Super Mario 60 Posted April 28, 2019 Share Posted April 28, 2019 My first visit to Loch Ness goes back to 1981 and back then we hired a boat and went around the loch in seach of nessie, seen many pictures but none of them that clear and convincing, non the less is it a very nice place to visit. This re visit was to take my wife and experience the beauty of Scotland, we really enjoyed our week touring your lovely cold country 2 Link to post
spywareonya 37,961 Posted April 28, 2019 Share Posted April 28, 2019 8 minutes ago, Super Mario said: My first visit to Loch Ness goes back to 1981 and back then we hired a boat and went around the loch in seach of nessie, seen many pictures but none of them that clear and convincing, non the less is it a very nice place to visit. This re visit was to take my wife and experience the beauty of Scotland, we really enjoyed our week touring your lovely cold country Mario sorry I have a question which is OFFTOPIC, some kind of OFFTOPICS are considered fitting as they stem from the main subject (like personal piss stories stemming out from a discussion about other things), but Others, which do NOT stem out of the proper line so they do not possess any "pedigree" to link them to the original subject of the thread, are the only kind of offtopic to be avoided, and my question is of that kind so I will dare to do just once, I will read your reply, and then we will be back in topic, Ok? Your profile says, or better day let guess, that you were divorced Then I read: 11 minutes ago, Super Mario said: my wife Did I misinterpreted your profile or are the two of you back together? I am asking since I usually take my friendship with people here on a deeper level than simply sharing piss stories with other fetishists, I have many friendships worthy of this name in Real Life that started here and extended much Beyond this forum, and though it is rare and I do not push anybody, I prefer to know at least the most important things of the people I talk to, is also a matter of respect toward them To be back in topic, tell me: I am fascinated with the fact you strode around the lake looking for the Monster, we posted many things in this thread and I would be delighted for you to comment them, even a single comment to sum up them all, the fact is that though I am not an headlong believer (you'll find out that I state to be quite sure of things many people laugh at as I have my reasons, well Nessie is not part of the list of things I'd die and kill for, I am open to skeptical comments and to the possibility is just a big fish misunderstood by people) this is the first time I am talking to somebody in this forum (outside of it I chat with a group of scientists that explore the possibility for it to exist) THAT ACTUALLY WENT LOOKING FOR IT at least once So I am fascinated... 1 2 Link to post
Super Mario 60 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 I am married for a long time my profile says This Loch Ness is fascinating I cannot deny that and if I had the opportunity I would dig deeper in the matter but myself living so far away from Scotland (I am Maltese) and with many other interests I just do not have the time. I look forward to visit Scotland again in the near future as I love the country 2 1 Link to post
spywareonya 37,961 Posted May 14, 2019 Share Posted May 14, 2019 (edited) On 4/29/2019 at 11:50 PM, Super Mario said: I am married for a long time my profile says This Loch Ness is fascinating I cannot deny that and if I had the opportunity I would dig deeper in the matter but myself living so far away from Scotland (I am Maltese) and with many other interests I just do not have the time. I look forward to visit Scotland again in the near future as I love the country Well, sorry for my misunderstanding!!! I dare to invite you in my fictional story thread, about Loch Ness!!! Edited May 14, 2019 by spywareonya 3 Link to post
likesToLick 10,216 Posted May 19, 2019 Share Posted May 19, 2019 On 4/23/2019 at 6:53 AM, spywareonya said: Sometimes scientists are afraid to admit they believe in something I should hope so! Belief is the opposite of science. A scientist who goes around believing in things needs to hand back his degrees and find work in some other field. 1 1 Link to post
spywareonya 37,961 Posted May 19, 2019 Share Posted May 19, 2019 19 hours ago, likesToLick said: I should hope so! Belief is the opposite of science. A scientist who goes around believing in things needs to hand back his degrees and find work in some other field. You misunderstood my words I meant that as long as science hadn't yet offered proofs that a thing is impossible, there is room for believing it to be possible I do not believe in already debunked things: but scientists said that the depths of the Loch are of similar composition to that mixed water which can be found where sweet waters of rivers ended up in the ocean, and the Elasmosaurus were known to fish in the nearbies of those places if the Loch really have tunnels connecting it to the oceans and live in the seas and come in the Loch just to spawn, then it would NOT AT ALL be impossible As long as the utter lack of such tunnels will be proved, Nessie's existence is still POSSIBLE Thus there is ROOM FOR PLAYFUL HOPE Which is different than belief, obviously But all discoveries started as beliefs of scientists who struggled to prove that what they believed was true and not just hypes 1 1 1 Link to post
2prnot2p 1,066 Posted May 20, 2019 Share Posted May 20, 2019 On 5/18/2019 at 8:00 PM, likesToLick said: I should hope so! Belief is the opposite of science. A scientist who goes around believing in things needs to hand back his degrees and find work in some other field. Yes, you are so right! 🙂 Link to post
spywareonya 37,961 Posted May 20, 2019 Share Posted May 20, 2019 Anyway, I am curious to hear opinions from new people, this thread is funny and cute Summing up what we know without giving personal direction to them: By any means the survival of small dinosaurs is possible since fishes even more ancient had been found to be still living BUT By any means nothing bigger than a big fish could live there, as we perfectly know that it would miss the food necessary Plus, no carcass had EVER been found, nor bones Which is not that absurd since Elasmosaurus (the only possible explaination of Nessie) never lived in fresh water and just used coast-near lakes to spawn, so they would just use the Loch for reproduction and NOT live there Lack of eggs or earth sightings is not a problem as Elasmosaurus were known to spawn live younglings and they did not get on the sand to lay eggs So, the end of our discussion is at hand: if the Loch has, like some scientists supposed, deep-crust tunnels connecting it to sea, Nessie existence is ABSOLUTELY POSSIBLE If such tunnels are not present, then Nessie existence is ABSOLUTELY IMPOSSIBLE I fear this could be the end of speculations, from now on only lovely chitchat about opinions is possible 1 Link to post
spywareonya 37,961 Posted May 21, 2019 Share Posted May 21, 2019 This is FAKE for TWO reasons: First of all, it was admitted as a hoax Second, Elasmosaurus could NOT rise its neck that way: they were like THIS As you can see, their bodies are quite little and needed little food Having no gills, they needed to surface to breath air, usually staying a bit under surface and slightly extend the neck upward Finns were RIGID and they spawned live youngling and did not venture on dryland to lay eggs They were known for fishing where rivers met the sea and sweet water and salt water intermixing, also using such places to reproduce 1 Link to post
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