![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() He said: “In terms of video evidence, there’s been two or three really good videos in the past, but this is certainly up there with the best of them.” He has been logging sightings for 26 years. How big? Between six and nine metres (20ft to 30ft) long, they reckon.Īny experts looked at it? Gary Campbell called it a credible sighting, the best footage he had seen in decades.Īnd he is? Keeper of the Official Loch Ness Monster Register. The lumps or humps or whatever they are kept disappearing under the water, but it was still pushing forward under the water.”Ĭertainly sounds like Nessie. You could see it much clearer than it’s come out in the photos. They want to remain anonymous, but she said: “It was something large … It was propelling itself with something. A new video and photos taken by a married couple from their holiday cottage overlooking the loch. I’m guessing there has been a recent sighting. Still, it hasn’t put off the enthusiasts, the cryptozoologists and the souvenir shops. It certainly doesn’t have the same romance to it. One professor of ecology has suggested that the images of a “tentacled and alienesque” creature could be a whale’s penis during mating season. By the 1930s, the legend of Nessie was world famous, with accounts, sightings and photos appearing sporadically ever since.Īny evidence? Scientists remain sceptical, putting sightings down to wishful thinking, hoaxes and actual logs. There followed sightings of “a large stubby-legged animal”, a “whale-like fish”, and a “most extraordinary form of animal” crossing the road. That would presumably mean there’s more than one at any given time, for reproductive purposes.Īnd since the sixth century AD? Things went a bit quiet on the loch until the early 1870s, when a D Mackenzie saw a log-like object “wriggling and churning up the water”. Unless the current one, assuming one exists, is a descendant of Adomnán’s. That would make the monster at least 1,500 years old. Age: The first account of a monster in the Loch Ness area appears in the Life of Columba by Saint Adomnán of Iona, written in the sixth century AD. ![]()
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