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Elephant Butte's Giant Catfish

Posted on Thursday, April 5, 2007 at 11:27AM by Registered CommenterMike Smith in | Comments22 Comments

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The stories take place in the southwestern part of New Mexico—in the watery, sand-sifting darkness of Elephant Butte Reservoir—along the concrete base of Elephant Butte Dam.

The reservoir is large—sprawling up forty miles of the Rio Grande, shining blue among low brown hills and one elephant-shaped island.  Its waters lap along more than two-hundred miles of desert shoreline, and are visited by more people than any other lake or reservoir in the state.  It can also get fairly deep...around eighty feet deep, near the dam...deep enough for sunken boats to stay sunken, for enormous fish to stay hidden, and for stories of such fish to remain nearly impossible to confirm.

Giant catfish caught in 2005 in Thailand.  646 pounds.  9 feet long.

Such stories, told by fishermen and fishing guides and locals, tell of enormous catfish, catfish ranging in size from the terrifying to the panic-inducing.  These catfish, the stories say, lurk around the base of the dam like freshwater whales, grow as big as their massive aquarium will let them, and eat whatever the upper Rio Grande and its tributaries carry down to them—other fish, plants, swimming dogs, decomposing human bodies, and even the occasional deer. 

“Basically, from what I understand, just below the dam there’s just some really old catfish the size of you and I,” said Bo Young, owner of Young’s Water Sports, in Albuquerque.  “I never witnessed it myself, but it’s certainly feasible.  Catfish do get pretty big.”

“Divers repairing a wall of the dam saw several of them down there,” said Frank Vilorio, of Land of Enchantment Fishing Adventures.  “They compared one of those catfish to a Volkswagen bug with the hood open.”

And John Morlock, a semi-retired Elephant Butte fishing guide, once knew a woman who swore to him that she had known divers who had been in the water and seen enormous whiskered catfish the size of school buses—catfish so huge and so frightening that one of the divers never again re-entered the water. 

“I am a professional fisherman,” said Morlock.  “I’ve been around the world a few times.  But I have never seen a catfish the size of a school bus!  There are some really big fish in this lake, but only as big as your leg.”

The New Mexico state record for the largest catfish ever caught was set at Elephant Butte Reservoir in 1979.  That catfish weighed seventy-eight pounds, and was just barely under four feet long.  It was huge—but it wasn’t bus-sized. 

Stories of giant catfish aren’t unique to New Mexico, though, or to the present. 

Father Jacques Marquette wrote about a gigantic catfish ramming his canoe on a Midwestern river, in the late-1600s.  A protestant missionary, on the Ohio River in 1780, relayed the story of a catfish pulling a man from a riverbank to drown and then eat him.  And Mark Twain wrote a fictional account of catching an over six-foot-long one, in 1885, in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

“Others are quite current, including the persistent rumor of a large flathead [catfish] caught at the mouth of the Tradewater River on the Ohio, by Caseyville, Kentucky, which contained a human baby,” wrote Jan Harold Brunvand in American Folklore: An Encyclopedia.  “This supposedly occurred during the 1970s.  …Many river folk believe that very large catfish, hardly ever encountered by fishermen, live in deep holes in the river for decades.  There are also legends of huge catfish living at the bases of dams, who prey on divers inspecting or performing maintenance.”

Such stories pop up in countless rivers and lakes and reservoirs all across the country—all throughout the West, and even inside New Mexico.  Aside from Elephant Butte, Quemado Lake and Conchas Lake feature similar rumors of enormous catfish as well. 

Details from all of these other areas are often very similar to details from the stories of Elephant Butte, as evidenced by a summary of such accounts in Brunvald’s Encyclopedia of Urban Legends.

“Divers who do maintenance work at the base of dams supposedly report giant catfish—as big as dogs, calves, even Volkswagens—lurking there,” Brunvald wrote.  “The huge fish may threaten the divers themselves (chewing on arms or legs), or they may be circling a sunken vehicle, lured by the decomposed bodies of accident victims trapped inside.  In the murky water at these depths the catfish loom in and out of the shadows like ghostly blimps.  The sight of these monsters, and their activities, are so horrible that some divers’ hair turns white from the shock, and many vow never again to engage in that line of work.”

Elephant Butte Reservoir posesses literally dozens of stories about its alleged giant catfish.  These stories may be unproven, they may lack any physical evidence or almost any firsthand witnesses, and they may have every hallmark of an urban legend, but they do have one thing: size.  New Mexico's giant catfish are by far the biggest of any American account, even if they are most likely just as fictitious. 

Catfish the size of cars just aren’t sufficient for us, no.  We need them bus-sized! 

And we shouldn’t stop at that, either.

“There is a legend that when the Elephant Butte Dam was done, a mating couple of either alligators or crocodiles were released in the soon-to-be lake, and they bred and began a race of predators in the lake,” said J Hopkins, a southern New Mexico writer.

“I heard there was a two-headed fish caught out there,” said Bo Young.  “A bass.”

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Reader Comments (22)

That picture is not from the Elephant Butte. That's a Giant Mekong Catfish from Asia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Mekong_Catfish
April 6, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJohn
Good article. It would be nice if there were pictures or evidence of some kind. Until then I will keep an open mind, not judging one way or the other.

As for the picture not being from Elephant Butte, it does not say it's from Elephant Butte so I don't see what the problem is. It is there to illustrate that catfish can attain a large size. I think "John" is nitpicking.
April 6, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterBingo
well you never know the truth. scienctists suck the fun out of every good story that just might have the possibillity of it being true. i say belive what you want but only one answer is right. i will belive anything that could be possibile. in the mississippi river there had been reports of giant carp the size of small children around the age of 8 or 9 or the size of medium to large sized dogs. so that means it's possible that human sized catfish to live in new mexico. well in the ocean the biggest salt water fish is the whale shark. and that thing can reach up to 20 feet long. so you decide what you want. i'm going with the people from new mexico who saw these mighty fish.
good day and goood bye.
April 6, 2007 | Unregistered Commentersusan
actually. whale sharks grow up to and upwards of 50 feet - not a mere 20
April 6, 2007 | Unregistered Commenterjack
Mike,

I am so glad to see you write on this topic. A long time ago when I was a kid, some welders my dad knew terrified me with a story of giant catfish at the Elephant Butte dam. Of course, one of the welders "knew" one of the guys who had seen the leviathan and vowed never again too go into the water. I believed the story because the guy told it so convincingly—and I was a little kid. I've always kept that tale in the back of my mind and recently when the lake levels got horrendously low because of drought, I wondered what happened to the giant fish. Since none were recovered in the muddy aftermath, they're probably just fine. I expect if you were swimming at the base of the dam and one of those big fish swam up to you with its mouth agape, you'd see the Gates of Hell looming down its throat ...
April 9, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJimbo
there are pics of the giant cats in one of the little stores at the butte. the proof is there the pics just have not been posted on line.
last time i was there, i recall 10 pic all differnt sizes but all over 50 lbs and the biggest was as long as the guy in the pic.
August 19, 2007 | Unregistered Commentered
So did you steal this from http://www.meta-religion.com/Zoology/Extremes/giant_catfish2.htm or did they steal it from you? Or is there some benign explanation?
September 8, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterMichael Cash
Wow, if people are going to plagiarize my work, I wish they'd at least leave it intact. They chopped off the ending!

Thanks for spotting that, Michael. And yes, I did write this piece, every word.

I'm going to ask them to credit me, and link to my site.
September 8, 2007 | Registered CommenterMike Smith
I believe this picture is stolen... the largest catfish ever caught was in Thailand a few years ago, and this is the picture of it.
September 12, 2007 | Unregistered Commentersarah
First of all, I don't think Mike posted that photo with the intent of passing it off as an Elephant Butte photo. I believe he was just using it as an example. Secondly, I am sitting here typing, looking at the Elephant Butte Dam from the back window of the house here and wondering could this be true. I think the fish could be pretty big there. I know people catch Striper Bass there that average 20-25 pounds minimum. If there are bodies in a car down there, it would have been from a long time ago, because Homeland Security will not allow anyone on the actual dam anymore due to creating fear of possible terrorist attacks, bleh, bleh.

Now, you may want to specify that America is "North America" where these tales occur. If you want to find some impressive catfish, do some research on catfish caught in the Amazon River of "South America". That's where the big fish are.
September 13, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterBlach Dehdrik
Uhhh, this is retarded. You use a picture of a Mekong River catfish in lieu of one for one that is supposed to be living in New Mexico? Look, just because they have the same colloquial nomenclature doesn't mean they're the same species. There are lots of fish that are commonly referred to as "catfish," but their traits aren't the same. Furthermore, if you're gonna post a picture that is somehow relevant to the story, you might want to do the favor of crediting the source, if nothing else. What sort of BS is this?
September 14, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterBrainheil
I KNOW IT'S JUST A PICTURE OF A GIANT CATFISH!

It's not one that's in Elephant Butte, because there probably are none in there. Move your cursor over the photo and it will tell you what the photo is of and (I believe) where it's from. All the photos are credited that way, whenever possible.

Get me a picture of the schoolbus-sized catfish of Elephant Butte, and I PROMISE YOU that I will post that instead. Just get me any good photos of giant Elephant Butte catfish, of any degree of enormity, and I'll post them, for sure.
September 17, 2007 | Registered CommenterMike Smith
That is a big cat fish
September 28, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterWesley
Jeez, that picture gives me the willies. Growing up in northern NM, we used to catch big catfish and drag them home in the sand and rocks. One squirt with water and they were kicking again...indestructable buggers.
October 26, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterRico Martinez
A group of us just got back from windsurfing in the butte. I had heard of the large catfish but that they hung out by the dam. We camped across the lake at long pointe and got a surprise. I first noticed some large dark spots towards the middle of the lake when i was out on the windsurfer, I avoided these not really knowing what they were. Later in the day the weather got extremely windy with choppy water. standing on the shore i saw not more than 40' from shore the same dark spots i had seen earlier. I started to walk into the surf cautiously and got within 20' and would see the occasional limp fin come out of the water. There were several of them in the area and they just seemed to sit just below the surface going up and down with the waves. Initially i though maybe it was schools of fish but as i got closer i saw a very long (6' or so) body with fins that would come out of the water every once and a while. I can't say for sure that these were catfish, but i don't know what else they could be. Whenever i tried to get any closer they would just sink out of view in the murky water.
April 30, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterPeter J
Peter, thanks so much for the comment.

I wonder what it was that you saw? It would be cool if there really were six-foot-long catfish in there--and it doesn't seem impossible that there might be--but I'd wonder first, given the lake's low level, if maybe they could have been submerged rocks beginning to show themselves.

I'm currently reading LAKE MONSTER MYSTERIES, a great exploration of that general phenomenon, by Benjamin Radford and Joe Nickell. I'll be sure to let you know if it sheds any light on the subject.
April 30, 2008 | Registered CommenterMike Smith
I ONLY WISH THAT WAS REAL
May 2, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterbig flatty
Giant catfish must be all over the United States. I met a former Air Force officer who had been stationed at Biloxi AFB. One weekend, he was one of a number of volunteers looking for a local man who had vanished on the river. The lost man was found, with one foot firmly lodged in the mouth of a 105-lb catfish. Evidently, he had stepped on the fish as he waded into the water. I have seen the skulls of very large cats on my uncle's farm in Missouri, and the topping of the cake was a story my mom's brother told about Lake Mead. He and several of his friends were fishing there when they learned of an experiment being conducted near the dam by some local fish and game people. They wanted to check out the tale of giant cats by the dam, so they put a large piece of meat on a very large hook (I guess one of those used in the ocean for large fish) which was attached to a reel of a good thousand feet or so of piano wire. The hook was lowered, and the wire unwound. I have no idea how deep the water was at that point, but apparently the reel didn't have too much left on it when something grabbed the hook and took off. The piano wire straightened as it cut through the water, the reel was blocked off, and the men waited. Suddenly, the wire went limp -- it had been broken! What grabbed the hook, no one knows. Another experiment ended when the bait was taken, the hook raised, and was found to be completely straightened!
June 6, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLee Wacker
Lee.... You are believing a fairytale! I commercially fish in Charleston SC. We catch tuna and marlin that weigh hundreds of ponds on 130 lb test line. We also fish up to 2000 feet deep. the world record blue cat was only about 150 lbs, and the flathead is only a little bigger. I promise you that there is not a catfish anywhere that could not be taken on 50 lb tackle. Every big lake in the country has the urban legend about big catfish. It is just like Cow Tipping....everyone knows someone who did it, but nobody actually did it themselves.
June 18, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterPaul Godbout
To Paul:

Who said I believed it? All I was doing was repeating a tale that was told to me. You must admit it does make for a good tall tale, but even a ten to twenty pound cat is fairly big, and frankly, I am not about to test some of the lakes around here to find out if there are any larger than ten or so pounds. I enjoy the stories, but I know that not all are true. However, truth can be stranger than fiction.
June 22, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLee Wacker
By the way, as for cow tipping, where I come from we call that "bulldogging!" Not for the faint of heart.
June 22, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLee Wacker
Actually in the 1800's there were numerous tales of channel cats in the Mississippi in the 400 to 600 pound range. I have personally seen a 6' 100# plus cat taken from the Cjumberland River below Cunberland Falls in Southeastern Ky. As a child, I grew up with tales of much larger cats in the hole below the Falls, including tales of young children playing in shallow water being snatched by theshuge monsters. Personally, I believe these tales to have a basis in truth.
July 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMichael Massey

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