Research Welcome to Ogopgo Country
Research

Nippon TV and the Japanese

Japanese CrewJapanese television crew came armed with remote underwater camera and a tiny submarine to find the bashful beast, the one they call Ogopogo.

The lake may be 80 miles long and more than 1,000 feet deep in places, but Tokyo-based Nippon TV insists Ogopogo can run but it can't hide.

Fusako Suzuki watched happily in the snow as the Nippon crew tested the underwater camera in a hotel swimming pool. The sub, equipped with gyro, sonar and acoustic gear, had not yet arrived. But that didn't stop a steady stream of quizzical hotel guests from watching the preparations, their noses pressed to the lobby windows.

"They're looking for Ogopogo," someone explained.

"Oh, yes. Ogopogo," people nodded.

With a radiant smile, Suzuki said, "Yes, we shall find it." Suzuki is part of a 15 person crew that arrived a week ago to begin an 11 day search for the elusive monster.

This is the second Nippon expedition. Last summer, 80 million Japanese TV viewers gobbled up the first Ogopogo segment, which showed a large object surfacing in the Peachland area of the lake, as well as a 30 foot long wriggling object on sonar.

It was the sonar reading that particularly inflamed the Japanese crew's curiosity. Ogopogo, ever the tease, has brought them back, much to the amusement of many of Kelowna's. (Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 1991)Back to Top

Back Back to Research
© 2001 Centre culturel Marie-Anne-Gaboury d'Edmonton
(All Rights Reserved)