
You’ve really got to stop and read those weird green metal “historical markers” from time to time. You just never know what you might learn.
Think you’re safe splashing around the E. coli-infested waters of The Big Sioux? Think it makes sense to wade through the muck down by Tuthill Park to find your lost frisbee-golf discs?
You’ve got more than rusted-out tractor parts and heavy-metal pollution to watch out for. You might also run into our local version of the Loch Ness Monster.
Back in 1887 a few fisherman casting about in the river on the far east side of town spotted what they thought was a floating log. Then the thing started moving and scared the god-fearing pioneering daylights out of them. They described it as a “monster snake,” a good “20 feet long and a foot thick.”
Fortunately, it slithered off into the depths, never to been seen again. But is it gone for good? Or is it just biding it’s time, waiting for a day-drinking kayaker to take asunder? Time will tell…
You can read all about it on the gravel-road sign pictured here. It’s hiding in the weeds where 41st makes a last-ditch effort to get you to Iowa before the river takes over. Eventually, Mother Nature always wins.
