Secondly the water is pitch black once you get a few feet down. The water runs off the mountains and down the hillsides surrounding the Loch bringing with it particles of peat which are suspended in Loch , making it inky black with very poor visibility. Many a diver has come up shaken because they didn’t realise how bad visibility was and the thought that something large my be in there with you is scary. This why underwater photos are so blurry. It is also very cold and stays at a constant low temperature all year round, so prolonged time in the water is not recommended.
Exploring the Loch underwater is difficult. It is very deep (some reports say over 800 feet(266 meters) some
940feet( over 300 meters) in parts) and the sides drop away at a very
steep angle. In places 50 feet( about 16 metres) from shore the loch
drops to hundreds of feet deep. There are no caves in the Loch side as far as we know as the sides will be mainly granite which does not wear away into caves as limestone does. The steep Loch sides mean sonar often bounces off them giving false signals. Then there is the 25 feet(8 metres) layer of silt at the bottom of the Loch, you would not want to get stuck in that. Who knows what lurks with in it or what bones lie there?
Then
there is of course money. To do a sophisticated proper investigation
would cost a great deal of money. Most researchers are self financing or
get small grants from their workplace. Since the 70s no one seems to
have come forward to want to invest in looking for Nessie. Most
researchers go up to investigate in their holidays from work, very few
are able to afford to spend large amounts of time at the Loch. Steve Feltham is the only investigator that seems to be in permanent occupation theses days. There people who research the Loch
fauna and flora etc but they are not monster hunters. They look at fish
stocks and water quality and so forth. In the 70’s every layby and
every turn in the road seemed to produce someone with binoculars and a
camera watching the Loch.
Which brings us to Nessie. Nessie is seen as a joke due to all the hoaxes perpetuated over the years and very few scientists
want to be involved . It can cost you your job and certainly held back
some people’s careers. The fact it is seen as a hoax means many people
have closed ranks and no longer report sightings and locals laugh when
you ask. They don’t want to be seen as foolish. The number of times I
have heard “Well I will tell you if you promise not to write it down or
anything. I don’t want reporters round”. (I don’t like to tell them
that being dyslexic I memorise the conversations but I don’t write them
down. It is something I learned to do at meetings at work because I
couldn’t write down notes fast enough. By the time I had decided how to
spell something they had moved on to something else lol. These days of
course I would record them or take a laptop). Though
that has been a huge amount of sightings over the years , when you
divide them by the number of years , it is not a lot. Nessie is quite
shy.( taking the average figure of 3000 sightings since 1930s ,divided
by the number of years ( 80) it is an average of about
40 a year ). If you then weed out the unlikely and definite mistaken
identity you are left with about 2 unexplained sightings a year. It is
not a lot is it? Then the chances of getting a
decent photo are even remoter. Most people on seeing something can’t
believe their eyes and by the time they have recovered enough to grab a
camera ,it is often too late, the whatever it is, has gone. So the odds
are against us all. That is a sample of reasons why I think nothing
conclusive has never been found to support the existence or non
existence of the Loch Ness creature.
The only
answer is large amounts of cash and sophisticated equipment and trained
people to operate it and interpret results in an all year round
expedition to search the loch thoroughly. So if anyone has won the
lottery and has a spare million????
Since 1990,they are dying for the damage that the humans are doing to the enviroment.
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