Dale and Colleen Hanchar were boating with their friend Myrna Germaine Brown on Lake Okanagan in British Columbia, Canada, just over a week ago when they noticed something unusual in the water, according to Global News.
Dale first noticed the object and instructed Colleen to prepare her camera as he turned the boat around, steering the ship within 10 feet of it.
“As a boater, I was just looking to see if there was anything dangerous that needed to be marked so someone didn’t run into it, like a dead head or something,” Dale explained. “We passed by, and I thought about it, and I told Myrna and my wife, ‘that didn’t look right, we need to go look at that again.'””
“We were all perplexed as to what that could possibly be,” he added. “You know, we kind of eliminated what wasn’t in our heads, talked about it briefly, and then just kept going.”

Colleen captured the entire image. (Hanchar, Colleen)
Despite taking photos with Colleen’s phone and seeing it with their own eyes, the couple and their friend were unable to identify it.
“For one thing, those two nodular things sticking up…whatever they are, about three feet apart,” Dale explained. “I did some research since we took this photo, and it’s not a plant.” This isn’t kelp because it’s a lake, not the ocean. This is not a sturgeon. It is not a dead deer turned upside down. All of these things can be eliminated, but the next question is, “What is it?”
Finally, Dale stated that all he wants to know is if anyone saw it or knows what it could have been.
“What is it if it has completely vanished and no one knows what it is?” We’re not sure.” He inquired.
The object’s unidentified nature has some wondering if it could be Ogopogo, Lake Okanagan’s resident monster.
The Okanagan Valley’s serpentine lake monster legend dates back centuries, with countless witnesses reporting sightings, including the area’s indigenous people, the Syilx Okanagan Nation, who call the creature N’ha-a-itk. While no definitive proof of its existence has yet been discovered, despite numerous modern sightings, some have speculated that Ogopogo is a surviving member of a primitive species of whale from the Late Eocene period, which existed 40 to 33.9 million years ago.
However, not everyone believes this photograph is proof of a monster in Lake Okanagan.
Cryptid researcher, folklorist, and Fortean Adam Benedict provided a more mundane explanation for the object to Global News.
“What drew my attention to the surface were the two protruding objects.” “However, when I bring it up on a larger screen and zoom in, I see a water bird of some kind in the process of diving, either just below the surface or coming up,” he explained. “The two protruding objects on the back are obviously its legs in some way, whether bent or kicking, but you can clearly see an eye as well as its beak right at the top of the water line just below the surface.”
Several species of diving ducks live in Lake Okanagan, including the greater scaup, which can dive over 20 feet and hold its breath for up to a minute.
Benedict explained that some people interpret it as a monster because of the lake’s reputation.
“One thing, you know, when you’re dealing with a lake that has a history or reputation for having something in it, your mind will always go to that thing first,” he explained. “Your mind will immediately go to ‘I’m seeing the monster.'” ‘I’m seeing the monster.'”
“However, if a person was boating on a lake that wasn’t associated with a myth,” he added, “it might not shake out the same way.”

Benedict provided this image, which highlights some of the object’s avian characteristics.
Some cryptid enthusiasts have mocked Benedict’s comments, claiming that they cannot see anything resembling waterfowl in the image.
“Yeah, I thought he was ridiculous for thinking it was a waterfowl,” one person said on social media. “I mean, there’s literally no resemblance.”
“What the hell is this guy seeing that he thinks it’s an aquatic bird?” said another. “I don’t see anything resembling a bird in this.”
The Singular Fortean Society contacted Benedict for a response to his critics, to which he replied, “Don’t let your desire for it to be a monster cause you to forget about the actual animals that live in the lake.”
Source & Photo Credit: Singularfortean.com