Showing posts with label Bownessie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bownessie. Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2011

Cumbrian man claims Lake District's Bownessie brushed past him as he swam

09:30, Saturday, 26 February 2011

Thomas Noblett is in no doubt that some sort of unexplained creature lives in the waters of Windermere – because he’s felt it.

Video: Thomas Noblett and Andrew Tighe at Lake Windermere

The hotelier had thought he and colleague Andrew Tighe were alone on the lake when, out of the blue, he suddenly realised something powerful was going past him.

Early morning conditions couldn’t have been calmer – with waters mirror-like – as the managing director of Windermere’s Langdale Chase Hotel continued his training for an English Channel swim, accompanied by Mr Tighe in a rowing boat.

“We were going across the deeps, the deepest part of the lake,” he recalls.

“It was really calm. Then, all of a sudden, I felt something go past the back of my legs. It felt like a cruiser had gone past.

“Suddenly, this wave then lifted me up. I stopped and asked ‘what the hell was that? Get me out of here’.”
Mr Tighe, the Langdale’s general manager, feared for his friend as the follow-up ‘bow wave’ rose.

He said: “Looking back at that morning it is all a bit surreal. I was most concerned about Thomas. I didn’t know what it was.”

The whole experience, between 6.45am and 7am on July 29, 2009, lasted about 30 seconds.

After the drama unfolded, the lake went back to being completely flat – with the men confused as to what had just happened.

At first, Mr Noblett, 48, thought a submarine had passed him – with the Ministry of Defence perhaps doing some kind of secret testing. He described the feeling as “awful”.

It was only after another colleague at the hotel overheard them talking afterwards, that the realisation that it could be something else struck.

“We didn’t know what it could be. We were chatting about it in the kitchen and our chef said there was a report of something being sighted in the lake,” said Mr Tighe, 35.

Their experience, along with other sightings, have left the pair convinced there is something in the waters.
“One hundred per cent. There is something in there,” Mr Tighe said.

His colleague added: “We were non-believers beforehand. We didn’t give it a thought before. I was more concerned that a pike would bite me.”

Speculation as to whether Cumbria could have its own Loch Ness monster-type creature in Windermere has grown in the past week after a photograph emerged of what looks to be a four-humped creature in the water.
It was spotted by Tom Pickles and Sarah Harrington, who were kayaking across the water. They captured the image on a camera phone.

Theirs is thought to be the eighth report of so-called Bownessie being seen in the past five years.

Mr Noblett, who has swam in Windermere hundreds of times, believes this latest sighting adds weight to what he and his colleague have been saying since 2009, adding: “We’re quite pleased about it. It shows we were not using this as self-publicity for the hotel, area or the lake.”

Sporadic sightings of the creature have been made since the 1950s.

Various descriptions have seen its size range from anywhere between 25ft and 70ft and of being snake-like in appearance.

Although there is the old Nessie theory of the creature being something prehistoric that has somehow survived in the lake, both Mr Noblett and Mr Tighe believe the creature is most likely to be a giant eel.

Other theories are that the “monster” could be a giant catfish or a large pike with the creature feeding off char
Since their experience, the hotel bosses have worked with north east-based psychic Dean “Midas” Maynard on trying to unearth evidence about what is lurking in the waters.

Today they will join him on a boat conducting a sonar search of the lake to see if they can spot Bownessie or any more clues about its existence, using 3D imaging equipment.

Another boat search with more passengers joining them will be carried out tomorrow.

But, with Windermere 10.5 miles long, one mile wide and plunging to 220ft at its deepest point, with various caves and shelves, Mr Noblett, who has been at the Langdale 20 years after working in Bermuda, Dubai and London, admits the search is the proverbial needle in a haystack.

Whatever they do or don’t discover, however, his view about whether there is a creature in the water will not change.

And the businessman has information that there are others who have has possible sightings, but haven’t wanted to speak out about them.

He added: “Some have said they are glad we have brought it up. One sailor has said it was like a side of meat turning over and going underneath. He didn’t want to tell anybody in case he was ridiculed.

“You’re always going to get two camps in whatever you do in life. The ones who don’t believe will boo-hoo everything. If they haven’t experienced it themselves, they will say it is an old wives’ tale.”

Many of those who are believers or have spotted something suspicious and believe there is something in the water are people who are completely serious about the lake.

“That has made our experience a little more concrete,” Mr Noblett said.

Dan Nield, 30, an operations supervisor with Windermere Lake Cruises, will be among those on the boat searching the lake tomorrow.

He admits the speculation about what may be in the lake is interesting, but is a sceptical of whether there is a “monster” in there.

“Everyone loves a mystery. It would be nice if there was something out there, but I’m a sceptic,” said Mr Nield, who spends his working day on the lake.

“Some have said there are big catfish in there. They can grow as big as a couple of metres in length. Others have said it could be a string of otters. It’s interesting. The picture that came out last week surprised me. Lots of people have been asking about it, but whether it brings more tourists to the area, I don’t know. I wouldn’t think it would do tourism any harm.”

There’s no doubting that the intrigue surrounding what may lurk beneath the waters of Windermere could be lucrative.

A whole industry has spawned from the mystery at Loch Ness, with a visitor centre, souvenir shops, television documentaries and even a Hollywood film staring Ted Danson.

Cumbria Tourism bosses say they are as keen as anyone to establish “whether the Bownessie phenomenon is fact or fiction”.

A spokesman added: “The truth is Windermere and Bowness are incredibly popular destinations and don’t need gimmicks to get people to visit.

“Nonetheless, at the start of the tourism year, it doesn’t do the industry any harm to have this kind of profile around the world.”

Mr Noblett believes Bownessie could become a visitor attraction.

“It will attract a different type of visitor. You are going to get people who say we don’t need any more tourist attractions here. They are the non-believers,” he said.

“But it can only help the businesses and the infrastructure of Cumbria. This is a happy story versus the catastrophes of the last couple of years in west Cumbria.

“People think Cumbria is an island. When the bridge went down in Workington they thought they couldn’t get in. It’s just the British way of thinking.”

Mr Tighe, the Langdale’s general manager for the past four-and-a-half years, also believes interest in what may be in the lake his high and added: “Most of our guests are interested.”

Executives at Windermere Lake Cruises, whose boats ferry people to stops up and down the lake, are not convinced Bownessie exists, but believe passengers will enjoy trying to spot it. They are offering a golden ticket prize of a year’s free cruises for anyone who captures a picture of the beast from one of their boats.

http://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/focus/cumbrian-man-claims-lake-district-s-bownessie-brushed-past-him-as-he-swam-1.812970?referrerPath=home

Monday, February 28, 2011

UK Kayakers Claim They Spotted Loch Ness-Like Sea Creature

Young Couple Say They Saw Mysterious Humps Emerge From the Water While Kayaking Near Bowness-on-Windermere

By KEVIN DOLAK
Feb. 19, 2011

Bownessie, the mythical younger and less famous sea monster of Britain's Lake Windermere, who lives in the shadow of her northern neighbor, the fabled Loch Ness monster, may have been spotted today.

Two 20-something Brits told the U.K.'s Daily Mail that they spotted three or four mysterious humps emerge from the water while they were kayaking on Lake Windermere in Bowness-on-Windermere, near the western coast of northern England.

Tom Pickles, 24, and Sarah Harrington, 23, said they stared at the shape, terrified as it moved through the water at about 10 miles per hour.

"I thought it was a dog," Pickles said. "Then I realized it was much bigger and moving really quickly. Each hump was moving in a rippling motion and it was swimming fast. I could tell it was much bigger underneath from the huge shadow around it."

"Its skin was like a seal's, but its shape was abnormal -- it's not like any animal I've ever seen before. We saw it for about 20 seconds. It was petrifying. We paddled back to the shore straight away," Harrington said.
The couple managed to snap a shot of the baffling figure with a camera phone before it disappeared into the water.
Experts who have examined the fuzzy photograph have said that the image is authentic, but that the file size is too small to tell if it was altered.

And of course there are the skeptics who say the monster, whether in Loch Ness or Windermere, is just a myth. "I have a whole lot of doubt that it could be a Loch Ness monster. I don't think a monster can exist biologically," said Ian Winfield, a scientist at the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology at the Lancaster, England, Environment Centre.

"It's a bit of fun, it adds a bit of spice to life," he said. "It would be wonderful if it was true. I mean if we had some kind of creature alive in the British Isles it would be fantastic but I really don't think it can be so."

http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/uk-kayakers-claim-spotted-loch-ness-sea-creature/story?id=12957038

Sunday, February 27, 2011

The 'Bownessie' monster sighted again in UK

London, Feb 25 : In less than a week after being snapped, a mystery lake monster dubbed 'Bownessie' has been sighted again.

Holidaymaker Brian Arton described seeing something 'dark with humps' sitting 300 yards out on the surface of Lake Windermere, reports the Sun.

And he said it exactly matched the picture taken five days earlier by kayaker Tom Pickles.

The 61-yearold and his wife, from Hovingham, North Yorks, had just checked into a hotel by the Cumbrian lake when they saw the strange shape.

"We thought it must be a pontoon, a log or an odd-looking buoy,"
he said.

"We didn't think it could possibly be an animal—but then it just disappeared," he added.

--ANI

http://www.newkerala.com/news/world/fullnews-156396.html

Thursday, February 17, 2011

BOW-NESSIE Mystery photo of 'English Loch Ness Monster' taken in Bowness

Monster ... the picture of Bow-nessie captured last week
Westmorland Gazette
By STAFF REPORTER
Thursday, 17 February 2011

A MYSTERIOUS 'monster' - dubbed Bow-nessie - appears to have been caught on camera for the first time.

A shape claimed to be a giant beast — said to be up to 50ft long — was spotted emerging from the depths of Lake Windermere near Bowness in Cumbria, last week.

In the grainy picture, which is eerily reminiscent of classic snaps of the famous Loch Ness Monster, an animal's humped back seems to be visible.

Enormous rippples can be seen in its wake as the dark shape passes in front of foliage growing from the misty lake. But can it really be the beast of legend?

Kayakers Tom Pickles, 24, and Sarah Harrington, 23, who took the picture, told today how they were left "petrified" and quickly paddled to the safety of the shore after encountering the monster.

IT graduate Tom said: "At a distance I thought it was some sort of large dog then I realised just how long it was. There was no way a dog would be out that far in any case.

"Each hump moved in a rippling movement and it appeared to have a huge shadow around it suggesting it was much bigger underwater.

"Its skin was like a seal's but its shape was completely abnormal. We watched for about twenty seconds before it plunged out of sight."

He added: "It was petrifying."

It was then the pair decided to make a quick return to the shore.

Sarah said: "It was like a huge snake. It freaked us out and it was not until we saw the pictures that we believed our own eyes."

This is believed to be the eighth sighting in the past five years of the mysterious hump-backed 'creature'.

It glides through the still water at 10mph, clearly leaving a rippling wake.

Bow-nessie, similar to the famous beast Nessie said to live in Loch Ness in Scotland, has long been part of local folklore.

A description of Bow-nessie given by Tom and Sarah to their local paper, the Westmorland Gazette perfectly matches that reported by university lecturer Steve Burnip in 2006.

Scenic Lake Windermere, a favourite holiday destination, is eleven miles long.

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3417860/Bow-nessie-Amazing-photo-of-English-Loch-Ness-Monster-taken-in-Bowness.html

Thursday, September 23, 2010

England's own Loch Ness Monster?

Thursday, September 23, 2010
Catherine Deshayes

The legend of the Loch Ness Monster has proved to be a marketing boon for the Scottish Tourist Board and now the Lake District looks set to be the next hot destination for intrepid monster hunters...

Seven sightings of a long hump-backed animal swimming in Lake Windermere have been reported over the last four years.

The mysterious creature's fame has been slowly growing and she was recently given the nickname Bow-Nessie.

One local, Windermere hotel owner Thomas Noblett, claimed to have had a close encounter with something in the lake.

He told Sky News: ‘All of a sudden I felt something brush past my legs like a giant fish. And then I was lifted up by a three-foot wave. I've no idea what it was.'

A tourist claimed to have captured the Loch Ness Monster on camera in 1934

Now 21st century technology, including sonar equipment, is being deployed to try and track her down.

The lake is 11 miles long and up to 220-feet deep in some places so the team searching for the creature will have to cover some ground.

So far, nothing has been detected, aside from a reported 14-foot long disturbance in the water, and the sonar read-outs have been blank.

Hunt organiser, Dean Maynard, added: ‘We've had more creature sightings here than at Loch Ness in recent years so we think it's time that Bow-Nessie received more attention.'

A 20-metre long object was spotted below the surface of the lake last year by a local film crew but sceptics claims the footage shows a wave from an unseen boat.

Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

http://www.themovechannel.com/news/bac3f06e-80e1/

England's own Loch Ness Monster?

Thursday, September 23, 2010
Catherine Deshayes

The legend of the Loch Ness Monster has proved to be a marketing boon for the Scottish Tourist Board and now the Lake District looks set to be the next hot destination for intrepid monster hunters...

Seven sightings of a long hump-backed animal swimming in Lake Windermere have been reported over the last four years.

The mysterious creature's fame has been slowly growing and she was recently given the nickname Bow-Nessie.

One local, Windermere hotel owner Thomas Noblett, claimed to have had a close encounter with something in the lake.

He told Sky News: ‘All of a sudden I felt something brush past my legs like a giant fish. And then I was lifted up by a three-foot wave. I've no idea what it was.'

A tourist claimed to have captured the Loch Ness Monster on camera in 1934

Now 21st century technology, including sonar equipment, is being deployed to try and track her down.

The lake is 11 miles long and up to 220-feet deep in some places so the team searching for the creature will have to cover some ground.

So far, nothing has been detected, aside from a reported 14-foot long disturbance in the water, and the sonar read-outs have been blank.

Hunt organiser, Dean Maynard, added: ‘We've had more creature sightings here than at Loch Ness in recent years so we think it's time that Bow-Nessie received more attention.'

A 20-metre long object was spotted below the surface of the lake last year by a local film crew but sceptics claims the footage shows a wave from an unseen boat.

Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

http://www.themovechannel.com/news/bac3f06e-80e1/

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Lake 'monster' rivals Loch Ness

September 13, 2010, 11:47 am

England may now have its own mysterious underwater creature lurking beneath its largest lake, and a rival to Scotland's Loch Ness monster.

Sky News reports that 'monster chasers' are the first to use sonar equipment to hunt down an unidentified creature mystifying locals of Lake Wyndermere in England.

There have been seven sightings in the last four years of what is believed to be a long humpbacked animal that has been nicknamed Bow-Nessie.

A local Lake Wyndermere hotel owner Thomas Noblett described his experience with the creature, "All of a sudden I felt something brush past my legs like a giant fish."

"And then I was lifted up by a 3ft wave. I've no idea what it was."

The lake measures over 16km in length and presents a huge task for the 'monster chasers'.

Hunt organiser, Dean Maynard says that there have been more creature sightings at Wyndermere than Loch Ness in recent years, "We think it's time that Bow-Nessie received more attention."

According to reports a local film crew spotted a 20 metre long object below the surface of the lake but sceptics believe the footage shows a wave from an unseen boat.

See video at: http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/latest/7932374/lake-monster-rivals-loch-ness
(Submitted by T. Peter Park)

See also: http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Strange-News/Lake-Windermere-Search-For-Englands-Loch-Ness-Monster-Nicknamed-Bow-Nessie/Article/201009215725530
(Submitted by Simon Reames)

Lake 'monster' rivals Loch Ness

September 13, 2010, 11:47 am

England may now have its own mysterious underwater creature lurking beneath its largest lake, and a rival to Scotland's Loch Ness monster.

Sky News reports that 'monster chasers' are the first to use sonar equipment to hunt down an unidentified creature mystifying locals of Lake Wyndermere in England.

There have been seven sightings in the last four years of what is believed to be a long humpbacked animal that has been nicknamed Bow-Nessie.

A local Lake Wyndermere hotel owner Thomas Noblett described his experience with the creature, "All of a sudden I felt something brush past my legs like a giant fish."

"And then I was lifted up by a 3ft wave. I've no idea what it was."

The lake measures over 16km in length and presents a huge task for the 'monster chasers'.

Hunt organiser, Dean Maynard says that there have been more creature sightings at Wyndermere than Loch Ness in recent years, "We think it's time that Bow-Nessie received more attention."

According to reports a local film crew spotted a 20 metre long object below the surface of the lake but sceptics believe the footage shows a wave from an unseen boat.

See video at: http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/latest/7932374/lake-monster-rivals-loch-ness
(Submitted by T. Peter Park)

See also: http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Strange-News/Lake-Windermere-Search-For-Englands-Loch-Ness-Monster-Nicknamed-Bow-Nessie/Article/201009215725530
(Submitted by Simon Reames)

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Bownessie hunters begin their search today

10:30am Saturday 11th September 2010

By Bethany Abbit
Reporter

A PSYCHIC and a hotelier will be hoping for a close encounter when they venture to the depths of Windermere in search of ‘Bownessie’ today (Saturday).

The monster hunters have taken a £300,000 yacht to the deepest depths of the lake and will use sonar equipment to search for the beast.

And as psychic Dean ‘Midas’ Maynard and Langdale Chase Hotel owner Thomas ‘The Gladiator’ Noblett begin their adventure, a sighting from the mid 1970's has been disclosed for the first time.

Andrew Bury, has revealed that he spotted a 90 foot monster ripple in the water whilst fishing on Windermere more than 30 years ago.

“One summer Sunday whilst fishing I was rowing back from Lakeside when I saw a wave along the lake very near to our boat,” he said.

“It was a clear, calm day and it looked as though a boat was dragging along the water, but there was nothing else around that could have caused it.

“There were seagulls diving all over it and it was moving quite fast. We thought it was really strange. I’ve spent a lot of time sailing and I’ve never seen anything like that before.”

Mr Bury, 52, who lives in Clitheroe, said the ripple disappeared after five minutes and he never saw it again.

“It could have been a small-scale submarine or a very large fish I suppose. It was very eerie,” he said.

This latest revelation is the earliest recorded encounter of the fabled monster, which is believed to lurk at the Lakeside end of the ancient lake.

The first sighting came in 2006 when tourist Steve Burnip witnessed a serpent like creature, around 15-feet in length, at the north end of the water.

In 2007, Windermere photographer Linden Adams described a ‘spine-tingling’ experience when he snapped the creature whilst walking with his wife near Gummers Howe.

"It just came out of the blue. The water was incredibly peaceful and then this huge thing appeared, diving and thrashing around,” he said.

Karen Walker was the next to report a sighting whilst boating.

“From out of nowhere this dark shadow just under the surface glided past the boat, it never broke the surface of the water, me and my sister-in-law both saw it."

Then last year, Mr Noblett himself was swamped by a three-foot wave whilst swimming on the lake.

http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/8386548.Bownessie_hunters_begin_their_search_today/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Bownessie hunters begin their search today

10:30am Saturday 11th September 2010

By Bethany Abbit
Reporter

A PSYCHIC and a hotelier will be hoping for a close encounter when they venture to the depths of Windermere in search of ‘Bownessie’ today (Saturday).

The monster hunters have taken a £300,000 yacht to the deepest depths of the lake and will use sonar equipment to search for the beast.

And as psychic Dean ‘Midas’ Maynard and Langdale Chase Hotel owner Thomas ‘The Gladiator’ Noblett begin their adventure, a sighting from the mid 1970's has been disclosed for the first time.

Andrew Bury, has revealed that he spotted a 90 foot monster ripple in the water whilst fishing on Windermere more than 30 years ago.

“One summer Sunday whilst fishing I was rowing back from Lakeside when I saw a wave along the lake very near to our boat,” he said.

“It was a clear, calm day and it looked as though a boat was dragging along the water, but there was nothing else around that could have caused it.

“There were seagulls diving all over it and it was moving quite fast. We thought it was really strange. I’ve spent a lot of time sailing and I’ve never seen anything like that before.”

Mr Bury, 52, who lives in Clitheroe, said the ripple disappeared after five minutes and he never saw it again.

“It could have been a small-scale submarine or a very large fish I suppose. It was very eerie,” he said.

This latest revelation is the earliest recorded encounter of the fabled monster, which is believed to lurk at the Lakeside end of the ancient lake.

The first sighting came in 2006 when tourist Steve Burnip witnessed a serpent like creature, around 15-feet in length, at the north end of the water.

In 2007, Windermere photographer Linden Adams described a ‘spine-tingling’ experience when he snapped the creature whilst walking with his wife near Gummers Howe.

"It just came out of the blue. The water was incredibly peaceful and then this huge thing appeared, diving and thrashing around,” he said.

Karen Walker was the next to report a sighting whilst boating.

“From out of nowhere this dark shadow just under the surface glided past the boat, it never broke the surface of the water, me and my sister-in-law both saw it."

Then last year, Mr Noblett himself was swamped by a three-foot wave whilst swimming on the lake.

http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/8386548.Bownessie_hunters_begin_their_search_today/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Friday, September 10, 2010

Hunt for the beast of Windermere

Last updated at 13:43, Thursday, 09 September 2010

EVERYONE has heard of the Loch Ness Monster.

But for the past four years, a rumour of another ‘beast’ has circulated around the Lake District.

A team of investigators have now taken it upon themselves to find the now legendary ‘Bownessie’ in the waters of Windermere.

The crack team will descend onto the shores of the famous lake on Saturday.

Psychic Dean Maynard will lead the team after a recent sighting tip-off.

The excursion is the second the team has carried out in as many years, first hunting for the ‘monster’ in the summer of last year.

Mr Maynard, who spends most of his time at his Ullswater base, said: “There are a lot of sceptical people who may not believe in what we are doing.

“But whatever happens, we are hoping it will provide a major tourism boost to the area, which in recent months is much needed.

“Last year we went with Lakes TV and managed to get some shots of what looks like the monster.

“This year we hope to gather more evidence.”

The tip-off came last week from Lancashire man Andrew Bury, who claims he first saw Bownessie on the lake 30 years ago. Mr Bury had kept quiet but spoke up after reading a magazine article about the physic.

The ‘monster’ is said to have a head shaped like that of a Labrador dog.

Several witnesses have come forward in the last four years, describing the ‘beast’ as moving in a straight line, without disturbing the water, before disappearing out of sight.

University lecturer Steve Burnip said he and his wife Eileen spotted the ‘monster’ in 2006.

Mr Burnip, 51, said: “I saw a straight line of broken water with three humps.

“It was about 20ft long and it went in a straight line up the lake.

“I nudged my wife and watched open-mouthed as it gradually faded from sight. The water was not choppy, so I know it wasn’t the wind, and I know what the wake from motor boats looks like and it wasn’t that, either.”

First published at 13:08, Thursday, 09 September 2010
Published by http://www.nwemail.co.uk

http://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/hunt-to-find-if-anythinglies-beneath-windermere-1.756207
(Submitted by Mark North)

Hunt for the beast of Windermere

Last updated at 13:43, Thursday, 09 September 2010

EVERYONE has heard of the Loch Ness Monster.

But for the past four years, a rumour of another ‘beast’ has circulated around the Lake District.

A team of investigators have now taken it upon themselves to find the now legendary ‘Bownessie’ in the waters of Windermere.

The crack team will descend onto the shores of the famous lake on Saturday.

Psychic Dean Maynard will lead the team after a recent sighting tip-off.

The excursion is the second the team has carried out in as many years, first hunting for the ‘monster’ in the summer of last year.

Mr Maynard, who spends most of his time at his Ullswater base, said: “There are a lot of sceptical people who may not believe in what we are doing.

“But whatever happens, we are hoping it will provide a major tourism boost to the area, which in recent months is much needed.

“Last year we went with Lakes TV and managed to get some shots of what looks like the monster.

“This year we hope to gather more evidence.”

The tip-off came last week from Lancashire man Andrew Bury, who claims he first saw Bownessie on the lake 30 years ago. Mr Bury had kept quiet but spoke up after reading a magazine article about the physic.

The ‘monster’ is said to have a head shaped like that of a Labrador dog.

Several witnesses have come forward in the last four years, describing the ‘beast’ as moving in a straight line, without disturbing the water, before disappearing out of sight.

University lecturer Steve Burnip said he and his wife Eileen spotted the ‘monster’ in 2006.

Mr Burnip, 51, said: “I saw a straight line of broken water with three humps.

“It was about 20ft long and it went in a straight line up the lake.

“I nudged my wife and watched open-mouthed as it gradually faded from sight. The water was not choppy, so I know it wasn’t the wind, and I know what the wake from motor boats looks like and it wasn’t that, either.”

First published at 13:08, Thursday, 09 September 2010
Published by http://www.nwemail.co.uk

http://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/hunt-to-find-if-anythinglies-beneath-windermere-1.756207
(Submitted by Mark North)

Friday, August 6, 2010

Fresh search on Windermere for Bownessie

L - R: Thomas Noblett and Andrew ('The Admiral') Tighe.
10:10pm Wednesday 4th August 2010

By Bethany Abbit, Reporter

A FEARLESS team of monster hunters will set sail on Windermere in a fresh search for ‘Bownessie’.

Lakeland hotelier Thomas ‘The Gladiator’ Noblett and celebrity psychic Dean ‘Midas’ Maynard will embark on their second journey into the depths of Windermere in search of the fabled monster.

The two men led a team of investigators to the lake to look for evidence last year but returned empty handed.

“Since last year, a lot of local people have told me they have felt something in the lake but have been too scared to say anything,” said Mr Noblett, owner of the Langdale Chase Hotel.

“There is obviously something large in there. You just have to look at the depth, width and length of it to know that.”

Bownessie was first spotted by tourist Steve Burnip in 2006. Mr Burnip described a serpent like creature, around 15-feet in length, at the north end of the lake.

Mr Noblett was prompted to prove the existence of the creature when he was hit by a three-foot wave whilst swimming on Windermere last year.

“A lot of people boo-hoo it but they are mainly people who have never set foot in the Lakes,” said Mr Noblett.

“Those who have seen it describe it as a very long and eel-like. One sailor told me he saw what looked like a big slab of meat roll past his boat and disappear underneath the boat.

“It could be a very large catfish that has just grown to be really big. Some of those fish do live for a very long time.”

Mr Noblett and his crew of three will set out on a £300,000 yacht using sonar equipment to try and track Bownessie.

They will explore the deepest part of the lake and sail to a spot near Gummers Howe, where the creature was snapped by Winderemere photographer Linden Adams in 2007.

“Whenever I swim across the lake I always get the heebys jeebies at that part. There is a real eerie feeling around there.”

Mr Maynard said: "The last Bownessie investigation was very memorable and we are hoping to have the same if not better results this time around.

"Since last year I have been contacted by many members of the public who have told me that they have also witnessed seeing something large in the lake over the past few years and we hope to get more evidence to back up these claims."

The Bownessie hunters will set sail on September 11.

http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/8306813.Fresh_search_on_Windermere_for_Bownessie/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Friday, March 26, 2010

Hunt for Bownessie

Last updated at 09:30, Wednesday, 24 March 2010

TALES of a giant creature lurking in the depths of a lake have fascinated the British public since 1933, when The Inverness Courier reported sightings of a ‘monster’ living in Loch Ness.

Watch a video clip....

By Karl Steel

Over the years, hundreds of investigations to find the beast have proved unsuccessful and the notion that something so large can go undetected for so long have, for most people, rendered it a modern day myth, a quirky tale, a ploy to bring in tourists.

So, when news emerged of a similar sighting on Lake Windermere in 2006, people were quick to dismiss it in the same way.

Millions of people travel up and down the 11-mile stretch of water each year – how can nobody have seen anything before now?

Then in February 2007, professional photographer Linden Adams snapped pictures of a large bow wave moving along the lake, dipping and circling in the calm water, from a viewpoint around 2.5km away and more than 1,000ft up on Gummers How.

“Even though I was a long way away, I could see that it wasn’t just a freak wave or a swan or anything like that,” says Linden. “It looked like it had the head of a Labrador, only a lot bigger.

“Compared with boats moored nearby it appeared to be about 50ft in length.”

When he saw the pictures that he’d taken, he knew that what he’d seen was an important find. He sent them off for forensic examination, and to this day they have confounded experts.

He labelled his discovery ‘Bownessie’, in reference to its Scottish counterpart, and the legend has grown from there.

“I wouldn’t rule out the possibility of it being a ‘monster fish’, in that the sheer size of it is beyond all record,” he says.

“There are so many questions to be answered like how it got there or, if it grew in the lake, what can it be eating?

“I am really keen to find out what it is. There is no way something of that size can have swum into the lake – it has either been put there or it has grown there.

“Any scientist that’s seen my photos have agreed that there is an animate being of considerable size that is living in the lake.”

In fact, there have been reports of a ‘monster’ living in the lake dating back to the 1950s, but it is only since these images emerged that the notion has begun to be taken seriously.

So far there have been public sightings from a number of different points along Windermere. Video footage taken by a local journalist even hit national headlines when it was featured on Sky News.

Reports often describe a dark mass, anywhere between 12ft and 70ft in length. One of the most detailed encounters happened in July last year when hotelier Thomas Noblett was swimming near Wray Castle – the lake’s deepest point at around 219ft – at around 7am one morning and he felt a wave that he described as having “the force of a submarine”.

Andrew Tighe, who was accompanying Thomas in a support boat alongside, said that the wave came completely out of the blue.

He says: “The lake was just so flat as it normally is at that time of morning – no traffic on the lake at all – and a huge wave came and swamped the boat and swamped over the top of Tom while he was swimming, to which Tom got out of his swimming stroke and said, ‘what the hell was that?’.

“Then all of a sudden another one came and just swamped over the top of the boat, swamped myself, and again, covered Thomas.”

Andrew said that it was almost as if a boat was travelling down the centre of the lake, but there was nothing in sight.

A few days earlier, the pair had dismissed a radio story about Bownessie as nonsense, but following his encounter he believes that there is definitely something abnormal living in the lake.

“Me and Thomas just laughed-off anything in (the radio programme), and with us being in the lake every day, we hadn’t experienced anything,” he says.

“What it is, I don’t know.

“All I know is what I saw on that day.”

The increasing interest in the mystery surrounding Bownessie attracted the attentions of paranormal investigator Dean ‘Midas’ Maynard.

The Durham-based celebrity psychic was enthralled by Linden Adams’ photo and felt that it was something worth looking into.

He says: “Being a paranormal investigator, I’ve got a very open mind to these kind of things - that’s what I do.

“From the witness accounts, I’m 99 per cent sure there’s something in Windermere that can’t be explained.”

Dean decided to become actively involved in the search, and along with Linden, Thomas and Andrew, set out on an investigation with sonar equipment for the ITV1 series The Lakes to see what they could find. Although that proved fruitless, plans are afoot to conduct a more scientific search later this year.

In July, the group will have access to the state-of-the-art DIDSON (Dual-frequency Identification Sonar) high-definition imaging unit, and it is hoped that this will provide inconclusive evidence of whether Bownessie exists or not.

It will be the most detailed survey of Lake Windermere ever undertaken, and with the backing of the Freshwater Biological Association, the research will also look at the level of fish stocks in the lake, and if there is enough to sustain a creature of such reputed size.

Dean says: “We hope just to get evidence that it’s here. We don’t have to do anything with it if it’s in here, we want to leave it alone.

“We want to verify accounts from people that have seen something and just clear up that they’re not going mad.

“So far we’ve not had sightings from any ‘crack-pots’, they’ve all been from respected people.

“There’s no point in scare-mongering, we just believe that there is something in there that shouldn’t be in there, or has grown to such a size that it is being labelled a monster.”

First published at 13:14, Friday, 19 March 2010
Published by http://www.nwemail.co.uk

http://www.nwemail.co.uk/home/love-life/hunt-for-bownessie-1.685945
(Submitted by Mark North)

Monday, March 8, 2010

Friday, January 29, 2010

Will 'Bownessie' be found in Windermere?

2:56pm Thursday 21st January 2010

By Gazette Newsdesk

A SECOND investigation is being planned to find Windermere’s legendary monster after video evidence previously recorded “something big”.

A team of experts, led by Dean Maynard, claimed to have filmed their best ever video evidence of ‘Bownessie’ during their first attempt.

The evidence featured on Sky News, which has prompted the team to investigate the lake again.

The original footage and other highlights will feature on the ITV show ‘The Lakes’ on March 1, with the team’s efforts starting five days afterwards.

“We all firmly believe that something very big is in Windermere,” said Mr Maynard. “What is it? Well, we are hoping to find that out.”

http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/4864441.Will__Bownessie__be_found_in_Windermere_/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Sunday, September 27, 2009

"Bownessie" - The Search for The Windermere Monster

September 20,2009

By Ian Brockwell

After many years of searching for the Loch Ness Monster without success, attention has been directed to what has been called a "distant relative" to Nessie, perhaps aptly named "Bownessie" because of the bow wave it produces and the similarity to the mysterious sightings in Loch Ness.

The first public sighting of "Bownessie" in Lake Windermere was in 2006, and the number of people who claim to have seen something continues to grow.

A recent video certainly seems to support the possibility of some kind of creature in the lake, which created a bow wave of around 20 meters in length.

Other sightings have estimated the size of the creature at anything from 20 to 50 feet long. One witness, who claimed the "creature" passed below him, said the movement in the water was so powerful he thought it was a submarine.

Bownessie has been described as a giant eel or sturgeon, but others claim they have seen a creature with humps (much like some of the reports on the Loch Ness Monster).

The most recent sighting of the creature was in July of this year, when a local hotelier was hit by a three foot wave while swimming.

This weekend saw the launch of a new investigation on the lake, using state of the art equipment and a specially chartered yacht. The team includes Linden Adams, a photographer who gave the creature its name and psychic Dean Maynard.

The odds of finding something in the lake seems reasonably good, but what remains to be seen.

It could of course be a hoax, a giant eel or sturgeon, or even some alien creature (many people have reported seeing UFO's entering lakes in the past). Maybe this is one mystery that might be solved shortly, we shall have to wait and see.

http://newsblaze.com/story/20090920183351ianb.nb/topstory.html

"Bownessie" - The Search for The Windermere Monster

September 20,2009

By Ian Brockwell

After many years of searching for the Loch Ness Monster without success, attention has been directed to what has been called a "distant relative" to Nessie, perhaps aptly named "Bownessie" because of the bow wave it produces and the similarity to the mysterious sightings in Loch Ness.

The first public sighting of "Bownessie" in Lake Windermere was in 2006, and the number of people who claim to have seen something continues to grow.

A recent video certainly seems to support the possibility of some kind of creature in the lake, which created a bow wave of around 20 meters in length.

Other sightings have estimated the size of the creature at anything from 20 to 50 feet long. One witness, who claimed the "creature" passed below him, said the movement in the water was so powerful he thought it was a submarine.

Bownessie has been described as a giant eel or sturgeon, but others claim they have seen a creature with humps (much like some of the reports on the Loch Ness Monster).

The most recent sighting of the creature was in July of this year, when a local hotelier was hit by a three foot wave while swimming.

This weekend saw the launch of a new investigation on the lake, using state of the art equipment and a specially chartered yacht. The team includes Linden Adams, a photographer who gave the creature its name and psychic Dean Maynard.

The odds of finding something in the lake seems reasonably good, but what remains to be seen.

It could of course be a hoax, a giant eel or sturgeon, or even some alien creature (many people have reported seeing UFO's entering lakes in the past). Maybe this is one mystery that might be solved shortly, we shall have to wait and see.

http://newsblaze.com/story/20090920183351ianb.nb/topstory.html

Is Bownessie out there?

11:17am Tuesday 22nd September 2009

By Lizzie Anderson

AN UNUSAL water disturbance and a possible sighting have given further credence to the legend of Windermere’s mysterious monster.

Lakes TV’s joint director, John McKeown captured the strange ripples measuring around 20ft, while filming a documentary about “Bownessie.”

“I had gone up to the view point just before the Beech Hill Hotel to get some establishing shots of the lake,” he said. “As I was filming I saw this long white disturbance in the water so I zoomed in on it. It was quite striking but I figured it must have been caused by the cables of the Windermere Ferry.”

However, when he discovered the ferry was a mile and a half north of the area, his curiosity returned.

“When I got home I uploaded the footage on to my lap top and not only was the disturbance very clear but something actually breaks the surface,” said Mr McKeown, who describes himself as being naturally sceptical. “Essentially, it was a strange pattern in the water, it wasn’t a wave or anything like that. I shot the footage at 8.10am on a Saturday morning and there were no boats on the lake.”

There have been numerous reported sightings of a mysterious creature in the lake over the years, the most recent being in July when Lake District hotelier Thomas Noblett was hit by a three-foot wave while swimming.

In 2006, The Westmorland Gazette reported how Huddersfield University journalism lecturer Steve Burnip, of Hebden Bridge, saw a 20ft serpent-like creature emerge from the waters as he stood at Watbarrow Point across from Waterhead.

Keen to gather more evidence, last weekend, celebrity and sports psychic Dean Maynard and local photographer Linden Adams, who photographed and christened Bownessie in 2007, led a team of investigator out on to England’s longest lake.

Using state of the art equipment, a specially chartered yacht and a sonar boat, the team scoured the depths of Windermere hoping for a glimpse of Bownessie.

Freelance Journalist, Kim Inglis, was one of the passengers on board.

“I was looking at a flock of seagulls that were circulating above the lake about 100 metres,” she said. “All of a sudden something came out of the water and before I could say anything it disappeared.”

Her sighting was confirmed by a passenger on the sonar boat, who also witnessed a head emerge from the lake.

“I would describe it as a head but I wouldn’t go beyond that as you start imagining things,” said Ms Inglis. “I definitely saw something. I believe it was probably just a big fish but I still think the idea of Bownessie is fascinating and it has put the region on the map, which is a good thing.”

To watch Mr Mckeown’s footage, which has since been broadcast on Sky News, visit www.lakestv.net.

http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/4641923.Is_Bownessie_out_there_/

Is Bownessie out there?

11:17am Tuesday 22nd September 2009

By Lizzie Anderson

AN UNUSAL water disturbance and a possible sighting have given further credence to the legend of Windermere’s mysterious monster.

Lakes TV’s joint director, John McKeown captured the strange ripples measuring around 20ft, while filming a documentary about “Bownessie.”

“I had gone up to the view point just before the Beech Hill Hotel to get some establishing shots of the lake,” he said. “As I was filming I saw this long white disturbance in the water so I zoomed in on it. It was quite striking but I figured it must have been caused by the cables of the Windermere Ferry.”

However, when he discovered the ferry was a mile and a half north of the area, his curiosity returned.

“When I got home I uploaded the footage on to my lap top and not only was the disturbance very clear but something actually breaks the surface,” said Mr McKeown, who describes himself as being naturally sceptical. “Essentially, it was a strange pattern in the water, it wasn’t a wave or anything like that. I shot the footage at 8.10am on a Saturday morning and there were no boats on the lake.”

There have been numerous reported sightings of a mysterious creature in the lake over the years, the most recent being in July when Lake District hotelier Thomas Noblett was hit by a three-foot wave while swimming.

In 2006, The Westmorland Gazette reported how Huddersfield University journalism lecturer Steve Burnip, of Hebden Bridge, saw a 20ft serpent-like creature emerge from the waters as he stood at Watbarrow Point across from Waterhead.

Keen to gather more evidence, last weekend, celebrity and sports psychic Dean Maynard and local photographer Linden Adams, who photographed and christened Bownessie in 2007, led a team of investigator out on to England’s longest lake.

Using state of the art equipment, a specially chartered yacht and a sonar boat, the team scoured the depths of Windermere hoping for a glimpse of Bownessie.

Freelance Journalist, Kim Inglis, was one of the passengers on board.

“I was looking at a flock of seagulls that were circulating above the lake about 100 metres,” she said. “All of a sudden something came out of the water and before I could say anything it disappeared.”

Her sighting was confirmed by a passenger on the sonar boat, who also witnessed a head emerge from the lake.

“I would describe it as a head but I wouldn’t go beyond that as you start imagining things,” said Ms Inglis. “I definitely saw something. I believe it was probably just a big fish but I still think the idea of Bownessie is fascinating and it has put the region on the map, which is a good thing.”

To watch Mr Mckeown’s footage, which has since been broadcast on Sky News, visit www.lakestv.net.

http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/4641923.Is_Bownessie_out_there_/