The Loch Ness Monster has once again been captured on video during a livestream of the fabled waters.
In this latest video, there appears to be two “hump-like objects” breaking the surface of the water and remaining there for more than two minutes.
The footage was captured and shared by prolific Loch Ness Monster spotter Eoin O’Faodhagain using the Nessie On The Net webcam.
The sighting, which took place early in the morning, resulted in video of the two mysterious black shapes appearing in the right-hand side of the footage.
Based on what appears in the video, he believes the mystery object was almost 20 feet long.
For about two-and-a-half minutes the shapes are visible on screen before shifting to the right and out of view.
“It was just a spot at first, which got bigger over the course of two and a half minutes,” O’Faodhagain told the Daily Record. “The disturbance of water was in the same position over the length of the sighting, which was unusual.
“The estimated length of the disturbance was 18 feet long. The size intrigued me as there is no known animals that length in Loch Ness. It changed its appearance over the course of the sighting.
“Is it Nessie? It could well be, but the footage needs further analysis. The Loch was calm but darkened by low lying clouds.
“At the time of recording at 6:15 a.m. to time of sighting 6:42 a.m. there were no surface vessels observed.”
After another recent sighting of the Loch Ness Monster, Eoin O’Faodhagain said he believes the creature shows “an obvious pattern of behavior.”
“It’s the first time I have captured it early in the morning, moving north,” he told the Mirror in January. “I have previously captured it moving south, late in the evening and near dark. We have discovered for the very first time that Nessie forages one way in the morning while light is at a bare minimum, and travels back when the light of the evening is diminishing.
“The question in my mind is: why and where is this creature going in the mornings and returning in the evenings, in the same area of the loch? It is fantastic to get the first sighting of 2024, but it is also great to pick up on different patterns of Nessie’s behavior that weren’t known before, through watching daily on the webcam.”