Four people huddle on the edge of a floating wooden dock, eyes scanning this mountain lake near China's remote northwestern frontier with Central Asia. Small waves lap at their shoes.
In a soft voice, Yuan Guoying recounts his two sightings of the creatures. The first over there, from a cliff, Yuan says. Then again, 19 years later.
From the group comes a squeal as tiny, silver fish dart at hunks of bread they have dropped in.
"Look! There are so many of them!" says one girl. "But where's the lake monster?"
Another 40 minutes pass. A chill breeze kicks up.
Yuan is unfazed.
"We can wait all night," he says. "Let's see if this is our fate."
They have come by the tens of thousands over the years — skeptical scientists, curious tourists — answering the lure of the mysterious "Kanasi Huguai," China's very own version of the Loch Ness monster."
Audra Ang, Associated Press.
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