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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Sept 14, 2011 7:20:25 GMT
www.dailystar.co.uk/news/view/210932/Nessie-spotted-at-last-er-possibly-/A STUNNED fish farmer believes he has finally captured the Loch Ness Monster on camera. Jon Rowe, 31, spotted these two Nessie-like humps appearing from below the surface of the loch in Scotland. He said: “There was a nice rainbow so I got my camera out to take a photo and noticed this really large dark shape in the loch with two humps that were barely out of the water.” Jon, from Lewiston, in Drumnadrochit, added: “My instant reaction was: ‘That’s Nessie.’ I have no doubt. I work on the loch everyday and I’ve never seen anything like it.” i1083.Report this post to Admin please.com/albums/j393/JonDonnis1/1-114.jpg[/img]
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Post by Mr Jinx on Sept 15, 2011 18:38:36 GMT
Jon, from Lewiston, in Drumnadrochit, added: “My instant reaction was: ‘That’s Nessie.’ I have no doubt. I work on the loch everyday and I’ve never seen anything like it.” If he's never seen anything like it how does he know it's Nessie? Surely, to know it's Nessie you must know what he/she looks like.
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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Sept 16, 2011 11:56:43 GMT
Dont use logic!! You are such a spoilsport
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Post by morganp on Sept 17, 2011 20:55:53 GMT
Adrian Shine, from the Loch Ness Project based in the Loch Ness Centre in Drumnadrochit, cast his expert eye on the picture along with his colleague Dick Raynor. He believes one possible explanation for the photo could be that it was two black throated diver birds captured diving for prey or emerging after a dive."It’s an interesting picture," said Mr Shine. "My colleague Dick is a skipper at Urquhart Bay and last week he spotted two black throated divers which are quite big and they have white undersides which you can see in the picture," said Mr Shine. Previously there have been two possible sightings of the Loch Ness monster with white undersides. But Mr Shine said if the birds were diving, which they often do in pairs, then it would explain their disappearance beneath the surface of the water. "If it was one object with two humps and it dives, you would not see two undersides. "You couldn't have one object with two humps having two bits of underside." Mr Shine explained that the birds often dive in pairs. www.inverness-courier.co.uk/News/Nessie-spotted-going-for-a-dive-12092011.htmmorganp
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Post by Mr. Jon Donnis on Sept 18, 2011 8:30:13 GMT
I think itis more likely to be the wake of the water
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