A giant creature has been seen moving across Loch Ness.
According to Mirror, Eoin O’Faodhagain (59 years old) in Ireland is a professional hunter. Loch Ness Monstermade a shocking discovery when he installed a surveillance camera at Loch Ness. He said his heart “jumped out of his chest” when he saw a mysterious creature about 5-6 meters long moving on the surface of the lake.
“I noticed two black spots moving behind each other, about 100 yards away on the surface of the Loch Ness. My heart was in my mouth and I was amazed at the length of the mysterious creature that was gradually emerging. I thought it was a really interesting and fascinating sighting of the Loch Ness monster, visually clear,” Eoin shared.
O’Faodhagain estimated the creature caught on camera to be between 5 and 6 metres long, about the size of a Ford Transit van. “There’s nothing known in Loch Ness that’s that big,” he said. “I don’t think it’s a fish. Even a giant eel would move more gracefully and squirm, but this one moves more rigidly. That’s why I think there’s a more massive body supporting it underneath.”
The footage was filmed on 9 July by a surveillance camera at the Clansman Hotel, run by Visit Inverness Loch Ness (VILN). O’Faodhagain, who lives in County Donegal, Ireland, regularly monitors the camera to keep an eye on Loch Ness. In the footage, two dark masses – one smaller, one larger – are seen moving slowly north as the camera pans from left to right and back again.
O’Faodhagain, who has spent years hunting monster Loch Ness, believes both are part of the same giant animal. “I think the smaller black mass is attached to the larger black mass, because they maintain the same distance from each other throughout the video. The only way this could happen is if both of these masses belong to the same living creature,” he said.
O’Faodhagain further analyzed: “I think the object in front is the creature’s head and may be looking for fish near the surface, as well as keeping an eye on everything above the water. It seems to be observing its surroundings. The creature’s head looks like a soccer ball, and even small birds fly around it as if nothing is scary.”
Over the years, O’Faodhagain has made several entries to the Official Loch Ness Monster Sighting Register. However, new restrictions on surveillance camera sightings have meant his most recent contributions have gone unrecorded.