
Not so long ago it was impossible to visit Loch Ness
without tripping over somebody who claimed to have intimate knowledge of
Nessie.
But in the twilight zone of
It is now six years since the last big expedition to
find Nessie, while the number of self-appointed “monster hunters” has dwindled
significantly.
“It’s becoming a potential crisis,” says Mikko Takala,
39, who runs four webcams on the loch’s northern shore and is a founder member
of the Official Loch Ness Monster Fan Club.
In any other circumstances, such an outbreak of
level-headedness would be applauded. But along the shores of
Steve Feltham, 44, who has spent 16 years watching the
loch from a converted mobile library on its southern shore, believes that there
were once as many as 30 mysterious creatures in the loch but that they are
gradually dying off, because of old age. “In the heyday of the sightings, back
in the Sixties and Seventies, there were probably 20 or 30 of these animals but
I believe that we’re now down to the last half a dozen,” he said.
Sightings of a “monster” in Loch Ness date back to
AD565, when disciples of St Columba, the Irish missionary, recorded seeing a
monster appear on the surface “with a great roar and open mouth”.
It was not until 1933 that popular interest was first
awakened after the first picture apparently showing a monster was published.
Scientists have sought to explain the sightings as wind
on the loch surface, overgrown eels or even elephants from a local circus.
Declassified secret documents released last year showed that civil servants in
1979 took the sightings seriously enough to consider using dolphins fitted with
cameras and strobe lights to search the loch.
Nessie tourism brings in an estimated £6 million each
year for the economy of the
Of the two this year, one was in March when an English
holidaymaker saw what he thought was a head and fin in the loch below Urquhart
Castle, while the other was in May, when a Yorkshireman captured video footage
of what looked like a jet-black shape moving slowly beneath the surface.
Although initially viewed as promising, experts now believe it was the result
of a sustained draft of wind blowing down from the surrounding hills.
Adrian Shine, 58, a naturalist who has investigated the
mystery of Loch Ness for 20 years, believes that one reason for the decline in
sightings is that people are more sceptical about what they see. “I think we
live in a more pragmatic age, and that people are becoming more aware of the
sort of illusions that can occur on water,” he said.
From The Times
29 September 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article2554267.ece