Camp Monsters - Tahoe Tessie
Episode Date: October 3, 2019When you go to Lake Tahoe, chances are you’ll see Tahoe Tessie. She’s a sea monster and a minor mascot for the area—pasted on the sides of buses, restaurant menus and adorning knick knacks in ev...ery gift shop.The problem is, if you look closely into the water you might see something that looks nothing like the charming and cheerful monster you’ve seen all over town. This episode is for those who love being out on the water... no matter what may lie beneath.
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This is an REI Co-op production.
When you go to Lake Tahoe, chances are you'll see Tahoe Tessie.
She's a sea monster.
She varies in color and size, everything from 40 feet down to 3 inches long,
depending on whether she's printed on the side of a
bus or a restaurant menu or something in between.
She's a sort of minor mascot for the whole region, a staple of the newspaper's April
Fool's Day headlines, a gift shop monster, playful, friendly, always smiling.
And no one has ever, ever seen her in the lake.
Except maybe on the side of a tour boat, of course.
People have seen something else, though.
Lake Tahoe is one of the clearest lakes in the world.
If you look carefully over the side of your kayak,
you may realize that the little rocks a few feet under you
are actually boulders much, much deeper down.
And even deeper than the boulders,
down where things get a little dim.
What moves like that fish a big fish an eel or well something that looks nothing
like the Tahoe Tessie from the gift shops carefully though you're looking
over the side of a kayak remember remember? Any sudden movement in a kayak can send you right into that icy water.
Right in with whatever it is that's down there.
Welcome to the Camp Monsters Podcast.
Every part of the country has its own legends to explain those things you hear
pass too close to your tent in the middle of the night,
or that run across the trail just beyond the beam of your flashlight.
And every week we'll be traveling the country, sitting around the campfire
and trying to scare each other with stories about the things that live just beyond the firelight.
While you're listening, remember that these are just stories.
Sure, some of them are based on the testimony of people who claim to have seen these creatures, but it's up to you how much you believe and how to explain away what you don't.
Come closer.
Let's hear this week's legend. Sorry the light's a little dim.
Now this is a good old boat, but maybe a little more old than good.
We really ought to have LEDs in here.
But a cabin cruiser like this is really the best way to see the eastern shore of Lake Tahoe.
You can't camp on the beaches on this side.
Nevada State Park rules.
And some of the most beautiful views are from the water.
Peeking into these little coves or looking up at the mountains red in the sunset.
The nights can get a little chilly this time of year.
It's nice to sleep in a boat with a cabin and bunks and some of the sunset. The nights can get a little chilly this time of year. It's nice to
sleep in a boat with a cabin and bunks and some of the amenities.
Anyway, this one dim bulb sets kind of a cozy mood, doesn't it? Here we are in the warm cabin
of our boat, huddled around our little bulb. Have you been outside? Perfect darkness except
for the stars. Not a light but our own for miles around.
Perfect silence.
Except for the little night sounds of the water.
Funny little sounds.
For minutes there'll be nothing but the lap of gentle waves along the hull.
Maybe a call of a sleepy bird from its nest on the shore somewhere.
Then all at once you hear a splash in the water.
Close beside the boat.
Possible to tell just where,
in the darkness it seems to come from
wherever you aren't looking.
It sounds much bigger than it must have been,
just a fish or beaver or something.
Darkness has that effect on sound.
Darkness or fog,
but we don't get fog on Lake Tahoe
except on a particularly cold night.
Yes, a boat really is the best way to experience the lake.
For a long time it was the only way to experience it.
The railroad only came as far as Tahoe City, and the roads around the rest of the lake
were rough where they existed at all.
But regular steamships called at all the little towns and resorts along the shore.
Nice little steamers they were, too. The S.S. Tahoe was 168 feet long, had a smoking lounge, dining saloon, ladies' cabin, steam
heat, plenty to keep her passengers entertained aboard ship.
But there was always a lonely soul or two leaning out against the ship's rail, their
back to the laughter in the cabin, their eyes staring over the water and the unspoiled shoreline
taking in the surrounding mountains.
They couldn't help
but be impressed by the beauty of the scenery. But every once in a while, a passenger would
disembark with a more unsettling impression. It always happened on the run up from the
south lake toward the little old logging town of Glenbrook on the eastern shore. Someone looking out over the rail would nudge their neighbor,
stop a passing stranger, and point out at the lake,
What is that?
The second person would peer, squint, shake their heads,
stop another passerby, and pretty soon,
Captain Jensen would notice that the ship was heeling distinctly
to whatever side the crowd was gathered on.
About that time, a steward would come up onto the bridge and tell the captain what he already
knew, what he'd heard a hundred times before, that someone had seen something in the water,
but whatever it was, it disappeared and didn't seem to be a hazard to the ship.
For his part, Captain Jensen sailed the S.S. Tahoe for thirty years and swore to his dying day that he'd never seen anything but a floating log or two and that any other story was all bunk.
Well, bunk it might have been, but that doesn't explain all the accidents on the old Lincoln Highway.
If it were regularly foggy out here, you might expect...
Well, now that I've jumped ahead of myself. I'd better back up.
The Lincoln Highway was one of the first roads for automobiles across America,
and part of it ran right along the lake here, right about where Highway 50 runs now. By the
19-teens automobiles had begun to gain popularity and people were starting to
rediscover and resurface old wagon roads or hack new roads
out of the hillsides. Ever wonder why an old Model T was built with such big wheels? Needed
the ground clearance to handle roads like the ones out here. Rocky tracks just roughed out along the
very edge of the lake. In its early days, the Lincoln Highway was one of those. What with
dark nights, bad headlights, no guardrails. It was natural you'd lose a
car or two from time to time over the side. If the driver was lucky, they'd swim to safety.
If the shore was gradual, they might even be able to have the car winched out and repaired.
But there was one place in particular where the shore was steep and water's deep and drivers seem to have a hard time swimming.
There was a little bridge they built around a big graystone outcropping just a couple miles south of
the little town of Glenbrook. It had more than its fair share of cars going over the edge, but
wasn't that to be expected of such a narrow bridge suspended roughly from a cliff on a blind corner out over the water?
No, but the strange thing was how many accidents happened in broad daylight.
No fog, nothing like that. Bright, sunny daylight.
In fact, night seemed to be the safest time to cross the bridge.
People slowed down, took their time, concentrated on the narrow road in front of them. By day, though, most of the drivers who managed to swim free as their cars sank into the depths blamed distraction.
Just as they were rounding the curve out onto the bridge, something in the water had caught their eye.
A few of them would admit what they really thought they'd seen.
They didn't want to be laughed at. No one would believe them anyway.
They couldn't believe it themselves. They'd say that a strange trick of the light
on the water caught their attention
a trick of the light so strange
that it had held their attention
while their car splintered through the wooden barrier
and plunged down the face of the cliff
so strange that the next car along
the little used road
inevitably found the soaking shivering driver standing
by where their car had gone
over, and staring, not down, toward the car, but out, across the peaceful blue water, like
they were looking for something out there. Quite a trick of the light.
There were so many accidents right at that spot that in 1931 it was deemed worthwhile to spend the money to carve a tunnel through the gray outcrop.
The local native people, the Washoe, protested against this decision.
They'd known the rock forever and they knew it better than anyone.
It was a place so powerful, so dangerous, that they had a special prayer to say before they'd even speak about that rock.
They knew stories, too, of things that lived in the waters below the outcrop.
They didn't like to see that rock disturbed.
But the 1930s were a hard time for sacred places and the American landscape.
A lot of people were out of work. Any kind of building project that created jobs sounded
like a good idea to them. The tunnel was built, followed by a second tunnel in the 1950s, and once
the road was routed away from the edge of the water, the accident ceased, but the stories persisted.
As more and more people took to the water in boats in the boom years after World War II,
there were more and more sightings of something strange in the water near that pale gray outcrop. Most of them were distant and momentary, like the steamer sightings, just a
quick glimpse of a long dark thing in the water that must have been an old log, except
wasn't it moving too quickly? And where did it disappear to?
Very occasionally, someone has an experience that
isn't so distant
not long ago a young woman named Sally
was out on the lake with
shh, hear that?
that was a big one
a big splash I mean
is the window open just behind you?
I don't think it came from out there
of course now it won't happen again
no, just the sound of the little waves.
That was big, whatever it was.
Fish jumping, of course.
I once saw a little fish jump clear over the gunwale of our boat and into my grandfather's lap.
I always wondered what had scared the poor little fish enough for it to do that.
We were talking about that incident last summer, weren't we?
With the kayakers out of Zephyr Cove?
Sally, yeah, she was the one. She went out with them.
She was part of a kayaking summer camp that went out exploring all over the eastern shore.
Learn about kayaking, kayak safety.
Take some food and
have picnics at this or that little cove or beach. It'd been a great time, a great
summer. It was just coming to an end when Sally had this encounter.
They'd been out all day, a big group of them. It was a beautiful day, sunny, warm, but
not too hot, the water calm and blue and clear. There were twelve young kayakers in Sally's group, all paddling
quietly together in loose formation, not talking much, pleasantly tired out by the day's trip.
None of them could say for sure when or exactly how it happened. As they were paddling past
that big gray rock with the tunnels through it, the air began to turn hazy.
They hardly noticed it at first, but it gradually thickened until they couldn't see the shore clearly anymore.
They stopped as a group and decided to ease in closer to the rock in order to keep the shore in sight until the fog cleared off.
It was the strangest thing. None of them had seen fog on the lake all summer, certainly not this time of day.
Someone said it must be smoke from a forest fire somewhere, but it didn't smell like smoke. They started paddling slowly toward the shore, with instruction to call
out when they saw a rock or find themselves in shallow water. It was a bright fog, one
of those that seems to just barely cover the surface of the earth,
and that diffuses the light of the sun so brightly that it's almost painful to look in any direction.
Sally found herself looking down into the water, where the darkness beneath the bright reflective surface seemed cooler to her eyes.
As they paddled closer to the shore, the fog grew brighter and even thicker,
until it formed a wall of unbearable sunlight that made it hard for Sally to see anything further than the end of her paddle.
Her fellow kayakers started calling out to one another, reminding everyone to stay close,
but in the fog their voices came from everywhere. It was hard to tell how near or far everyone was. I'm here, Sally called out, more to add to the comfort of the group's loud voices all around
than to inform anyone of where she was.
She didn't know where she was.
She must be near that big gray rock now.
It seemed they'd paddled further than they should have needed to get there,
but it was impossible to tell how fast or slow they were moving.
Sally held her paddle up over the water to block out some of the glare
and peered down,
trying to see the bottom if she could.
Every time she moved her body in the kayak,
her window through the glare on the water
shimmered and rippled.
It was hard to tell what she saw.
Was that a rock down there?
She thought she could see...
No.
But that could be the bottom, though.
Was that...
It was hard to make out.
She shifted her paddle and moved her head,
leaning over and squinting intently deep into the water.
A spiked mouth, black scales,
and before she could think she was staring into an enormous white
rimmed eye just inches inches from her own just below the surface a cold fixed staring eye like
a pale-eyed eel but huge the hitch could see was at least a foot across it had swum out from under
her kayak it was directly under her kayak she shouted jerked away the boat rolled and she was in the water and the water was filled with scales
loops and coils
thick round scaled bodies
she tried to bend her own body back to the air
but couldn't reach it
panicked
she saw the eye
and the huge head
and the sharp toothed little mouth again
swinging slowly toward her now underwater
she looked away and grabbed her paddle
bent her body
and flicked her hips and was back in the air water streaming from her and grabbed her paddle, bent her body, and flicked her hips,
and was back in the air, water streaming from her hair into her eyes,
blinding her, water choking out from her nose and mouth.
The fog was filled with shouts now, people calling, close and far, but none visible.
I'm here, she croaked out. I'm here!
More shouts. More fog.
Were the voices moving away from her now?
She tried to plunge her paddle into the water, tried to speed away from there, but the paddle made a faint clack.
As it struck something, almost as hard as rock.
She watched in frozen horror as a coil of the creature's thick body slid slowly through the water beside her.
It gradually fell back beneath the surface, but she could see it there, a scaly loop water beside her. It gradually fell back beneath the surface,
but she could see it there,
a scaly loop moving beneath her.
She could see it on the other side of her kayak, too.
Faintly through the glare of the fog,
the water seemed filled with dark, round body
moving slowly, silently in every direction.
Then she felt a bump against the bottom of her kayak.
A bump.
And then heard and felt as something pushed her slightly up and slid against the thin skin of her kayak. A bump, and then heard and felt as something pushed her slightly
up and slid against the thin skin of her craft. Another coil of body spooled out of the water
against the nose of her boat, down where her feet were, and hung motionless for a moment
before sliding forward again and slipping slowly beneath the water's bright cover.
Sally sat motionless.
She was still aware of the shouting and the fog, but it seemed further away, now remote.
She could hear her own breathing,
feel the pulse in her hands where they gripped the paddle she held protective and useless against her chest.
She was aware of motion all around her below the water.
The surface swirled and eddied against the bright fog
with the movement of the powerful thing just beneath
she forced herself to move her paddle
to move one blade down toward the water
if she could dip it in just an inch
just two inches it would be enough for a little pull
enough to get her gliding away from here
she could feel the coolness rising off the surface of the water before her hand reached
it, before the paddle dipped in.
She could see the little whirlpools rising as the creature writhed beneath.
As her paddle broke the surface of the water, so did something else, just beyond the nose
of her kayak, not a coil this time.
As it kept rising, she recognized the head of the kayak not a coil this time as it kept rising she recognized
the head of the creature
its open mouth filled with little spikes
of sharp black bone
she closed her eyes rather than see the terrible
vacant round white black
that was the creature's eye but she couldn't
stay in the darkness for long
when she opened her eyes the whole head was out
staring lifelessly back
at her and the neck continued to rise further and further from the surface.
It was four feet, five feet above the water when it snapped its jaws at the fog as if testing it.
It hung there for a moment as its mouth slowly reopened.
Then it snapped again and began to sink back into the water. But it sank towards
Sally, its body brushing up the side of her kayak, its head coming closer and closer to
her as it sank lower and lower. It was about to brush against her hand and she cringed
away. The creature stopped sinking and lay its neck across the body of her kayak, right in her lap,
and looked at her with its flat, white circle of eye.
Its mouth opened a little,
and closed a little,
and opened as if it was panting in the air.
She could feel the rest of its body bumping and colliding
all along the underside of her kayak,
first here, now there.
If there were any voices calling in the fog, she didn't hear them anymore.
Then the creature snapped its sharp jaws,
and Sally smacked it as hard as she could with the blade of her paddle.
The whole world exploded into spray then.
Sally felt her chest struck with unbelievable strength,
and she was driven into what had been the water,
but now was a thrashing chaos of foam and force, ripped and twisted by movements and blows from every direction.
Her paddle was gone. She was out of her kayak.
She had no idea where the surface was or whether she was being pulled up or down.
She struggled. The struggle only seemed to matter to herself.
She thought at the time she'd grabbed a rung on a slow-moving freight train
and been yanked off her feet by the machine's indifferent power.
That had happened last summer. No, no, two summers ago. She could feel the warmth of that evening, feel the wind and hear the whine of the insects in
the trees, the rumble and scream of the big freight train's wheels. She blinked and shivered,
coughed, and felt the warm water come up and out of her and the cold
cold water of lake tahoe press her all around something jostled against her life jacket
something weaker and much warmer than the creature and she felt hands clasping her and heard the
voices of her friends fog was lifting and the brightly colored kayaks were crowding
in, everyone eager to help and find out what had happened to her. They'd all heard her
scream, heard a thrashing in the water that seemed far too large for one person to make,
but they hadn't seen anything else in that fog.
What happened to Sally that day?
Some sort of attack, clearly. An attack of seizure with thrashing and hallucinations?
Possibly, though the doctors in Carson City who examined her didn't find any sign of one.
She'd badly bruised her ribs, as if she'd struck her chest violently on something,
or had something strike her.
Other than that, she was fine.
To her credit, she was back on the lake in a kayak less than a week later, for the last day of camp.
But she made sure that the last day's trip
steered well clear of that big gray rock outcrop,
the tunnels through it,
and something else in the waters beneath it.
One other strange thing that you might have noticed,
Sally's fellow group members all testified that
during the attack they could hear but not find her because of the fog.
Well, I think I've mentioned fog is rare on Lake Tahoe, especially on the eastern shore,
especially in the summer, especially during the day.
No one else in the area reported so much as a mist.
There was no fog on Lake Tahoe that day.
Ah, but look outside.
We've got some fog tonight.
But it can happen when the nights get cool enough, like this one.
Go ahead and close that window.
We don't want the chill getting in here while we sleep.
The chill, or anything else.
Cat Monsters Podcast is part of the REI Podcast Network.
It's written and performed by yours truly, Weston Davis,
and recorded and edited by Nick Patry in the very cozy and campfire-like
confines of Cloud Studios here in Seattle, Washington. Be sure to listen to the next
episode of Camp Monsters when we'll hear a story about the mines and ghost towns and railroads
that were abandoned a century ago in the mountains of Southern Colorado and why some places might be
better left abandoned. If you enjoy these stories, please subscribe, rate, listen, spread the word.
It's your support that keeps us recording. Thank you very much. I would love to go on an adventure in the backcountry, seeking one of the nation's
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Whether you're looking for a solo hike in the woods or you're headed out on an overnight
trip, it's essential to know the ins and outs of preparedness for your next adventure.
REI's Wilderness Safety Training course can teach you the necessary skills needed to courageously
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From trip planning and communication to decision making and emergency response, REI's Wilderness
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