Loch Ness: a magical and sinister place
Loch Ness: a magical and sinister place
the Loch Ness Monster: almost everyone has heard of him. A large number of people claim to have seen the long-necked and hunchbacked leviathan from the depths. Some have even photographed and filmed it. Nessie, as the beast is known affectionately, has been a fundamental part of the world of the inexplicable since 1933, when the monster phenomenon exploded dramatically, all over the planet. Since then, innumerable people have congregated on the shores of the lake 22.5 miles long and 744 feet deep, all in the hope of seeing the elusive creature. Attempts have been made to search for Nessie with sonar equipment, airplanes, balloons and even submarines.
Theories abound as to what Nessie is, or, much more likely and correctly, what the Nessies are. Certainly, the most captivating theory, and that which the Scottish Tourism Board, filmmakers and the general public find most attractive, is one that suggests that monsters are surviving. of plesiosaurs. They were marine reptiles that became extinct tens of millions of years ago. Or, he did not. Frankly, I think the plesiosaurus theory is garbage. The possibility that monsters are actually giant-sized salamanders prevails in a few quarters. Like the idea that maybe the massive eels are the culprits. Then there are scenarios that include the sturgeon, the large catfish and even a camel and a giant frog.
Numerous Nessie enthusiasts, researchers and authors have spent years, decades, in some cases - chasing its quarry. They have done it in a way that strangely reflects the obsessive actions of the fictional Captain Ahab, in the acclaimed Herman Melville novel of 1851, Moby Dick; or the whale. But, it's all, and forever, in vain. No matter how many days, hours, weeks and years gone by, and no matter how advanced the technology used to find the animals, it always ends in failure. After more than eighty years of intensive research, the Nessies still evade capture, discovery or classification. Is all this due to bad luck and inept research? Certainly not. Rather, it is a case of people looking for answers in the completely wrong direction.
Throughout the decades, numerous numbers of books have been written in Nessie. For the most part, they all follow the same path. It is a road that is becoming increasingly tired, predictable, repetitive and worn out as the years go by. These same books usually adopt an almost identical approach: they relate the most famous sightings, the main actors of the saga and the theories that exist to explain the monster, and then leave it at that.
For me, simply regurgitating all the same old stories in depth, and defending the same old theories of what might be the beasts of that huge lake, would be useless. Such a thing has now been done to the point of total boredom. And doing it has not accomplished anything significant, in any way. However, there is demonstrable evidence that Loch Ness monsters are definitely supernatural, rather than a flesh and blood nature. Magical rituals, satanic rites, necromancy, dragon worship cults who engage in bloody sacrifices under the full moon, strange synchronicities, UFO sightings, encounters with the feared Men in Black, and even exorcisms are an integral part of the phenomenon known as the Loch Ness Monster. Like the creature's connections to one of the most infamous occultists in the world: Aleister Crowley, who lived in the lake from 1899 to 1913: to curses, to magicians and even to a wide range of other strange creatures that also Call Loch Ness your home, as what is known as "Alien Big Cats".
Not only that: one could imagine that most people would love to see a Nessie. Probably they would, at least, until they actually see it. So, it's a very different fish cauldron. It is a curious and intriguing fact that many witnesses do not react with amazement, disbelief or emotion. No, the answer to meeting a Nessie, and especially in a close and personal way, is very often very different. People talk about the beast being "an abomination", "something abnormal", "a disgusting vision" and "something that still torments us". Others have commented that after seeing the creature, "we were all sick." "Horrified". That "my dog ... is crouching and trembling". One of them said: "I never want to see something like that again". There is, then, something decidedly incorrect about the creatures of Loch Ness; something that provokes reactions beyond what one might expect, even when one encounters something fantastic and unknown.
Undoubtedly, strange and sinister things hide in the deep and turbulent waters of Scotland's most famous lake, and they have done so for centuries and centuries, perhaps even more. But, here is the important factor: they are not what you may think they are. They could be the most pessimistic and evil things you can imagine. There is no doubt that the accounts of the creatures of Loch Ness have caught the attention of people on a truly massive scale. However, that same attention is provoked not only by the stories of the monsters, but also by the lake itself. To say that Loch Ness has an air and an atmosphere of mystery and intrigue is an understatement. The gigantic lake is full of legends, folklore, mythology and history.
It is located along a large fault line called the great fault of Glen, whose origins go literally hundreds of millions of years. The fault runs through the name of Great Glen, which includes Loch Ness, Lochy Lake, Lake Oich, Lake Linnhe, the River Ness and the Lochie River. Loch Ness is home to an almost magical looking 13.th structure of the century called urquhart castle, which would not look out of place in the next. Lord of the Rings movie. The great tower of the ruined castle, the Grant Tower, dominates the mysterious and dark waters of the lake, just as it has done for centuries. It provides an excellent view of the deep and mysterious waters that harbor something melancholy and abominable. The ancient history of the castle is dominated by war, death and tribal clashes.
(Wikipedia)
Cherry Island - a slab of earth made by man in Loch Ness - was, in 15th Century, the domain of a castle already disappeared. When the castle left, so did its legends and its traditions. An island now submerged, Eilean Nan Con, in Gaelic language, and which is translated as "Dog Island" in English, was home to vicious herds of hunting dogs. Villages and ancient and picturesque villages, largely immutable, surround the huge body of water. The forms and beliefs of times past still persist among the locals. Thick expansive forests surround the lake, causing amazement and amazement at the secrets that could hide. Huge green slopes dominate the entire lake. And as for those waters that contain so many monstrous secrets, they contain more fresh water than any other lake in Wales and England. set. It is not surprising, then, that Loch Ness has a reputation as a beast hideout.
.
!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s)
{if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?
n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};
if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0';
n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;
t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,'script',
'https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js');
fbq('init', '369524843414444');
fbq('track', 'PageView');
.
SOURCE LINK ERESVIRAL.COM https://www.beviral.online



Comentarios
Publicar un comentario