Loch Ness Monster picture of the most famous back into the debate after a retired detective says seeing visions of the monster twice. Simon Dinsdale, a retired police detective from Essex, said that the two-minute videos that were recorded 50 years ago by his father, known as Nessie hunters, is the original video.
Video taken by Tim Dinsdale in 1960 is one of the best images that provide evidence of the existence of the monster that some call it a mysterious creature. Now the belief in the existence of the monster the more elevated after Simon claims to have seen the creature twice.
Tim Dinsdale is a flight engineer in the RAF who died in 1987, is one of the world's leading Nessie hunters, made 56 expeditions to Loch Ness and wrote several books about the monster. When he sent his video to the RAF for analysis, experts say that the mysterious shapes that move in water instead of a boat or a submarine, but an "unknown object".
Simon was trying to convince the public that the video was authentic and did an interview about his belief in the mysterious monster with BBC television.
"I saw a large, unusual objects, like the back of large animals. It was sticking out the surface of approximately 0.6 to 0.9 meters, with a length of approximately 1.2 to 1.5 meters. Color reddish brown and have patches on the left are clearly visible. And when it starts to move, "he said as reported by the Telegraph on Monday (13/12/2010).
Speculation about the existence of huge monsters that live in that water starts in the city of Loch in 1933 when George Spicer reported sightings of these big monsters.
Spicer said that he and his wife saw a large animal as high as 1 meter and a length of 8 meters was crossing the road. After that started a lot of recognition that says it has seen the appearance of the monster, but the public itself is still not convinced of its existence.
The most popular photograph is a photograph taken in 1934 by Dr Robert Kenneth Wilson, who showed animals with long necks in the middle of the lake.