Tuesday 26 March 2024

New Nessie Photo 2024

 
Some new photographs of the Loch Ness monster have been published. They were taken by Chie Kelly from Ascot, Berkshire who was at the Loch on holiday with her family in 2018. She had a good camera and so could take multiple shots through a telephoto lens meaning that these are some of the best Nessie shots ever. They have also been edited into a simple animation. Source: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/loch-ness-monster-breakthrough-most-32390967 and: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT5VBaiQF5w. The images show a brown object or objects floating on the loch's surface quite a distance from the shore. They actually look fairly familiar because somebody else photographed a creature consisting of two humps over fifty years ago. The photos by Frank Searle were a media sensation. What is it? Somebody suggested otters; another said seals. They might also be a pair of floating dustbin bags; which would be awful because it wouldn't just debunk the monster, it would mean somebody is dumping rubbish in Loch Ness, polluting the environment. Somebody thought it might be an elephant. Probably not. Although elephants can swim they always raise their trunk up like a snorkel to breathe; which interestingly might resemble the serpentine head of Nessie reported by many witnesses. However, no zoo has reported any escaped elephants and that would not exactly be the kind of secret that can easily be covered up. It might be a catfish or eel. As the CFZ have discovered, those fish can grow to huge sizes and giant eels have been spotted in the area, see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2019/09/loch-ness-monster-found.html. That's probably the most likely explanation. Reports of Nessie date back to the 5th century, but the increase in human population around the loch's shores has led to far more sightings in the last hundred years. I'm convinced the monster exists. It is probably a fish or shark because an air breathing mammal or reptile would be seen more often on the surface. It is clearly elusive and shy, actively avoiding human contact; and in the murky depths of Loch Ness that is easy to do. More photos will come in, no doubt, but proving the identity of Nessie will ultimately be an enormous task.
See here for more information: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2022/11/cryptozoology-portal.html.

No comments: