What is this?Cadborosaurus — "Caddy" — is a sea serpent reported off the coast of British Columbia since the 1880s, with roughly 300 claimed sightings, a formally proposed species name (
Cadborosaurus willsi, 1995), and a famous 1937 carcass photographed at a whaling station and then promptly lost, as carcasses in these stories tend to be.
We wrote the full history — the K'ómoks First Nation legend, the 1933 Oyster River sighting (the witness shot at it, because 1933), the Naden Harbour carcass, and a complete sightings timeline through 2025:
📖 Full article: Cadborosaurus in the Comox Valley — Sightings History & The Caddy Gift Shop🖼️ The collection: Caddy the Cadborosaurus on OpenSea
Details- Chain: Polygon
- Marketplace: OpenSea
- Project: Strategic Crypto Reserve — a fully disclosed parody token & NFT ecosystem, run alongside a real small-scale Bitcoin mining operation on Vancouver Island
- Utility: It is a picture of a sea serpent. That is the utility.
⚠️ Disclosure (the real kind): This is a
parody NFT collection — digital art for entertainment and community only. No investment expectation, no promised returns, no roadmap to the moon. Caddy has never been confirmed to exist and, in the same spirit, neither has any financial upside here. DYOR.
The Comox Valley is home to a confirmed prehistoric sea monster — the Puntledge River elasmosaur, BC's official provincial fossil. Caddy is just running about 80 million years behind schedule.Links: Article |
OpenSea |
@strategicreset |
Discord