Author Topic: Loch Ness Monster hunting?  (Read 850 times)

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Offline buckeye hunter

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Loch Ness Monster hunting?
« on: November 11, 2005, 10:07:50 AM »
I heard Paul Harvey say on the radio today that the Loch Ness Monster has been taken off the international endangered species list...how would that rate for an exotic hunt experience?  :)

Offline loaded4bear

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Loch Ness Monster hunting?
« Reply #1 on: November 12, 2005, 05:25:44 AM »
not the loch ness monster... but close, probably his cousin!
 
here's the story:
 
Hunting Season Opens for Mythical Creature
By KARL RITTER, Associated Press Writer
Fri Nov 11, 0:35 AM
 
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - A mythical monster, believed by some to have lived for hundreds of years in the murky depths of a Swedish lake, is now fair game for hunters _ if they can find it. Authorities have agreed to lift its endangered species protection.
 
Hundreds of people claim to have spotted a large serpent-like creature in Lake Storsjon in the northwestern province of Jamtland, and in 1986 the regional council put it on a list of endangered animals.
 
But a government watchdog challenged the decision, saying such protection was hardly necessary for a creature whose existence has not been proven.
 
The regional council agreed to remove the listing this month, but declined to rule out that a monster lives in the 300-foot deep lake.
 
"It exists, inasmuch as it lives in the minds of people," the council's chief legal adviser Peter Lif said about the purported beast. "But I guess we'll have to agree that it cannot be proved scientifically, and then it should not be listed as an endangered species."
 
The so-called Storsjo monster was first mentioned in print in 1635. Hundreds of sightings have been reported since then. Some people describe the creature as a snakelike animal with a dog's head and fins on its neck. But no clear image of it has been captured on camera.
 
Storsjo monster aficionados said lifting the endangered species protection was a mistake, and appeared insulted by the decision.
 
"We are not fanatics," said Christer Berko, of the Storsjo monster association. "We see this as very interesting phenomenon that we unfortunately have not been able to document."
 
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Offline coltnavy36

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just to add a note
« Reply #2 on: November 30, 2005, 07:31:38 PM »
That does not seem to wierd to me actually.
Especially when you consider that I'm the guy who is going to the Congo for a chance at Mokele-m-Bembe.
At least in my dreams.
But, if I had the money, I would not put it past me seriously thinking about it.
There are places in the Congo that even the natives have never been to, not to mention white men. Seriously.
The governments have not even been there.
Dang-it, it makes me want to grab the Kodiak double rifle I'm getting soon, and head that way.
Well, come to think of it, I have my best adventures here in my arm-chair, with a fire going in the fireplace this winter.
After all, it's not the 1900's any more.
Take care, all.
coltnavy36
"They REALLY lived."
     ---Secondhand Lions---