WE HAVE CONCLUSIVE PROOF THAT BLUE LIZZY EXISTS!

There’s plenty of evidence that Blue Lizzy is REAL. While you’ll have to visit the museum in person to get the whole story, this page should present enough evidence to convince non-believers.

PRIMARY EVIDENCE

(First-hand, eyewitness accounts)

The controversial so-called “Park Bench Photo,” taken by Noreen Mae Billings at Sag Pond Lake Municipal Campground in 1965. This photo has been examined by several experts who have confirmed that THIS IMAGE HAS NOT BEEN EDITED IN ANY WAY. You c…

The controversial so-called “Park Bench Photo,” taken by Noreen Mae Billings at Sag Pond Lake Municipal Campground in 1965. This photo has been examined by several experts who have confirmed that THIS IMAGE HAS NOT BEEN EDITED IN ANY WAY. You can see the original image in the Gallery of Evidence at the Blue Lizzy Museum & Petting Zoo.

“I grew up in Hawthorn Junction and had an experience with Blue Lizzy when I was a girl but I have chosen to keep it to myself for many many years for fear of being labeled a “kook”. But after visiting the Museum I felt moved to speak out. Anyway here is my story. When I was a teenager in the 1960s my boyfriend and I used to go “parking” at Cypress Landing (we are married now with three beautiful children and several grandchildren). One night we heard a splashing sound and then a little while later a huge, dark shape lumbered past our car. Norman flicked the headlights on and we saw a gigantic woman (probably eight feet tall) all covered in scales like an alligator. She looked right at us. Her eyes were glowing red. And then she let out this deep bellow and I swear the car windows shook. Well I guess she didn’t like the lights on her because she swiped at Norman’s car and almost tore his bumper clear off before walking away toward the lake. We didn’t go back to the lake much after that. So that is my story about Blue Lizzy. Thank you to the Museum for encouraging witnesses to speak up!”

– Marilyn Z.

“I’ve never put much stock in any that Bigfoot nonsense, but I know I’ve seen Blue Lizzy. I was out hunting with my buddy, Mayor Roscoe. He’s got this little cabin out by the lake where we go sometimes. This must’ve been 2013, right after all those bad storms we had that fall. I remember ‘cause there were all kinds of trees down and it was pretty rotten hunting – I guess all the animals were spooked on account of the storms. By the end of the day, we wound up at the lakefront, hoping maybe we’d at least bag a duck or something, but no such luck. We were just getting ready to head back, when all of a sudden we saw her. It was right around sunset, and Roscoe noticed this big, kinda bluish shape a couple of hundred yards down the shore. Now, I know what you’re gonna say, but it was easy to see what was going on, even though it was getting dark. We just stood there and watched while that critter drug something over to the edge of the lake and held it under till it sank. I know gators do that with their kills sometimes, so I’d wager old Lizzy was saving herself a snack for later. Roscoe wanted to go get a closer look, but I said, ‘Hell no, she might come back for seconds.’ I’m telling you, we saw her clear as day. She’s real.”

– Marshall J.

SECONDARY SIGHTINGS

(Direct evidence such as tracks, cattle mutilations, shed teeth and claws, etc)

WARNING: SOME IMAGES CONTAIN GRAPHIC CONTENT AND MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR ALL VIEWERS

“I visited Sag Pond Lake with my family this summer, and we found some unusual tracks by the shoreline. We just happened to stop by the museum because the kids needed to use the bathroom, and the gentleman there (Todd, I think?) gave us a fun lesson on identifying reptile tracks, which I think the kids enjoyed. They were very big, around the size of a men’s size 12 shoe, but they looked more like alligator tracks than human footprints, which Todd (?) said is characteristic of Big Lizzy’s tracks.”

– Allen N.