Mon Aug 7th

National Sea Serpent Day

Have you ever looked out over the water and thought you saw a magnificent creature break the surface? Many men on board the HMS Daedalus in August 1848 couldn't believe their eyes as they looked out over the South Atlantic, as they looked out. On a voyage to Saint Helena, several passengers and officers discovered a 60-foot-long creature with a peculiar maned head above the ocean water. This siting and many other tales that are yet to be told are commemorated on National Sea Serpent Day.

Serpent sightings are a thing of legend and legend. We may even call them sirens of the sea. The Cetus, the Greek mythology's sea creature, was named in Greek mythology. The Vikings described the Kraken. The Kraken were discussed by the Vikings. serpents that live in the watery depths of our country's major lakes and waterways have names. For a time, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service had one sea serpent named One. The horse-like sea creature name Chessie reminds us of another legendary creature named Nessie of Loch Ness in Scotland. Chessie isn't the only creature to remind us of Loch Ness. We're not the only one. Pressie and Bessie are two of the two Great Lake monsters to take on the names Pressie and Bessie.

Several sightings have been attributed to large water animals such as whales, sharks, and sea lions. Sea serpents, mosasaurs, or other Mesozoic marine reptiles, according to cryptozoologists, who claim that sea serpents are relict plesiosaurs, mosasaurs, or other Mesozoic marine reptiles.

Learn how to celebrate #nationalseaserpentday

  • Learn about sea serpent legends.
  • Post your personal sea serpent sightings on Facebook
  • If you're sailing the ocean or a large body of water, look for sea serpents
  • On social media, use the hashtag #NationalSerpentDay to post