Nessie 'returns' with new sighting

After going 'missing' for the last eight months, the legendary Loch Ness Monster has seemingly been spotted once again.

An English woman named Hayley Johnson was visiting the famed vacation destination in Scotland on Monday when she noticed a dark shape emerging from the water.

Puzzled by what she was seeing, Johnson managed to snap a picture of the oddity before it sunk below the surface and vanished from view.

Johnson's sighting is being celebrated by Nessie fans and researchers who had grown concerned that the creature had not been seen since last August.

Gary Campbell of the Loch Ness Monster Sighting Registry told The Sun, "I am relieved and delighted with this sighting - and so will the planet!"

Indeed it would appear that theories suggesting that the lack of sightings indicated the demise of Nessie were premature and that the creature, whatever it may be, is still lurking in Loch Ness.

Let's hope it doesn't take another eight months before the beloved 'sea monster' appears again.

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By George Noory / Coast to Coast AM Host

George Noory, host of the nationally syndicated program, Coast to Coast AM, says if he weren’t a national radio talk show host he’d be in politics. Heard by millions of listeners, Coast To Coast AM airs on approximately 564 stations in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Guam.

While hosting The Nighthawk, a wildly successful, late-night program on KTRS in St. Louis, Noory was recruited by Premiere Radio Networks to guest host on Coast to Coast AM with Art Bell.  He became the permanent host of the phenomenally successful over-night program on January 1, 2003, following Bell’s retirement.  Since then, Noory’s audience has continued to grow.

Noory captivates program listeners with his discussions of paranormal phenomena, time travel, alien abductions, conspiracies and all things curious and unexplained. He is driven, he has said, by the desire to solve the great mysteries of our time. From his first days as a radio broadcaster he says, “I’ve wanted to cover stories that the mainstream media never touch—the unusual, the paranormal and things like that. I learned that broadcast was the best business for exploring these issues, and I’ve been doing it for 33 years.”

(Source: coasttocoastam.com; May 3, 2017; http://tinyurl.com/l9x5vvu)
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