(09-30-2021, 03:07 AM)Ninurta Wrote: Good thing I downloaded it when I did then, huh?
In the video of his companion you posted, I noticed one section where he was talking to the camera, but kept looking over his shoulder.
Out in the loch behind him was an oddly behaving wave. He took the camera off himself and briefly zoomed to that area, but nothing
was really shown, and he didn't really comment on it, either.
Weird, huh?
It could be another example of the response to the loch's reputation, any odd wave phenomena -even if you don't believe
the accounts, will make the most cynical of folk wonder if for that one moment, they were wrong!
As I indicated before, the focus that the members of the group who filmed the charity-canoeing tended to stay near their
individual outdoor-camping techniques and part from the light-hearted banter about the competition to win the toy-Nessie,
the legend of the loch wasn't really pushed.
Whether this was deliberate to enhance the idea that it was a group of pragmatic, no-nonsense campers accidently putting
themselves into a 'Woo-Woo' situation for fame, cannot be verified at this point. Their goal was to row for a charity, not film
a mythical underwater creature... or was it?!
And that's the puzzle we're left with. If one-or-more of these men did contrive to fool the public, the consequences could be
bothersome if-and-when it's discovered. If they are innocent of any chicanery and the footage was untouched, what is that
animate object in their drone footage that resembles the plastic Plesiosaur from Talking Turtles.com?!
Another question could arise that if these participants edited their own filming, why didn't they see what some anonymous
viewer saw or were they not looking for something that many people equate with Loch Ness?
However, if -again, none of the canoeing men, the drone-pilot or those who supported the challenge from the land were
involved in altering the footage to show a monster, none of them noticed the odd shape in the drone film during editing
and none of them purchased a plastic dinosaur for the ruse or even for their kids and finally, if Richard Maver genuinely
uploaded his video to his YouTube channel believing the entire filming of the Great Glen Challenge was just about him
and his cohorts during the experience... then where did that few seconds of a shape emerging from the depths of the
loch come from?
And... who dumped the video off YouTube?
Edit: In Richard Maver's first YouTube video, he mentions his use of a drone and the entire video to Lochnagar in Scotland
was of him being alone and doing the walk. Hence, he flies a drone -as seen at 25.27 in his first video.
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe.