Queen of the Naga's or merely the King of Herrings? (the Don Sao photo debunked)

    One thing about having fewer guests is that I have plenty of time for pointless hobbies, meaning I get to spend my downtime indulging my twin passions of ugly fish identification and naval history via the internet.

    So it was while flicking back issues of All Hands - the US Navy Magazine - that I came across a familiar looking photo, part of an infestation that had always perplexed me...
 
    ...anyone who has visited the Don Sao, the markets of Sob Ruak or the Golden Triangle - or, so I'm told, Nong Khai - will have seen a picture purporting to be taken on a secret US base in Laos in 1973, a picture of about 20 servicemen holding a long fish like thing; looking, to me, like the Chinese style dancing dragons one sees in parades and claiming to be the "Queen of the Nagas".

    Nagas, in this instance (as opposed person from Naga-land or just plain Indian cobra), being a dragon like fish snake thingy, one of which created the Mekong, concrete incarnations of whom guard every temple in Northern Thailand and the beasts whose breath or flatulence create the fireballs in the lower Mekong during the November full moon.

    I never had a problem with the existence of Nagas, or the existence of secret U.S. bases in Laos in 1973, my only problem with the photo is that one of them, the Queen (how do you sex a Naga?  Surely then it is a Nagi?) no less, would be daft enough to let herself get caught by foreigners.

    I was happy, therefore - unless this is all a big cover up and I've been duped - to see that the original photo was actually taken in Coronado, California in 1996 and is of a tropical deep water fish from the family Regalicedae - nothing to do with killing kings I surmise, but one particular member of the family glories under the common name, King of Herrings - the very sound of which makes me want to put on an eyepatch, wooden leg and say "aarrrrrr" (what can I say too much time, too little work).



Not easy to read from the photo, the full text reads:

"SEALS find serpent of the sea:  Look, on the beach!  It's a bird, it's a plane, it's... a fish?  Twenty-three feet long and more than four feet in circumference, this image from a 1950's horror film weighs in at 300 pounds.  And it's dead as a doornail.

The silvery serpent of the sea - an oarfish - was discovered last year by Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) Instructor Signalman 2nd Class (SEAL) Kevin Blake.  The oarfish has large, saucer-shaped eyes and a raised, red, elongated dorsal fin along the upper ridge of its spine.  At the time of the find, Blake was leading students on a beach run at the Naval Special Warfare Center, Coronado, Calif.  "It was unlike anything I had ever seen before," said Blake.  "It looked like some sort of prehistoric throwback."  Scripps Institution was notified of the find.

Although this specimen was dead, it was a rare find.  The University of California, San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, has only been able to collect four specimens of the undersea giant.

Scripps' Senior Museum Scientist H.J. Walker came to the site and removed the creature's head and tail for anatomical study.  He speculated on the death of the fish, saying it probably met its maker after an encounter with the propeller of a boat. (JR. Comm. - nothing to do with having a SEAL Basic Underwater Demolition Team in the area then!)

Walker dared the BUD/S trainees to sample their find, knowing well that oarfish, when cooked, tastes like paper.  He tried eating it himself when an oarfish was caught in some fishing nets of the Southern California coast a decade ago.

According to Walker, the oarfish is harmless, eating only small shrimp and living in depths of up to 700 feet in warm tropical water.  Oarfish average between 20 and 30 feet long when fully grown.

"Because of its look and size, this is a fish that gives rise to the sea serpent image."  Walker said.

Records have a 56-foot long serpent like creature found on a Scotland beach in 1808.  It's believed to have been an oarfish.

Story By JOSN John Carstens
photos by LT DeeDee Van Wormer."
 
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Comments

  • Sat, 10 Jan 2009 12:38:44 GMT sangjay choegyal wrote:
    After many stories from 'acclaimed professional guides' ranging from what you mentioned about a secret US base in Lao and some how being pulled out of the Mekong by 20 stoned service men. And how no, it was found on the west coast of America and flown over to Laos by some Marines who were flying empty just to take the piss as they returns to the states with body bags full of heroin.

    Although that would then call for a cover up story like the one above..

    Even if it was a cover up story to hide the fact Marines were taking the piss during the Vietnam war or in fact a boringly true story about the king or queen of Herrings, Thats my trip up the Mekong stoned look in for the Queen of Nagas canceled.
    Reply to this
    1. Sat, 10 Jan 2009 12:57:59 GMT John Roberts wrote:
      ...the fact that this is not her means that she's still out there.
      Reply to this
  • Sat, 28 Mar 2009 13:08:46 GMT Tory wrote:
    You should post this picture to Wikipedia's page on oarfish - you've got a good picture.
    Reply to this
  • Wed, 05 Aug 2009 22:53:14 GMT Lapa wrote:
    Thanks for this. It really helped me out!
    Reply to this
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