A Loch Ness Monster enthusiast reckons he has finally been spotted the elusive beast with the 'strangest' sighting yet.
Eoin O'Faodhagain has become synonymous with keeping a close eye on Neesie Cam, in the faint hope of spotting the mythical creature. And his latest sighting could be his most convincing yet.
New images snapped by the camera set up near the Inverness Loch at Shoreland Lodges near Fort Augustus, show a strange dark black blob appearing to breach the surface of the water before moving steadily north against he current. Mr O'Faodhagain claims that there is only possible logical explanation for this – it's got to be Nessie.
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He said: “I kept zooming in and out of the video clip, and just as well because I got one of the strangest images I have ever got in Loch Ness. It’s this image of a half-circle hump, light grey in colour with three uniform black spots.
“If I was looking up in the sky at it, I would have said it was a UFO, but I was looking at a webcam over part of Loch Ness. I have no idea what this strange moving object is, only to suggest it could be a young Nessie.
“As nobody to date knows what the Loch Ness Monster is, nobody can say it isn't.”
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Whether the shape was a head, a hump, or something else entirely, Eoin reckons most of its mass was hidden underwater. The 59-year-old also claimed that the size of the blob “maybe two feet long”.
He added: “But there seemed to be a lot going on underneath the water. As it moved further from the camera, you could see a lot of splashing going on around it, and this was very peculiar as it was not moving fast.”
He’s also been unable to match those distinctive spots with any of the loch’s other inhabitants. "The markings of the three black-spot pattern is very unusual,” he said.
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“No seal or otter has markings like that, and – as for an eel – no on that as well. Anyway, it is moving too rigidly for any of these animals, and at a constant slow pace. Snakes might have markings on their skin, but what snake has a two-foot oval hump?"
Eoin often logs on to watch the water from his home in County Donegal, Ireland. The VILN webcams can be watched live online at visitinvernesslochness.com.
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