| |
NOT the Loch Ness Monster - Loch Lochy Mystery Monster Sightings
Loch Ness Monster has
sister in Loch Lochy
Loch Ness Monster hunters are now
flocking to Loch Lochy following a spate of
sightings
Loch Ness isn't the only loch in Scotland
hiding a mystery in it's depths. Loch Lochy has it's own mystery
monster. Read the following press articles to find out more!
IT'S A
MONSTER! - Stunned visitors see Loch Lochy's mystery
Resident
Lizzie, a three humped first cousin of Nessie, the Loch Ness
Monster, surfaced again last week on Loch Lochy. And several
people, locals and vistors, confirmed on Thursday the sighting of
the water beast. Staff and guests at the Corriegour Lodge Hotel
watched in amazement as a dark shaped twelve foot long "something"
caused a commotion on the loch which is overlooked by the
hotel. Guests and waitresses at Corriegour Lodge rushed to the
picture window of the dining room to get a better view of the
creature which had come to the surface. "At first we thought what
we were seeing was an upturned boat", said husband and wife Derick
and Lindsay Burney, from Hornchurch, who were having dinner at the
hotel. "Then suddenly it started moving backwards, and then round
in circles, and we noted that it had three humps. It was causing
quite a stir. It was very large, about twelve feet in length, and it
wasn't a seal or any other mammal we've ever seen before. And we've
been coming to Loch Lochy on boating holidays for the past seven
years" Lorna Bunney, joint proprietor with her husband Rod, of
Corriegour Lodge revealed that she had originally seen a marine
animal in the loch three weeks previously. "I thought at first
that it was just the wake from a cabin cruiser but it was too fast,
and the ripples too close together for that. I ran to look out of
the kitchen door and I realised it was some kind of creature. I've
never seen anything like it before." In July, 1960, there were
reports at Loch Lochy of a creature measuring up to the usual
descriptions of the Loch Ness Monster And evidence of a monster
on the loch was gathered in 1933 by monks at Fort Augustus Abbey.
Long moving swiftly - "that's her, they cry"
It started off as aspot on a
sonar screen then grew and grew until it was the size of a rowing
boat. Then bigger...
Monster hunter
Cameron Turner stuck his face in the hi-tech radar screen and
snapped: "We've got contact!" After long days and nights powering
his little boat above the deepest trenches of this prehistoric loch
he had at last found what he was looking for. His quarry is
Lizzie - the distant cousin of the fabled Nessie. Loch Ness lies
along the same fault line as Loch Lochy and hunters who have plumbed
the depths of this great gash across Scotland are sure there are
underwater tunnels connecting them. Of course he wasn't the first
to have been captivated by the secrets of Loch Lochy near Spean
Bridge. The first reported sighting was in 1929 by two
gamekeepers who followed what appeared to be a floating log along
the surface for about a mile. In 1960, nine witnesses spotted a
large, black creature - estimated to be 30-40ft long - roll over
exposing one of its flippers and light coloured underbelly. Most
recent sighting was by local angler Alaistair Stevenson, who reckons
he snared Lizzie by accident while fishing for pike. "I knew
immediately it wasn't a pike with that ferocity. I had to stop the
line but when I did the power started dragging the boat behind it.
All the time i'm thinking it was like a scene from
Jaws. "Fortunately my line and rod snapped and that was the end
of that. I have no idea what it was but it was a lot bigger than a
pike."
Monster
links
Visit these
sites for more rumour, fact and fantasy about the Loch Ness Monster
and her relatives in Loch Lochy and elsewhere
Loch Ness Monster travel route - Driving through
the Great Glen The Official Loch Ness Exhibition Centre - All
about the Loch Ness Monster and much much more The Legend of
Nessie - All the evidence, scientific studies and pictures Cryptozoology - The study of still unknown species
of animals Fortean Times - Unexplained phenomena of every
kind Laurence Broderick sculptures - Otters,
mermaids, water-horses and other mystical creatures captured in
bronze and stone |