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£1,000,000 reward

aftermath

Inactive User
Get your camera equipment ready.

A £1 million reward has been offered to anyone who can find conclusive proof that the Loch Ness monster exists.

The bounty is part of plans to supply up to 50,000 people with cameras in order to search for the mythical sea creature at next weekend's Rock Ness music festival.

Organisers are claiming it will be the largest ever organised attempt to prove the famous monster is real.

Bookmakers William Hill are offering the reward to anyone who finds evidence which persuades the Natural History Museum that Nessie exists.

They are also offering odds of 250/1 that the museum will agree the existence of the creature sometime this year.

William Hill spokesman Rupert Adams said: "We are hoping the £1 million bounty will help to solve one of the great enigmas of modern times.

"This is a great opportunity with such huge crowds on the shores of Loch Ness and it will be fantastic if someone can get a picture with one of the thousands of Nessie-Snappers cameras we are handing out, that can rival the 'Surgeon's photograph', which is still the most recognised despite being taken over 50 years ago."
 
Is it really a wise idea to give thousands of drunk teenagers a camera and tell them to look for the Loch Ness Monster. The freezing water coupled with extremely dangerous under currents in Loch Ness have killed a fair few people (even a guy from my school). I know its a bit of fun but maybe a little more thought needs to go into it.
 
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am rich partys on me lol
 
the highlands need these tourist it brings in lots of money keeps people in work .. but im sure nessie is real i married her bloody daugther .
 
yeh was said that a circus (not sure why they were there tho) used to let there elephants swim in the loch and that wot was captured on film...

i was at rock ness last year and gutted i cant make it this year but im sure i seen many monsters that weekend :Laugh:...wheres my reward money?? :p
 
"This is a great opportunity with such huge crowds on the shores of Loch Ness and it will be fantastic if someone can get a picture with one of the thousands of Nessie-Snappers cameras we are handing out, that can rival the 'Surgeon's photograph', which is still the most recognised despite being taken over 50 years ago."

A photograph supposedly of the Loch Ness monster taken by Robert Kenneth Wilson, a British gynecologist, on April 19, 1934 at around 7:30 AM. Because of Wilson's profession, the picture came to be known as "The Surgeon's Photo." In 1994 it was revealed that the picture actually shows a toy submarine outfitted with the head of a sea serpent.
 
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