WILMINGTON- Lake Champlain has a “Champ,” and Loch Ness has its “Nessie,” but does Harriman Reservoir have a “Harry?”
Well,  maybe.  Martin Kasindorf (left)saw something unusual in the reservoir while  he was sitting near the water’s edge Friday at about 2:30 pm.   Kasindorf’s dogs reacted to the sight first.  When they started barking,  he followed their intent gaze out beyond the shoreline, less than 100  yards away from where he was sitting.  In the water he saw six distinct  “humps” in a curved line.  “Each hump was about six inches to a foot  apart,” he recalls.  “It was a nice sunny afternoon, and the surface of  the lake was calm.  I could see the water lapping against them.  My  first thought was that they were rocks.  But the dogs thought there was  something alive out there.”
Kasindorf and his wife Irma Hawkins  own the only house with frontage on Harriman Reservoir.  The house, a  former schoolhouse, served local schoolchildren years before Harriman  Dam was built and the reservoir flooded.  The house has been in Hawkins’  family since the 1950s, and the couple have been spending summers at  the place since 1995.  
Although the level of the lake varies,  Kasindorf said he knew there should be no rocks in the spot where the  humps appeared.  He called out to Hawkins, who came out of the house to  see the spectacle.  
“At that point, the humps started moving and  submerged,” Kasindorf says.  “Then a few yards (to the right) I saw  something straight, like a log, and brown moving quickly through the  water.  If it was a log, it was a log with a motor on it.”
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