sad day in province's history

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Premier Danny Williams said Friday was a sad day in the history of Newfoundland and Labrador as people mark the first anniversary of a fatal helicopter crash.

No sympathy for Guergis 'hissy fits': Tory matriarch Deborah Grey

OTTAWA - If beleaguered Conservative minister Helena Guergis was hoping for sympathy from her political sisters, former party matriarch Deborah Grey was fresh out.

editor's picks

Mississippi school sued after it calls off senior prom rather than let lesbian couple attend

JACKSON, Miss. - An 18-year-old lesbian student who wanted to take her girlfriend to her senior prom is asking a federal judge to force her Mississippi school district reinstate the dance it cancelled rather than let the couple attend.

11 rare Siberian tigers die at cash-strapped Chinese zoo, raising questions of overbreeding

BEIJING - Eleven rare Siberian tigers have died at a wildlife park in a startling case that activists say hints at unsavoury practices among some zoos and animal farms in China: They are overbreeding endangered animals in the hopes of making illicit profit on their carcasses.

Conan brings 'Legally Prohibited from Being Funny on Television Tour' to Canada

NEW YORK - Without a TV show to do every night, Conan O'Brien is taking his act on the road. And he's coming to Canada.

Author assumes guise of child in letters punking the famous and infamous

WASHINGTON - Over the years, "Little Billy" learned much from the country's top minds.

Vatican slams Rome school's plan for condom-vending machines

ROME - The decision by a Rome high school to install condom vending machines has set off a storm in Italy, with the Catholic Church charging the move will encourage young people to have sex and Rome's mayor saying it sends the wrong message.


F E A T U R E D   S P O N S O R S

READ THE PRINT
EDITION ONLINE:
LOCAL GUIDES