Orkney Sea monsters.
The north of Scotland has many tales of sea serpents from around the
islands especially so the Orkney Islands and Scarpa Flow.
On a summer
day, in the 1850s, a young boy, Alec Groundwater, was spending a day by the shore in Orphir. The sea was flat calm and young
Alec was sitting on a rock, looking out over Scapa Flow, his legs dangling
out over the water. Not too distance
from where the boy was sitting , the water began to surge and a strange beast rose from the depths.
The boy's description of the beast was vague, but he described a broad, flat
head with a wide mouth that contained some large teeth, and had a long mane, similar to that
of a horse.The creature stared at the
boy , with "cold baleful eyes", before rearing up from the sea and trying
to seize the his dangling legs. The
boy stood up frozen in terror as the
monster made a number of attempts to
reach him.When at last it gave up, it plunged beneath the sea, where it:
"rose
once more to shake its head and mane till the water cascaded from it on all
sides, then disappeared."
In 1905 an article appeared
in the local paper:
|
The sea serpent in Orkney
Seen by two fishermen - off the "douch"
The Orcadian
Seen by two fishermen - off the "douch"
The Orcadian
The sea serpent has again made its appearance, and at
present it is enjoying itself in the boisterous waters of the String, with a
tendency to sun itself near Shapinsay, quite close to the .rocks under
Balfour Castle.Last Saturday two fishermen were working their creels off the
"Douch" when the monster suddenly raised itself out of the water at
the side of their boat.
The visit was so
sudden and unexpected that the men cannot give a very particular description of
the monster. Of one thing they are certain, however, and that is that the
serpent had an awe-inspiring appearance, and was quite different from anything
they had ever seen before.The body is described as massive as that of horse,
covered with a scaly surface, and spotted. It was the eyes of the monster,
however, that attracted most attention. These are said to have been as large as
a bowl, and had a most fascinating attraction for the beholder.After gazing at
the occupants of the boat for a second or two the uncanny visitant, gradually
sank out of view, much to the relief of the fishermen. The same men, when
fishing near the same place on Wednesday last, had another glimpse of the sea
serpent..
It is needless to
add that the reported visit of the far-famed monster to Shapinsay has caused
somewhat of a sensation, and arguments are rife and strong as to what it can
be.The more superstitiously inclined lean to the belief it is the sea serpent;
but more level-headed people are of opinion that it is nothing more than an
extra large seal, attracted to the vicinity by large numbers of sillocks which
are at present swarming around Elwick Bay.
Who knows? Some day
a more than ordinarily plucky fisherman may succeed in laying a drop of salt on
the tail of the real sea serpent. Maybe a Shapinsay man. There are no more
plucky men in Orkney.
It would be dismissed by most as mistaken
identity and so forth if it were not for many other sightings reported over the
years.
In August 1919,
five men fishing off Brims, in Hoy, encountered
another creature.. The boat, carrying
the men, was between the headlands of
Brimsness and Torness, when the long-necked monster appeared .It was described as having a neck "as thick
as an elephant's foreleg". On top of the neck was a head that, "very
much smaller in proportion".
Speaking to The
Orcadian newspaper at the time, one man reported :
"The
neck I should say stuck about five to six feet, possibly more, out of the
water. My friends thought it (the creature) would weigh two or three tons, some
thinking four to six, If the neck stretched say to eight feet the neck and body
would be eighteen to twenty feet long."
(Some speculated
that a colony of monsters were living in caves beneath the islands after this
sighting)
Mr John R. Brown,
a lightkeeper on the Pentland Skerries, sighted another massive sea creature in
August 1937. Mr Brown stressed his sighting was
definitely not a killer whale.
A few weeks
before this Pentland Skerries sighting,
workmen on the Fair Isle reported seeing a large creature approach them. Alarmed for the safety of a colleague
in the water, the men were about to signal
or him to return when the creature "sheared off" to deeper water. It
remained some distance from the shore, where the witnesses observed it swimming
for most of the afternoon.
That same month,
the author of The Orcadian’s nature notes, James Marwick,
reported an another sighting from Rousay.
“It was in
the sea about 200 yards off the shore, straight opposite Nethermill, Sourin.
Two friends, along with my brother, saw it also. My brother, a friend and I
first had a good look with the spyglass at it. All we could see was a big head,
with long ears and very long neck. We were not satisfied with that so my
brother and I launched a boat and went off to get a better look.
“As we came
near, it turned round, head-on towards us about 12 or 14 feet away.“This is
what we saw: A big round head with small black eyes, big drooping ears, long
tapered neck and a very heavy-looking thick body, altogether about nine or ten
feet long; slate grey in colour and smooth-skinned like a porpoise.”
I came across this but was
unable to find confirmation:
Many
years later, a diver reported descending to investigate a sunken German ship,
only to realise he was standing on the back of a large sea monster that had
made its home in the wreck.
Divers flock to Orkney for the Scapa Flow wrecks .
Divers flock to Orkney for the Scapa Flow wrecks .
All
the reports have similarities but I suspect the 1850’s sighting by the boy was
a walrus. Walruses have been known to make the occasional appearance in the
area. That would not explain the long necked sightings however. The fishermen
and the nature reporter would know what walruses, dolphins, killer whales
,seals etc looked like so would not mistake the creature for them. So what was
visiting the waters around the Orkney
Islands with a long neck?
No comments:
Post a Comment