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CFZ REPRINT: LINDSAY SELBY: REPRINT: LINDSAY SELBY: Pembroke Dock Sea Monster
Jay Cooney brought this to my attention again and so I thought I would reprint it with the goal in mind of having a discussion on it afterward;
In 2004 Richard Freeman of the CFZ, together with a crew from the Australian Animal X TV show, visited Pembroke Dock in southwest Wales, to follow up stories about a sea monster. Lindsay revisits the case...
Originally posted by Thorneblood
Wish that pic was better....any updates on this cause i can't see nothing?
Originally posted by Thorneblood
reply to post by RUFFREADY
Yea i read that, even did a quick search on it and didn't find too much....
Ever notice how Sea monster pics are always the worst ones in the strange creatures world?
i can't see nothing?
Originally posted by Frocharocha
Originally posted by Thorneblood
reply to post by RUFFREADY
Yea i read that, even did a quick search on it and didn't find too much....
Ever notice how Sea monster pics are always the worst ones in the strange creatures world?
Probably because no one would ever hope to have a HD camera when a monster shows up. I'm pretty sure this explains the bad photos. Even the best cellphone cameras are pretty terrible when photographing at this range. Also, scientists only accept physical evidence. Photos can easily be faked.
If this animal si a pre-historic monster, it's probably at the surface taking more air before going down again
Dale Drinnon Yeah, that "Computer enhanced by himself" is a killer. However I do not wholly discout the picture as a fake. For one thing, the neck action in fishing is attested to in many reports.
he said'We were at the pier head at Fort Augustus and I was taking a picture of a swan at the time,' he said.
'Out of the corner of my right eye I caught site of a black area of water about 15ft long which developed into a kind of bow wave.
'I'm convinced this was caused by a solid black object under the water. The water was very still at the time and there were no ripples coming off the wave and no other activity on the water.
'Water was definitely going over something solid and making the wave. It looks like the sort of wave perhaps created by a windsurfing board but there was nobody on the loch at the time, no boats, nothing.
'The disturbance in the water began moving up the Loch sideways. It is something I just can't explain.'
.
Originally posted by RUFFREADY
Crap! It must be sea monster (or lake) week!!
I've been on ATS today (and making $$$ on the stock market) filling and printing forms for my accountant and the monsters just keep coming in!!
Photographer Captures Video of Lochness Monster?
"Check out this video of what some believe is sea monster swimming near the shore of Lock Ness. It was filmed in northern Scotland by David Elder, an amateur photographer. The 50-year old believes his video is proof that Lochness is alive and well:"
he said'We were at the pier head at Fort Augustus and I was taking a picture of a swan at the time,' he said.
'Out of the corner of my right eye I caught site of a black area of water about 15ft long which developed into a kind of bow wave.
'I'm convinced this was caused by a solid black object under the water. The water was very still at the time and there were no ripples coming off the wave and no other activity on the water.
'Water was definitely going over something solid and making the wave. It looks like the sort of wave perhaps created by a windsurfing board but there was nobody on the loch at the time, no boats, nothing.
'The disturbance in the water began moving up the Loch sideways. It is something I just can't explain.'
.
go here for film .....................bigfootevidence.blogspot.com...edit on 26-8-2013 by RUFFREADY because: (no reason given)
And I found that these were supposedly photos of the Lake Superior monster and a reference link given to a source about the Lake Superior monster. The source did not mention this photo and I mentioned that part too. "This is one of many photographs taken in the 90s by the Us navy.They estimated the creature's length about 15 m [approx. 45-50 feet long] long,with a long tail," was the first part of the reply, "These photographs appeared in either SIGHTINGS or UNSOLVED MYSTERIES.I don't remember which, but they showed an amateur footage of the same creature on the surface." was the second half of the reply which came later.
As it turned out, both the mentioned photographs actually came from a different lake, Lake Pepin.
In an article on his CryptoZooNews blog, well known cryptozoological researcher Loren Coleman released some recent information which caught my attention. Two middle aged men kayaking in Somes Sound (off of Acadia National Park in Maine) on Thursday, August 22, 2013 allegedly witnessed an unknown aquatic animal. The details currently available reveal that the animal had a three foot long, scaly horse-like head. While it is certainly possible that the men were startled by a surfacing moose, details like scaly skin and a three foot long head do not coincide with the features of such an ungulate. It is interesting to note that many reports of "sea serpents" throughout history described the animals as having horse-like heads, and many of these observations were detailed and apparently at close range. I currently wonder if Tyler Stone's hypothesis of partially dried hair or rough skin creating the appearance of scales on longnecks could be true in respect to this report.
Whether it was a moose, a longneck, or a miserably false observation, this is a very interesting report in the respect that it is so recent. Hopefully, more details will be released in the near future regarding this possible sighting of what may have been a genuine long-necked "sea serpent."
A sea serpent described as being like a huge eel with antennae was seen at the Skidegate Narrows, Queen Charlotte islands, in July 1939. It was throwing seals up into the air to kill them by breaking their necks, something which killer whales are also well-known for doing. (Mary Moon, Ogopogo, 1977, p. 162) Apparently about 30 feet of the dark-coloured "Eel" was visible and Bernard Heuvelmans would definitely classify this as a Longneck because of the "antennae."