I suppose it shouldn't be long before the 'It's a photoshop, I've seen many in my time' meme kicks in again...
He has dedicated more than two decades of his life to the hunt for the elusive Loch Ness monster, spending 60 hours a week on the water.
And now George Edwards believes he has finally fulfilled his ambition of spotting 'Nessie'; he even photographic evidence to prove it.
Mr Edwards, who has spent 26 years on his quest, managed to capture this image of a dark hump slinking in and out of the lake's waters from the deck of his boat, Nessie Hunter, before it vanished back into the deep.
He claims the picture is the best-ever taken of the Loch Ness Monster and proves once and for all that the elusive leviathan exists - and is definitely not a sturgeon.
If there really was something down there, then it would either have to defy nature by having a lifespan of several hundred years, or there would be a family large enough to reproduce without commiting genetic suicide via in-breeding. Which means we'd have seen at least one in full by now. We've captured images of truly colossal and weird animals in the darkest, deepest waters of our oceans, sometimes by accident. With all the hunting expeditions and time wasted searching for something in the lake, then we'd have found it by now if it existed.
My children called me "Daddy". My wife called me "Milien". Now the world will learn to call me... NOX...
Can't a American swim in the loch and not be called a monster cuz he's over weight! That's it, next year I'm going to Canada, no one bugs a big footed bastard up there!
I am Dr. Henry Killinger, and this is my Magic Murder Bag
Dr Henry Killinger wrote:Can't a American swim in the loch and not be called a monster cuz he's over weight! That's it, next year I'm going to Canada, no one bugs a big footed bastard up there!
Go to Saskatchewan though. They'll see you coming from about 15 miles away and have time to set things up for you.
If there really was something down there, then it would either have to defy nature by having a lifespan of several hundred years, or there would be a family large enough to reproduce without commiting genetic suicide via in-breeding. Which means we'd have seen at least one in full by now. We've captured images of truly colossal and weird animals in the darkest, deepest waters of our oceans, sometimes by accident. With all the hunting expeditions and time wasted searching for something in the lake, then we'd have found it by now if it existed.