<span>Searching for Nessie</span><span>  </span>
 Important  Information Please Read FirstAll sighting and photographic references  on this page are documented and can be verified through various  publications.
Although Nessie was sighted as far  back as the 6th  century a.d. it is the modern day sightings that have  captured the  public imagination.  In the early part of the 1930's a new  road was built around Loch Ness  which in turn brought in a spate of  new sightings from road users and  sightseers. Up until this time  stories of the monster circulated more  within the local community but  talk of other sightings were spreading  outwith the village. The first  recorded sighting of Nessie on land was made by Mr Spicer and  his wife,  on July 22nd 1933, who were driving down the road between the  Loch  Ness side villages of Dores and Inverfarigaig. They caught sight of  a  large cumbersome animal crossing the road ahead, which was some 20   yards from the water. They first saw a long neck, forming a number of   arches, a little thicker than a elephant's trunk and a huge lumbering   body heading towards the Loch. It disappeared into the bushes out of   sight. After this sighting reports flooded in and interest grew on an   international scale. Speculators offered huge prizes for the animal,   dead or alive.  Circus owner Bertram Mills promised a sum of £20,000 to  any man who could bring the creature alive to his circus.
Probably  one of the first photographs to be taken of the monster was  snapped by  a British Aluminium Company worker, Mr Hugh Gray, near  Foyers. It  showed a writhing creature creating a considerable  disturbance on the  surface of the Loch. He only saw part of the animal  which he estimated  to be around40 ft long, which included a thick  rounded back and also a  muscular looking tail. In December of the same year a hippo's foot had  been planted by a  prankster and all was taken seriously until officials  finally uncovered  the truth. This had an affect on future reports of  sightings, as  theywere taken less seriously.But still reported  sightings were becoming  increasingly common and more intriguing.
On  the 5th of January, 1934, a motorcyclist almost collided with the   monster as he was returning home from Inverness. It was around 1a.m. and   was bright due to the moonlight. As Mr Grant approached Abriachan on   the north-eastern shore of the Loch he saw a large shape loom on the   right side of the road.As he approached the object he saw a small head   attached to a long neck.The animal saw Grant and promptly crossed the   road back down to the Loch. Mr Grant, by this time, had jumped off his   motorbike and followed the path it took to the Loch only to see the   rippling water where thecreature had entered.In April,1934 the most   famous photograph was obtained by a London surgeon as he heading towards   Inverness along the new road.
<span>The Surgeon's  picture. There is some dispute as to the authenticity of this  photograph.</span> This event encouraged more people to come  forward with their tales of sightings. An event on the 5th of June, 1934  was considered to be of importance but  was not widely publicised. It  involved a young girl from the Fort  Augustus area who was employed as a  maid in a large house close to  abbey. It was about 6:30 a.m., the maid  was looking out of a window down  the Loch. She saw on the shore, ' one  of the biggest animals she had  seen in her life, ' at a range of about  200 yards. Her description was  similar to those of others, giraffe  like neck, small head, skin like an  elephant and two very short fore  legs or flippers. She watched it for  around 20 mins when it re-entered  the water and disappeared.
There were a number of privately  funded investigations, most of which  were not successful, which took  place in the same year. There was one  such expedition which did have a  degree of success. It was led by a Sir  Edward Mountain in July, 1934.  During that period of research and  investigation he obtained five still  pictures of the monster, he had  observed the monster, along with  members of his team, and had actually  filmed the monster. It was  probably because the expedition was so well  funded that a result was  most likely and that a poorly funded  investigation would be doomed to  failure.
As the threat of war with Germany grew stronger, Nessie  and all the sightings were furthest things from peoples minds,  but   there were some recorded sightings and even a number of photographs   were taken. During the war Loch Ness was in control of the Navy and the   loch area was secured. This did not stop the monster from making itself   known.In May, 1943, a Mr C.B. Farrel of the Royal Observer Corps was  on  duty to warn of incoming enemy bombers but instead observed the   movements of the monster at a distance of 250 yards. He saw 20-30 ft of   the monster's body and the neck which was approximately 4-5ft above the   surface of the water. The eyes, he explained, were large and the body  of  the monster appeared to have a 'fin'. It finally submerged without a   movement on the water.
When the war was  over and up until the late '50's  sightings of Nessie continued as  people got back onto the road with  their motorcars on the Loch side  road. The monster was still a local  source of interest but remained the  complete enigma.
In 1951 a new photograph  appeared which to some  confirmed the existence of the monster. On the  14th of July at around  6:30 a.m. Mr Lachlan Stewart, a woodcutter  employed by the forestry  commission, saw something large moving out on  the Loch. With a friend he  ran to the waters edge and there about 50  yards away they saw three  humps, each about 5 ft long moving at fast  speed. Mr Stewart ,who had  picked up a small camera before leaving his  house, took this photograph.                Seconds later a small head  and long neck appeared in front of the  first hump then the monster  turned out towards the centre of the Loch  and with a lot of splashing  swam off and sinking head first 300 yards  offshore, disappeared. Mr  Stewart estimated the length of head and neck  to be 6 ft, and then  15-20 ft behind the last hump he noticed a  commotion in the water  suggesting the movement of the tail.
In December  1954 another 'sighting' was made by  a Peterhead fishing drifter called  'Rival III'. The vessel captured an  unusual graphical recording of a  large object at a depth of around 480  ft - 100 ft or so above the  bottom - which kept pace with the boat for  half a mile then  disappeared.
Another eyewitness account happened  in October  1955, by Colonel Patrick Grant of Knockie Estate. He was  travelling from  Fort Augustus to Invermoriston and nearing  Inchnacardoch Bay he saw a  great commotion in the water between 100-200  yards from the road. He  brought his car to a stop and could see a  black object above the surface  10 or 15 ft long. In less than a minute  the object suddenly started  swimming eastwards, parallel with the shore  and very near the surface  though submerged. Moving at great speed it  travelled 200-300 yards and  disappeared completely.
1955  brought one of the most intriguing  photograph ever taken. Peter A.  Macnab from Ayrshire was having a  holiday in the Highlands and was  preparing to take a photograph of  Urquhart Castle. His attention was  drawn to his left where he saw an  enormous dark animal with two humps.  This is the photograph he took.
Spring 1958. The  proprietor of The Foyers  Hotel, Mr Hugh Rowand, his wife and two  friends were seated in their  garden overlooking Loch Ness when his eye  caught a stationary fin shaped  object in the water near Sand Point. A  few seconds elapsed and the  object sprang into life and shot across the  Loch towards Drumnadrochit.  Mr Rowand guessed it's speed to be in the  region of 20-25 knots.
A Mr H.L. Cockrell of  Dumfries, Scotland, had a  remarkable experience with the monster in the  Autumn of 1958 when he  met it in his canoe on the Loch. Mr Cockrell  being an expert seaman and  familiar with small crafts had developed a  waterproof camera with flash  equipment which he used from his canoe.                 The camera was strapped to his head like a miner's lamp and   activated by the movement of his mouth which left his hands free to   paddle. He was boating about dawn on the Loch when something appeared   about 50 yards away. It looked like it had a large flat head 4 or 5 feet   long and about 3 feet to the rear of this he noticed another thin  line,  all very low in the water. He swung round to approach what ever  it was  and to his great horror it turned towards him. He took a shot  with his  camera and kept moving towards it and to his relief the  creature turned  to another direction. When the film was developed ,  although it showed  the Loch to be calm, there was a great deal of  disturbance on part of  the surface of the water.
The  day after Mr Cockrell's sighting the monster was  seen by a Mr Brown  and his wife from Invergordon in the same place but  closer to shore.  They described it as three thick black humps moving  through the water  with 50 ft ahead of the humps a movement which seemed  to suggest a  head.
<span>24th May,1960</span>A   member of the Northern Naturalists Organisations, Mr Peter O'Connor from   Gateshead, Durham had a sighting. From the garden of the Foyers Hotel   he and a number of other people saw the creature at around 4  o'clock  in the afternoon. At first he thought it was a rowing boat about  200   yards from the Foyers shore but using his field glasses he could see a   brown  coloured object which was slowly sinking.
<span>27th  of May, 1960</span>Mr O'Connor encountered the monster yet again 3  days later. Between 6 and 6:30 a.m. he went for a walk along the shore  beside  Foyers Bay and the monster glided into view around the headland.  He waded into  the water up to his waist to get a closer view. It  features were small and  sheep-like and a very, very strong neck. It's  skin appeared smooth, very like a  seal. He turned to yell to his  companion and then turned back and took this  photograph, to the right,  as it disappeared into the turbulence it had created.
<span>27th  June to 23rd July 1960</span>This  date is generally regarded to  be the first major scientifically planned  expedition of its kind to  visit the Loch was conducted by The  Universities (Oxford and Cambridge)  Expedition. The purpose being to  make a general study of Loch Ness,  paying particular attention to the  possible existence of the Loch Ness  Monster. Participant in the  expedition numbered 30 volunteer graduates  and under graduates who used  cameras and an echo sounder mounted on a  boat. They did encounter one  visual sighting of what appeared to be the  monsters back moving through  the water. Another sighting they had was  of an object that continuously  changed shape on the surface of the  water. Numerous echo soundings were  taken which were of unusual  character.
<span>7th August  1960</span>A sighting was  reported on this date by a witness who  wished to remain anonymous. The  witness was driving south-westerly  along the main road towards Abriachan  pier when he noticed a small  yacht travelling up the Loch. He then  realised there were two V wakes  parallel to one another. The closest of  the two wakes came from the  yacht and the second appeared to be caused  by something just under the  water. The object surfaced and looked just  like a midget submarine  without its periscope. The colour was greenish  black, about the size of  the yacht, which was in fact 48ft by 10 ft.
<span>Saturday  10th November 1973</span>In  1973 an interesting sighting was  reported by a Mr Jenkyns of Pointclair,  Invermoriston. Mr Jenkyns had a  head/neck sighting in a close range  observation. The sighting report  is as follows : Mr Jenkyns lived in a  house which is 12 yards above the  surface level of Loch Ness. On  Saturday 10th November 1973, at about  11:45am he tried to start a  tractor which had been stuck for some weeks  on a piece of rough ground  sloping down to the loch edge to partially  built jetty it was a cold  slightly damp day, with a strong  south-westerly wind on the surface  giving a heavy swell with waves over  2ft high. Mr Jenkyns used an engine  chemical to start the tractor and  as the tractor did not have a  silencer there was an explosive noise, so  loud that Mrs Jenkyns heard it  in the house, despite all the windows  being double glazed. Immediately  after the noise of the starter, Mr  Jenkyns heard a very loud splash,  which he described as an impact  splash as  if something very heavy had been thrown into the water. It  was a single  noise and was not followed by any further splashing. Being  under the  impression someone must of thrown a heavy object into the  water, he got  down from the tractor, walked round it and a good look  along the  shoreline. He then went back to the tractor and 2 mins after  hearing the  splash noticed in the water 5 yards of the end of the jetty  a ring of  concentric circles, showing despite the waves.  While he was  looking, a little to his left an animal emerged quietly and  smoothly  (the distance from the observer being about 45 yards) in a   north-easterly direction parallel to the shore, then submerged straight   down. Throughout, the object maintained a rigid pole-like posture and   its motion through the water was very smooth, with no apparent sign of   any jerky movement. The head and neck were slate-black, quite rigid and   about 9 inches in diameter.  He observed a slit mouth, what appeared to  be some large scales on the  top of the head but not the neck, and  above the mouth an eye or possibly  a vent. The eye was quite tiny in  proportion to the mouth. When the  object rose out of the water, it  formed an angle 80 degrees to the  water, but when it started to move  and throughout the movement it formed  a 60 degree angle. There was no  sign of any fins, horns or other  appurtenances. The water at this point  is estimated to be only 10 - 20ft  deep.
<span>13th  July 1979</span>Going on a number  of years, this sighting was by  Paul H. Biermasz who was on holiday in  the Loch Ness area. This is Mr  Biermaszs'  own account of his sighting. In July 1979 I had a Nessie  sighting that  goes as follows : I was driving from the camp site where I  was  staying at Invermoriston, north to Inverness on the main road when  a few  miles after Urquhart Bay, passing a layby with a good Loch view,  I saw  'It'. 'It' was at a distance of some 200-300 metres, shaped like  an  upside-down (black) rowing boat, speeding away from the shore. The  speed  was remarkable because of the wave 'it'  produced. Other people  must have seen 'it', a sailing boat crew might  have spotted something  as 'it' was coming their way. A touring bus was  in front of me and  crossed the road to pull into the layby. Passengers  in the rear of the  bus were pointing at the Loch also. Everything  happened in seconds. The  time of this sighting was between 10 and 11  a.m.. The sky was cloudy  but the Loch could be clearly seen and the wind  was very low. Back in  Holland the story of my sighting was not believed  so I have kept quiet  about until now.
<span>17th June  1993</span>Edna MacInnes and  her boyfriend, David Mackay said  they watched the creature for 10  minutes. Miss MacInnes said that the  40ft beast waved around its giraffe  like neck then vanished into the  water. Later on the same day James  Mackintosh and his son also spotted a  brown thing with a neck like a  giraffe break the surface. Mr  Mackintosh remembers: "It was an eerie  experience, it was swimming  quite swiftly away from the shore."
<span>9th  of April,1996</span>A Lancashire  man, named Bill Kinder,  observed a black, shiny object rise out of the  water and leave a 10  metre wake. This took place on this date 1996  around 10:00am, just  north of Fort Augustus. Also on the same day, the  Ling family from  London who were travelling behind Bill Kinder on the  west shore,   reported seeing two humps rise out of the water and leave a long trail.
<span>10th  of April, 1996</span>Two large brown shapes were spotted by a  couple from the Black Isle, which appeared to be 10 feet in diameter and  3 feet apart.  The object was 200m from the shore near Urquhart Castle,  it then travelled across the Loch and disappeared.
<span>14th  of May, 1996</span>A representative  of Union Commercials, named  Jonathan Murphy, on his first visit to Loch  Ness to make a television  commercial for Vodaphone, contacted a local  paper and said he saw  something in the water. He had photographed the  object which was then  sent to NASA for a thorough investigation.
<span>  13th June, 1996</span>Staff and guests of  the Craigdarroch House  Hotel, Foyers, witnessed at 8:30pm, a bubbly  disturbance which was  followed by a wake, it  then travelled zigzag across the water, creating  movement on the Loch  for around 10 minutes.
<span>21st  of July, 1996</span>During their  visit to the Loch Ness Caravan  and Camping Park at Invermoriston, Emilio  Demnio and Nikhi Banjeri from  Preston, reported seeing a dark brown or  black hump appear in the  middle of the Loch and stayed for around 10  minutes, at 2:15pm.
<span>1st  of August, 1996</span>While on the  pier at Fort Augustus, three  witnesses including holidaymaker Nick  Watson saw at around 5:30pm a  black hump approximately a mile from the  shore. It was creating a large  commotion on the surface. A few minutes  later it headed away from them  and disappeared.
<span>18th August,  1996</span>A camper at  Invermoriston photographed what looked  like a head and a neck emerging  from the Loch. Glaswegian Craig Kerr  reported it to a national  newspaper. The object appears in the  background of a photograph he was  taking of  another subject. He did  not realise this until the film had been  processed.
<span>In  1996</span>Staff members at the  Clansman Hotel beside Loch Ness,  during their lunchbreak around noon  witnessed several humps appear in  the Loch. They appeared to be black  and were around 1 metre long. They  disappeared and shot to the surface  again further out in the Loch  within moments.
<span>September  1996</span>This sighting was made by Frank Meyer of Cincinnati,  Ohio. These are his own words :As  someone with scientific education  (physics) I will not believe in  anything I don't know for sure. But I  was on Loch Ness for four days in  1996 during the first days of  September with four relatives, we saw  something we could not quite  explain: We had rented a motor cruiser to  travel on the Caledonian  Canal for two weeks. We spent one night at the  Foyers pier. The weather  had been fine in the evening, and the loch was  very quiet in the  morning, practically no waves at all, clear weather.  Around 8:45am, I  noticed something like the trunk of a large tree,  floating motionless  just under the  surface, about 100 meters in the direction of Urquhart  Castle. My four  fellow boaters saw it, too, after I asked them what it  was. It did not  move for at least 15 minutes (well, one of us thought  it had moved  slightly). We speculated what it could be, we watched it  with binoculars  (which revealed that it was not a single blob of  darkness, but had  limblike substructures, as if it really was a dead  tree), but nobody  took a single photo! I still can't believe it...  Finally we took off to  visit Urquhart Castle. I took a course that  would take us close  to the point the mysterious object was floating.  Due to the position of  the steering wheel, I could not see it during  the beginning of the  approach and relied on the others to take a close  look. But when we got  there, nothing was visible. Not only that, but  nobody had actually seen  it disappear. One moment it had been there, a  moment later it was gone  without a trace. It was obviously no tree. Was  it one of the almost  stationary zones of rippled water that can occur   on lakes due to wind and current? It was so isolated - one dark spot in  a  wide totally quiet surrounding - and stayed unchanged for 15 minutes  or  more, and it was darker than the normal shadow - to me that  explanation  seems practically impossible. The same reasons exclude a  cloud shadow.  For a mirage it was not far enough, and one thing I am  absolutely sure  of: It was under the surface. The only thing I can  think of as possible  explanation is a thin floating layer of dark  particles, slowly collected  overnight by the currents of the Foyers bay  and  of the open loch, clearly visible only because of the flat viewing   angle. But then, why didn't it disappear gradually when we approached   the spot?
<span>16th February, 1997</span>A family reported seeing an object travelling quickly through the water.
<span>1997</span>A local man from Glenurquhart filed a report about seeing two humps in the water near to Abriachan.
<span>21st  March, 1997</span>A South African holidaymaker reported to have  seen two humps appear from the water near Aldourie Castle beside Loch  Ness.
<span>22nd of March  1997</span>Travelling down  the south side of the Loch  Richard  White of Muir of Ord saw a number  of humps moving on the water around  200m from the shore
<span>15th April, 1997</span>A visitor from the Isle of Skye reported seeing something odd in the water near Foyers.
<span>14th  June, 1997</span>An object which  looked like a pole appeared  from the water near Dores, the top of which  looked like a small head  that looked around and then disappeared.
<span>21st  of June,1997</span>About 1 mile south of Urquhart Castle, at  around 9:00am, a dark object was spotted moving swiftly across the Loch.
<span>21st  of June, 1997.</span>Another  sighting was reported by the  producer and technician of an American film  team who were filming a  documentary at Strone Point, above the castle.  They spotted a dark  object moving swiftly across the Loch about 1 mile  south of Urquhart  Castle around 9:00am. Unfortunately it had disappeared  before the  cameraman had time to record it on film.
<span>21st  of June, 1997</span>The "Royal Scot" from Fort Augustus reported  two sonar contacts at a depth of 400 ft in a trench just north of Fort  Augustus.
<span>2nd July, 1997</span>The "Royal Scot" again reported a similar contact at a depth of 300 ft.
<span>9th  of August,1997</span>There was a  report of a camper, who was  staying at the Loch Ness Caravan and Camping  Park at Invermoriston,  which told of her  experience during an incident at around 3:00am. She  had heard something  splashing about in the water and realised some  ducks nearby were  becoming restless for some reason. Then she said she  heard a strange  buzzing noise from the Loch but it didn't sound like a  boat or other  engine.
<span>13th August,  1997</span>A report of a large, dark, coloured object appearing in  the water near Abriachan and moving at speed.
<span>Saturday  30th May 1998</span>The first  reported sighting of the the Loch  Ness Monster in 1998 was made by a 22  year old female tourist from  Marlborough, Wiltshire at 8:55am. She saw a  large black object rising  about 10 feet out of the water just beneath  Urquhart Castle and claimed  she had been able to see the object for a  full 2 minutes before it  disappeared.
<span>June 17th  1998</span>Around 5 a.m. a  group of young men on a hill walk  claimed to have witnessed Nessie as  they were descending a hill near  Inverfarigaig. The men, brothers Adam  and Mark Sutherland and Peter  Gillies from Inverfarigaig and Peter Rhind  from the Black Isle watched  the shape for about 45 minutes through  binoculars before it disappeared  under the water. They described the  shape as being about 300 metres  from the shore, massive in size with a  long tail. The Loch was flat  calm at the time.
<span>July 13th  2000</span>At approx 11 a.m.  Melissa Bavister and Chris Rivett, a  couple on holiday in Scotland from  Northampton. were travelling on the  North  shore of Loch Ness near Drumnadrochit when they stopped in a  lay-by to  take a scenic picture of the Loch using a camera with a 23mm  lens. They  hadn't noticed that also in the pitcure was the now familiar  humps that  are associated with Nessie. When they returned home and had  the film  processed Chris noticed the humped shapes in one of the  photographs.  They were just passed the village of Lochend. "It was a  fine clear day  and we are positive there were no craft on the loch or  birds flying  about." said Chris.Experts have agreed the single   photograph showed a very large object in the water half a mile from  either shore.The  exact location, near the reputedly haunted Boleskin  House, is one of  the deepest parts of the 23-mile-long loch, believed  to be around 700ft  deep.
 <span>See Full Story</span>
<span>Early  May 2001</span>Approx 6 a.m James  Gray and Peter Levings were  fishing on Loch Ness near Invermoriston,  about three quarters of a mile  from where the  River joins the Loch. Mr Gray said the conditions were  absolutely  peaceful in the middle of the loch. He then spotted a  movement 150 yards  away and saw something sticking out of the water. He  grabbed his camera  and took a few snaps. The object then raised up a  couple of feet and  was rising as he looked at it. He said: "Soon, it  was about 6ft out of  the water but secods later it had become a black  kind of blob as it  disappeared. It had curled forward and gone down."  He added: "This was  certainly no seal. It had a long black neck almost  like a  conger eel, but I couldn't see a head. It didn't seem to bend  very much  but as it went under it sort of arched and disappeared. "We  circled for  twenty minutes but found nothing."
<span>Have a look at this sighting:</span>Sighting
<span>June  1st 2003</span>This proved a good  day for monster spotting with  no less than three sightings in eight  hours. Two of the sightings were  from the cruise  boat Royal Scot and the third was claimed by a  fisherman at around 10pm.  All were reported in the Fort Augustus area.  The skipper of the Royal  Scot spotted a fast moving wake in the water  at around 2pm, but thinks  he was the only person aboard to see it at  the time. "The loch situation  at that time was flat calm - absolutely  mirror glass," he recalled. "It  was travelling at 30 to 35 miles per  hour. It was probably chasing  salmon. It seems to be some sort of fish  eating machine." The second  sighting at 8pm lasted for 35 minutes and  was witnessed by all 25  passengers and three crew aboard at the time.  "What we saw was the top  of  a hump four or five feet long and five or  six inches out of the water,"  the skipper revealed. The sightings came a  week after the boat's sonar  detected an object 20 feet long and  weighing almost two tons, 320 feet  below the surface in the same area.  The third sighting was reported at  Borlum Bay. A fisherman saw  something resting on the surface for three  or four minutes before it  did a surface roll underwater and disappeared.  It was described as  almost black in  colour and close to a seal in size.
<span>Tuesday  17th August 2004</span> Tom Clegg of Worcestershire saw what he  is certain was the monster just  before 4pm. Tom saw the creature in the  south of Loch Ness between  Invermoriston and Fort Augustus. "I saw  three dark humps in the water,"  he recalled. "It was maybe about 150  metres out into the loch. The humps  were three to five metres in length  maybe. The skin seemed very smooth.  It didn't look like anything I'd  seen before." He watched the humps for  three to five seconds before  they appeared to slip below the water. Tom  remains convinced he saw an  animal of some kind and rejected the  suggestion he may have been fooled  by a boat wake. "That was the first  thing I checked for, but there  wasn't a wake. There weren't any boats in  sight," he said.
<span>Thursday  11th August 2005</span> Nigel Bell and his family from Newcastle  watched what they described as  the head of a large animal move through  the loch at 6pm. The family, who  were on the veranda of a holiday lodge  at Foyers at the time, said that  the head was larger than that of a  cow and was about a third of the way  across the loch. Regular visitors  to the area, they were convinced what  they saw was not the result of a  boat wake or wave movement.
<span>Sunday  28th August 2005</span> Kelly Yeats and Neil McKenzie from Bridge  of Deee, were staying at  Foyers Bay House when they saw a "long necked,  curved-headed" creature  in the loch at 8.30am. The sighting lasted 10  minutes.
<span>Friday 9th September  2005</span> A retired Master Mariner was cruising just south of  Urquhart Bay in a  Caley Cruisers' boat at a speed of nine knots when it  was overtaken by  an unknown object which came between them and the  south shore. The  sighting lasted several minutes and the object only  disappeared as the  boat moved towards it. A regular boat user on the  loch, the captain said  that there was no rational explanation for the  object, which was unlike  anything any of the boat's occupants had seen  before.
<span>Saturday 15th October  2005</span> Robbie Girvan. owner of the Loch Ness Caravan Park at  Invermoriston,  took five pictures of what he described as a four foot  high head and  neck at 6pm when he was walking his dogs by the loch  shore. He said he  saw a long neck come out of the water and had time to  return to the  house, get his camera and return to take the pictures.  Previously a  non-believer, he said the "dark green and silvery"  creature could only  have been Nessie.
<span>Tuesday  27th March 2007</span> Sidney Wilson, an English holiday maker  from Nottingham, took a cruise  down the loch to view the sights. As  they approached Urquhart Castle two  power boats appeared leaving a  large wash in their wake. Sidney took  two quick photographs of the  boats and on the second one there appeared  to be something in the  water. After enlarging the image Sidney could see  a head and a fin on  the photograph.
<span>Saturday 26th May  2007</span> A two-minute video clip, recorded on this date, shows  what appears to be  a long, black creature swimming just below the  surface of Loch Ness. <span>Click here to view Gordon's  video</span>.  The creature's head breaks the surface as it  propels itself through the  water. Images from the tape also clearly  show how the creature creates a  wake on the surface of the water as it  swims in the direction of  Inverness. The film was taken by amateur  scientist Gordon Holmes, from Shipley,  Yorkshire, who estimates the  "creature" was moving at around 6mph. Mr  Holmes, who works as a  technician at Bradford University, was in the  area using hydrophones to  detect underwater noises from the loch. He said he saw the monster at  9.50pm while he was filming the loch from a  layby on the A82. Mr  Holmes, 55, said: "I was minutes from going home but I saw something   moving and dashed out of the car and switched the camcorder on. "About   200 yards away from me I could see something in the water. It was   definitely a creature propelling itself through the water. It was fairly    bubbling along the water. It was streaking along."
<span>This sighting occurred on Saturday 19th September 1998 and is told by</span>
<span><span>Mr and Mrs Robert Carter from Marsden, West Yorkshire.</span></span> 
We  had just arrived at Strone Holiday Chalet near  Urquhart Castle,  overlooking Urquhart Bay. It was about 3:00pm. We  parked the car at the  rear of the chalet and were preparing to unload  the car. My husband  decided to stand and admire the view over Urquhart  Bay, when he noticed  a black object in the water of about 14 foot in  length. He stood for  some 30 seconds trying to identify what the object  was and not being  able to he ran back to the car, opened the boot and  reached for his  binoculars. He asked me to come and look at the object  with him. We  both went to the side of the chalet and I also saw the same  dark object  in the water. My husband stood looking at it through  binoculars for  about 30 to 45 seconds until it disappeared under the  water. I myself  was looking at it with the naked eye and can also say it  was a large  dark object, around 14 foot in length. It looked to have a  body and a  head and it was animate, then it sunk into the water without  any  obvious diving motion.My husband's description of the object is  very  similar to mine. He saw a black, slick object of about 14 feet in   length and stood 3 feet out of the water, there was no visible signs of   flippers, fins, or a tail. It's head appeared to be perfectly round,   like a football, but with obvious sign of a muzzle i.e. like that of a   seal. The object was moving slowly through the water with a slight bow   wave, and it did not arch its back to dive, it just gently slipped below   the water. On Saturday the 19th the weather conditions were fine and   clear and we did not notice any vessels in the Bay at the time, the   water was very calm. 
Both my husband and myself  have in  the past observed dolphins and seals in the wild and this  object did not  look like either. We have been visiting the Loch Ness  area for about 4  years and have seen the Loch's water in many different  moods, also we  have observed the wakes from boats and have seen wind  slicks and dark  shapes on the water which are often mistaken for  Nessie. What we  observed was none of the aforementioned, it was a solid  object moving  through the water.
 
Although  we have ruled out what  it was not, neither of us know what it was. All  we can say is that we  saw a large, black animal in Loch Ness.
<span>This latest sighting occurred on 13th July 2000 at approx 11.00amby Melissa Bavister and Chris Rivett</span>
Melissa  and Chris were on holiday in Scotland.  On the 13th of July this year  they were travelling on the North shore of  Loch Ness near Drumnadrochit  when they stopped in a lay-by to take a  scenic picture of the Loch a  camera with a 23mm lens. They hadn't  noticed that also in the pitcure  was the now familiar humps that are  associated with Nessie.
<span>Here is their own story of events that morning.</span>
Melissa  said: "We had stopped at a lay-by and I'd snapped one picture using my  little Kodak camera."I just wanted a scenic picture to show people back  home. I was amazed when I looked at the photograph."Chris  said:  "Melissa and I were just admiring the beautiful scenery and  saying how  much we had enjoyed Scotland when I spotted this shape in the  picture.  "I said to Melissa that there are no islands out in the middle  of the  loch and that got us wondering just what was it out there on the   water."To be honest, neither of us saw anything that made us think:  'There's the monster', and take a picture."At the same time, we are  positive we never saw anything else, such as a boat, that could have  given this image."Had something attracted our attention, I would have  grabbed a camera with a telephoto lens from the car." The  couple, from  Northampton, had visited relatives in Edinburgh and Perth  before going  on to Loch Ness. Melissa said: "We drove out from Inverness  on the  Urquhart Castle side of the loch on the main A82 road."Just  past the  village of Lochend the big lay-bys with the fixed telescopes  were  crammed with visitors, so we drove on about a mile or two until we   found a lay-by that was empty."It was a fine clear day and we are  positive there were no craft on the loch or birds flying about."
Experts  have agreed the single photograph showed a very large object in the  water half a mile from either shore.The  exact location, near the  reputedly haunted Boleskin House, is one of  the deepest parts of the  23-mile-long loch, believed to be around 700ft  deep.
Alistair  Bowie, the Inverness photo lab technician who  developed the print,  confirmed that the image is on the negative. He  told a local  newspaper:"The object is on the film and it's not a mark on  the  negative. Whatever this is, it was there when the picture was  taken."  The startling image was also examined by Jim Cordiner, senior  lecturer  in photography at Glasgow's School of Building and Printing. He  also  told the same newspaper: "It's certainly one of the more  interesting  monster photographs I have seen." So is it Nessie? Jim  said: "Most  pictures are explained away. What we have here is a large  object with  two clear, definable humps in the middle of a loch."
<span><span>Operation Deepscan</span></span>
Operation  Deepscan has been by far the  largest and most intense search of Loch  Ness to attempt to find the  proof of the mystery known as the Loch Ness  monster.The newspapers claimed it was "a sonar exploration of Loch  Ness, an operation which would sweep  the unfathomable depths of the  loch from shore to shore and end to end with a  curtain through which  nothing could escape".
But  how did the operation start and what was the results of the plan  estimated to cost £1million. It was the brainchild of Adrian Shine, the  leader of the Loch Ness  project who teamed up with Darrell Laurence  head of Laurence  Electronics, Tulsa Oklahoma. He thought Loch Ness  would be a good  testing site for his sonar units (not to mention the  publicity). So trials started at the loch in October 1986 using ten  boats fitted  with Laurence X-16 sonar units. The x-16 sonar unit was  used because it  would record on a paper chart anything  seen in the  lochs depths. The units had a range of 1300ft and could target objects  as small as 1ft and separate objects just 1in apart.The  boats, which  were supplied by Caley Cruises set out from the New  Clansman Hotel into  the loch and tried to form a line down the loch but  bad weather and  winds up to force 6 stopped any chance they had to  gather information  so all they had to show was  yards of meaningless sonar readings.  Operation Deepscan was therefore  cancelled for that year.It was decided  to go ahead with Operation  Deepscan the following year.br So on  October the 9th 1987 started the  largest sonar sweep of any fresh water  loch anywhere in the world.The  boats again supplied by caley cruises  met at the New Clansman Hotel. As  well as the 24 boats that were to  take part in the operation every  layby for miles around the loch were  full of interested spectators and  their cars.Over 250 newspersons and  20 television  crews turned up to record the the event for the  newspapers and tv stations from all over the world.Nearly  every boat  that could be hired was on the loch that morning including a  pleasure  steamer hired for the media and an helicopter buzzing around  the line  of boats.The proceedings started with Adrian Shine talking  to everyone  taking part, which included volunteers from the Docklands  Fund and the  Drake Fellowship, through a megaphone asking they do it for 
"all the maligned eyewitnesses who look to you for vindication ".
  The media loved it and spirits were high for the start of the  operation.The  boats edged out into the loch, where they formed a line  of 19, all  fitted with lowrance X-16 sonar units with other boats  following  including the New Atlantis fitted with a Simrad scanning  sonar which can  still be seen on the loch today.The first problem they  encountered  was the sonars forming the curtain interfered with each  other so the  sensitivity had to be turned down to almost minimum or the  readings  would be indecipherable. This problem solved, the searchers  moved down  the loch towards Fort Augustus keeping in line using flags  set on  several of the boats.On the first day 3 strong sonar contacts  were  recorded from 78 metres (256ft) to 180 metres (590ft). The best of  these  was made just off Whitefield opposite Urquhart Bay.The object   entered the the sonar at 174 metres (570ft) and was tracked for 140   seconds. The new atlantis moved forward to try and engage the target   with the Simrad scanning sonar but without success.The position of all  three targets was taken using Decca navigation equipment so they could  be revisited later.The  boats returned to the New Clansman Hotel and  everyone waited with bated  breath for the debriefing in the hotel that  evening. In the debriefing  it was reported that 3 strong sonar contacts  were made that day, larger  than would be expected from a fresh water  loch.David Steensland of  Laurence said that the 78metre (256ft)target  might be of a very large  known fish but thought that unlikely at that  depth. Of  the other two targets he said they were very strange and  larger than  those he picked up from sharks off the coast of  Florida.Darrell  Laurence said that all the contacts were larger than a  shark but smaller  than a whale. Adrian Shine, leader of the Loch Ness  project said in his  opinion all 3 targets were unlike those which could  be expected from  the lochs known inhabitants like salmon eels or  shoals of char and that  they are deep midwater contacts of   considerable strength.  So the first day of the operation ended with  great optimism for the following day of the search.Day  2 started with  the 19 boats lined up just north of Fort augustus and  the sweep started  back down the loch all the way to abriachan. Apart  from a couple of  indistinct contacts nothing was seen to match the 3  contacts of the  previous day.The media, assembled at the debriefing  with hopes of more  good contacts, took the no  contact news badly. Adrian explained that he  had sent 5 boats out that  morning to check the sites of the previous  days contacts but nothing  could be found that could have made them.  That proved that they were not  fixed objects but moving mid water  targets.It was estimated that the search covered 60% of the total loch  area as the sides and bays could not be covered.The  media left the loch  some what dismayed that the Loch Ness Monster had  not been dragged  from the loch for all to see and some reported  Operation Deepscan as a  flop.  Whatever they may say or print the operation was a success. It  did  record 3 large sonar contacts in the loch of a size too large to be  made  by anything known to live in the loch.So what were the 3 contacts  which were said to be larger than a shark but smaller than a whale?I am  afraid we will never know anymore about what can be seen on the sonar  contacts of October 9th 1987.
<span>But it must be added to the evidence pile for the existence of the Loch Ness monster.</span>
<span><span>Project Urquhart</span></span>
Project  Urquhart (named after the castle which stands  on the shore of the loch  ) was the idea of Nicholas Witchell the BBC  news presenter and Loch  Ness enthusiast since 1970.He wondered if he  could get the scientific  bodies interested in studying loch ness and to  his suprise they said  yes. The Natural History Museum in London, the  Freshwater Biological  Association, Simrad the marine electronics company  and the Discovery  Channel all agreed either to help or sponsor work at  the loch, not to  search for the monster but to study the loch and its  workings as the  largest body of fresh water in the British Isles.
The  first stage, which took place in 1992 was carried  out by the Simrad  company using their research ship MV Simrad from  Norway. They carried  out the  first complete hydrographic survey of the loch since 1903 when  Sir John  Murray plumbed the depths of the loch using nothing more than a  long  piece of pianowire and a weight.Simrad travelled nearly 500 miles  in  the loch using the latest em1000 multi beam swath system which  sends  out 120 sonar signals at once in a pan beneath the boat  taking a  total  of 7 million soundings.
A new  maximum depth was found a couple of miles north  of Invermoriston of 786  feet compared  with the depth of 754 feet found  by John Murray just  south of Urquhart Castle and despite rumours that  have been around for  years no evidence was found of any caves or tunnels  in the loch ( or  Edwards Deep ). The loch proved to be a very regular  steep walled  trench.While cruising the loch Simrad noticed a line of  objects, dubbed  the footprints, running from Foyers to Fort Augustus at  about 60  metres apart. A small remotely operated submersible fitted  with a video  camera was sent down to look at one of them and it turned  out to be a  large metal wheel barrow. It is thought that they are  calibration   targets put down by the Ministry of Defence to test sonar, when sonar   was in its early stages of development and they were using the loch for   trials.
 July 1993 saw the arrival at the loch  of the 65ft  research ship Calanus and  its support boat Seol mara.  Calanus carried some of the most  sophisticated sampling devices and  fish detecting sonar ever seen on an  inland freshwater loch before and  was to clock up almost 200 hours of  intense sampling of the loch. What  they found is that the loch did not quite act like they expected and  several unusual features still can not be explained.The  northern end of  the loch is more productive than the southern end so it  would be  expected to  hold a denser population of phytoplankton (microscopic  vegitation) but  the next step in the food chain the zooplankton  (microscopic lifeforms)  and fish are more abundant in the southern end  of the loch.They  thought that this may be caused by the deep water  currents taking them  towards the southern end or that the zooplankton  may be feeding on  material washed down from the rivers entering the  loch at Fort Augustus.  Even the vertical distributions of phytoplankton  and zooplankton did  not follow what would be expected with the  zooplankton being  found some distance below the phytoplankton. Also,  the open water fish  distribution was some what unusual with the bulk of  the fish living  between 20 and 30 metres in total darkness.Trawling  the loch  produced around 200 fish from the epilimnon (top warmer layer)  most of  which were charr. This is a very small amount for a stretch of  water the  size of Loch Ness but what the open water area lacked the  more  localized areas such as river mouths and near the shore line more  than  made up for and passed what would be expected from far richer  lakes. Because  of this we still have no figure for the amount of fish  in the loch with  estimates made by the loch ness project of between 27  and 30 tonnes  being the last figures to be released.
The  Natural History Museums part in 1993 was to find  microscopic animals  in the loch which most of us will never have heard  of. The nematode  worm is found everywhere in the world from the highest  mountain to the  deepest oceans living in the sand soil and sediments as  well as in the  tissues of  plants and animals.In all 41 core samples  were taken with  most of the worms found in the top 1 centimetre. In  just one of the  samples 274 nematode worms were found covering 27  different species and  one of these the ethmolaimus sp being new to  science now with a new  home in the vaults of the Natural History Museum  in London. The purpose  of the study is to see which and how many of the  worms live in the  loch to give them some idea of how a large freshwater  lake should  be and to see what the changes in the climate could have on  it.This  will help them with studies throughout the world into global  warming  and pollution . but of more interest to most of us are the  unusual  sonar contacts made in both 1992 and 1993. 
Although  the project were not there to look for the monster they did, while   using their sonar, see some large contacts in the loch that they could  not explain.On  Tuesday the 28 of July 1992 at around 7pm the Simrad  research ship was  heading south between Foyers and Invermoriston when  the automatic  tracking sonar locked on to a target and held it for  around 2 minutes.  Thor Edland, the Simrad specialist who was operating  the sonar at the  time, described it as a very strong echo in comparison  to the fish  traces they had been  recording.During the 1993 operations  the Simrad sonar aboard the Calanus recorded 4 sonar contacts in mid  water.Birnie  Lees, the senior Simrad engineer who studies the traces  described them  as "strong high value targets ". One in particular he  said was "far too  large to be one of the lochs known fish". So the  biological study of the  loch has shown us that the loch does not behave  like we would expect a  loch of its size to.
 
The old question of "is there enough fish in the loch to feed a monster " is no nearer an answer.
 A  new mini monster has been found in the loch,  but again sonar contacts  have been recorded at the loch this time by  people who were not even  looking for the monster. Again the sonar screen  shows us that something  large is moving around in the depths of the  loch that should not be in  a freshwater loch in the middle of the  Highlands of Scotland.
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