Is Canadian province of Saskatchewan named after Sasquatches?

Saskatchewan not named after sasquatches, residents insist

 

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CTV

Saskatchewanians are eager to correct the record after an NBA announcer insisted this winter that their province is named for its abundance of sasquatches.

The Fox Sports announcer made the comment while pointing out that Utah Jazz forward Trey Lyles is the first person from the province to play in the NBA.

“That region’s known for being home to a lot of sasquatches,” the announcer said, adding, “that’s what it’s named after.”

For the record, Saskatchewan comes from a Cree word for “swift flowing river.”

And as Manitoba sasquatch expert Chris Rutkowski points out, there are far fewer bigfoot sightings in the Land of the Living Skies than other regions like the Pacific Northwest.

Washington has had the most of any state or province, with 617, according to the Bigfoot Field Researchers Association. British Columbia has had the most in Canada, 130. Saskatchewan has had a mere seven.

Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall laughed when he heard the news. “We might have more Elvis sightings,” he said.

Regina Mayor Michael Fougere also found it amusing, but saw an upside: “Now we’re going have a bunch of people that are going to come here wanting to see the sasquatch.”

Saskatchewan Tourism’s Aviva Kohen seemed more annoyed by the other things the Fox Sports announcer rattled off about her province, including that it’s cold and flat.

“That’s a myth I run into quite a bit in marketing and a myth I try to dispel.”

 

Sasquatch sightings in Canada

bigfoot

 

State # of
Listings
Most
Recent
Report
Last
Posted
Alaska 22 1-2014 1-2013
Alabama 98 3-2016 7-2016
Arkansas 104 5-2019 11-2018
Arizona 84 10-2017 6-2016
California 441 4-2019 11-2018
Colorado 124 10-2018 8-2018
Connecticut 17 6-2019 11-2018
Delaware 5 9-2013 11-2012
Florida 325 4-2019 11-2018
Georgia 132 8-2017 1-2017
Iowa 76 4-2018 6-2018
Idaho 87 12-2018 11-2018
Illinois 298 4-2018 9-2017
Indiana 78 11-2015 8-2015
Kansas 46 3-2019 8-2017
Kentucky 113 1-2019 10-2018
Louisiana 43 8-2017 1-2017
Massachusetts 35 3-2018 10-2017
Maryland 35 11-2015 5-2014
Maine 17 12-2017 2-2017
Michigan 219 5-2019 6-2018
Minnesota 73 8-2018 7-2018
Missouri 148 6-2019 4-2018
Mississippi 23 4-2013 2-2013
State # of
Listings
Most
Recent
Report
Last
Posted
Montana 47 1-2019 5-2016
North Carolina 97 4-2019 10-2015
North Dakota 6 12-2010 8-2005
Nebraska 15 1-2019 5-2018
New Hampshire 16 10-2017 7-2016
New Jersey 70 4-2018 6-2053
New Mexico 42 3-2014 10-2013
Nevada 9 4-2009 2-2005
New York 109 5-2019 8-2018
Ohio 290 2-2019 4-2018
Oklahoma 99 5-2019 10-2018
Oregon 250 12-2018 6-2018
Pennsylvania 118 6-2019 3-2018
Rhode Island 5 12-2011 11-2011
South Carolina 52 1-2014 2-2012
South Dakota 17 8-2011 6-2008
Tennessee 100 5-2019 8-2018
Texas 238 5-2019 2-2018
Utah 70 7-2016 7-2009
Virginia 78 4-2019 4-2019
Vermont 9 10-2017 12-2016
Washington 666 6-2019 12-2018
Wisconsin 99 1-2019 7-2018
West Virginia 102 2-2019 7-2017
Wyoming 28 5-2010 3-2010

Video shows giant hailstones pelting Germany


You really wouldn’t want to be outside in this. Image Credit: Twitter / @filiusmontium
The Munich region of Germany was hammered by hailstones the size of tennis balls earlier this week.

The huge chunks of ice, which measured up to six centimeters in diameter, pelted homes and gardens while torrential downpours flooded the streets, causing widespread disruption.

Several people, including a 7-year-old boy, were reportedly injured by the falling ice.

The below video, which is one of several uploaded on to social media of the extreme weather, shows the sheer mayhem wrought by the gargantuan hailstones as they rained down on a residential garden.

The spectacle of the ice hitting the pond in the middle of the frame is particularly intense.

“I’ve never experienced anything like it before,” said local man Roberto De Angelis.

Nitro Explosion!

Richard Anthony Monsour (May 4, 1937 – March 16, 2019), known professionally as Dick Dale, was an American rock guitarist. He was a pioneer of surf music, drawing on Middle Eastern music scales and experimenting with reverberation. Dale was known as “The King of the Surf Guitar”, which was also the title of his second studio album.

Dale worked closely with the manufacturer Fender to produce custom-made amplifiers including the first-ever 100-watt guitar amplifier. He pushed the limits of electric amplification technology, helping to develop equipment that was capable of producing a louder guitar sound without sacrificing reliability.

 

Horrendous, yet Humorous Album Covers

I posted one of these a few months ago. But I have found out that there is basically a bottomless pit of really bad album covers.  Check out these catastrophic covers.

 

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Such a successful young man.

 

albums

Bertha on the drums, and Tina on bass.

 

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This guy is the Tom Jones of Croatia.

 

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Not exactly sure what the idea they are trying to get across here is.

 

albums4

This guy has a horse face, so apropos.

 

Warning: Adult content.

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albums5 1957 country

I guess Daddy gets strapped with all the vet bills.

 

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Nothing like sexual innuendo to sell an album.

 

The bible thumpers get straight to the point.

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albums6a

I hope these guys go to heaven, I don’t want to run into them in hell.

 

albums6b

Okay, that is what is behind all the lightning strike fatalities.

 

albums9

May the killer God help us all!

 

albums10

Beer drinking king, or polyester suit king?

 

albums11

The guy also has a perm. The hairdresser scored big time with these three.

 

Nothing like a band with an evil wooden puppet as a backup singer.

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albums12

 

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God forbid she reaches seventeen without a hubby and a couple rugrats.

 

Centuries of intrigue, turmoil and death: Why treasure hunters can’t stay away from Oak Island

‘Something extraordinary happened there. No one knows for certain what it was’

CBC Radio

Oak Island, Nova Scotia is the location of treasure hunts, investigations and excavations since the late 1700s.

It’s the world’s longest-lasting treasure hunt, yet explorers show no sign of giving up on uncovering the secrets of Oak Island.

Rumours began swirling more than two centuries ago that infamous pirate captain William Kidd buried treasure on the 57-hectare piece of land of the coast of Nova Scotia. Since then, the island has drawn in treasure hunters from all over the world, each thinking they’ll be the one to solve a piece of the mystery of where — and what — the so-called treasure is.

Loss of money, sanity and even life have occurred during expeditions. But explorers keep coming back.

“Something extraordinary happened there. No one knows for certain what it was,” said American author and journalist Randall Sullivan.

“There’s just something about the place that captivates people.”

Sullivan dug up some of the history and intrigue of the island in his new book, The Curse of Oak Island: The Story of the World’s Longest Treasure Hunt.

He discusses how Oak Island became such an alluring enigma with Anna Maria Tremonti on The Current. Here is part of their conversation.

How does the mystery of Oak Island begin?

Well, it begins historically in 1795 with three teenage boys on this little island.

[One of the boys] found an area that was — the oak trees were younger. And then he saw the stumps of old oak trees had been cut down. Then he saw that there was sort of a circular depression that the new trees were growing in.

And he concluded that this was probably a pirate treasure, and he got two friends to join in. And what they found immediately started the intrigue.

They dug down a few feet and there was basically a patio of hand-laid stones. They dug down under that and in 10 feet struck wood. [They] thought they’d hit the top of a treasure chest. But what they’d actually hit was a platform of logs that were embedded in the walls of this round shaft. And they knew it was a manmade shaft, because the outer walls were rock-hard clay but inside it was all loose dirt that had been dug out. They dug down another 10 feet … it was another platform of logs.

At that point they looked up, saw 20 feet of earth towering above them and realized they’d be buried alive by any slippage, and so [they] covered it over and filled it in a bit and then went looking for someone who could mount a more exhaustive or elaborate search.

It wasn’t until the next group arrived and hit platforms at 30 feet, 40 feet, 50 feet, 60 feet, 70 feet, 80 feet, and at 90 feet hit one that had a large stone tablet on it.

Then when they flipped it over there was some sort of an inscription on it, something that had been carved or etched into the stone. And it was a code of some sort. … Whatever it was, they couldn’t decipher it.

So the theory was that [Captain Kidd] had gone to Oak Island and buried his treasure there?

This story was spread around the country about an old sailor who claimed that he’d been part of Captain Kidd’s crew and had buried treasure on some island off the Atlantic coast. … So that spread up and down from New England into the Maritime Provinces of Canada and so virtually everybody knew that story and thought that there was a Captain Kidd treasure somewhere buried. So these boys jumped to that conclusion.

There are so many other theories that it boggles the mind because it’s such a Rorschach blot for any treasure hunter or conspiracy theorist or amateur historian.

Some of them are a bit more mundane or obvious like that the Acadians, when they were pushed out of Nova Scotia, might have buried their treasure somewhere or created a bank to store it.

The two that are most attractive to people involve the fact that it may have been the Knights Templar who may have buried … the treasures they removed from under the temple in Jerusalem when they were occupying it. That would be the Holy Grail.

And then there’s a whole segment of people who believe it was the followers of Francis Bacon and all of this group of kind of the original Rosicrucians who gathered around him in England. That one sounded the most outlandish.

And if anybody finds anything, who gets to keep it?

Well, the Canadian government has a special Oak Island Law. It’s the only one of its kind in the country, whereby they permit treasure hunting on Oak Island … but they [the government] get 10 per cent of whatever is found.

People have been digging on Oak Island for more than 200 years. If something was really there, you’d think they would have found it by now.

That’s a fair point to make, but they have found a lot of really curious things. That’s what keeps them going.

I mean a couple of summers ago they found the remains of human beings at 180 feet. So what were people doing 180 feet below the ground on Oak Island other than performing these excavations? And they dated them to at least 300 years ago. So 300 years ago, people were down digging 180 feet below the ground on Oak Island for some reason.

The Money Pit