I received an email from researcher Kim Schlotmann, who has been looking into the mysterious film taken by paracryptozoologist Jon-Erik Beckjord (1939-2008). I say the film is mysterious in the sense that few have seen it let alone know much about it (though we have a couple of stills shown below). Kim provides some answers as I reproduce his words to me below. One other aspect of Beckjord that fascinates me as much as his film was his claim that Tim Dinsdale confessed to him in private that he also believed Nessie was a paranormal phenomenon and recounted the tale of how received a visit from ghouls and demons in his boat, Water Horse when moored off Foyers. Perhaps the resolution to that is for another day.
But enough of my words ....
I promised to tell you about my results in
researching Jon-Erik Beckjord’s famous Nessie wormhole film. It took me a long
and hard time investigating this. Cryptozoology nowadays has to struggle with
some serious problems: Possible pieces of evidence (photos, film footages etc.)
get lost forever (as, for example, the McRae film), bloggers and researchers
often don’t even give detailed sources for their claims (that’s a huge problem:
I have to investigate the origin of many cryptozoological claims by myself
because the bloggers don’t tell their readers in which newspaper and in which
issue of this newspaper they found a special sighting report – this madness has
to stop!
If I had done that when I was studying at my university [I have a
bachelor’s degree in Germanistics and Philosophy and a master’s degree in
Philosophy], my professors would have kicked my ass out of the institution for
not following the scientific rules. And one of the biggest problems:
Unfortunately, many researchers refuse to cooperate and don’t even answer
replies when they are politely asked for something. All of these negative
aspects are very damaging for cryptozoology’s reputation and finally lead to
the sad result that mainstream scientists insult this discipline as “pseudoscience”.
I can only appeal to all persons who are
involved in this field – may they be laymen or professionals – that they cite
sighting reports and other claims in a detailed and correct way.
Anyway, let’s talk about Beckjord’s film.
In their Book The Mammoth Encyclopedia of Unsolved Mysteries, authors Colin
Wilson and Damon Wilson tell us the following (have bought this book at Amazon,
but it’s not delivered yet, so I can’t cite the precise page):
„ […] many people agreed that it showed a
white, shape-shifting thing that was not a reptile“.
Both authors describe the audience’s reaction
when seeing a 16 mm film made by Jon-Erik Beckjord at the shores of Loch Ness
in 1983. He allegedly presented this film at the end of the International
Society of Cryptozoology conference in Edinburgh
in 1987. I asked Dr. Karl Shuker and Professor Henry Bauer, both were not able
to remember this film’s screening. However, the Wilsons’ book is not the only source
mentioning such a film.
In his book Hidden
Animals. Field Guide to Satsquatch,
Chupacabra, and Other Elusive Creatures, author Michael Newton cites
Beckjord as follows:
“ ‘[Nessie] ‚is not a biological full time zoological animal but rather that it is a paranormal/supernatural/ wormhole-traversing being that will never be caught nor killed. And we have a film that shows it coming from a space-time wormhole, and going later back into it’ “
(Newton 2000, 91).
“ ‘[Nessie] ‚is not a biological full time zoological animal but rather that it is a paranormal/supernatural/ wormhole-traversing being that will never be caught nor killed. And we have a film that shows it coming from a space-time wormhole, and going later back into it’ “
(Newton 2000, 91).
It is unclear if both these films – the film
mentioned by the Wilsons’
on the one hand and the film mentioned by Michael Newton on the other hand –
are one and the same, but I think so.
The idea that such a film would actually
exist fascinated me, so I decided to investigate this film’s fate. I started
with cryptozoologists who attended the 1987 International Society of
Cryptozoology conference, but as I said above, they couldn’t remind if Beckjord
really screened his film. I also tried to contact a woman named Christine
“Chris” Pitts, who seemed to have been Beckjord’s fiancee. Again, this was a
dead end (I contacted eight different women with the name Christine Pitts – I
only got one more or less rude answer from one woman, the rest was not
answering my letters. So the real Chris Pitts, it seems, was not among the
women I wrote to). So what to do?
I wrote a letter to Beckjord’s sister Pamela
Beckjord-Forbes. Direct hit! She responded and was so friendly to give me the
e-mail contact details of a long-time research fellow of Beckjord, a woman with
the name Dr. Molly Squire. So I asked Dr. Squire what happened to this
famous Nessie wormhole footage. On July 31, 2016, she e-mailed me:
The film is still being catalogued with
the rest of Erik's cryptozoological materials. I'll tell you he also made
some still photos from the film. Forget the words shapeshift and wormhole. It's
fuzzy looking when blown up like any normal photography is that is taken from
shore to a distance in the water. But it still shows something long in the water
moving with an apparent head. The object is nowhere near any boat nor does it
show any connection to any boats wake even though that is one skeptical
argument given against the likelihood of Erik having filmed a type of
anomaly.
All materials are at the China Flats, Willow Creek, California
historical museum. All is being catalogued and plans are to scan all and have
the archival materials available over the Internet for researchers to view
online. It'll be at least a couple more years from what I guess. I'm
working on Erik's biography and may have a still image I can scan
to send you. I'm writing this on a new phone. Came home from
vacation and can't find my computer.
P.S. I am willing to swear that I've seen
the loch Ness footage and it does appear Erik has something alive long and fast
moving.
I then asked her what the exact technical
details of this films were, i.e. when this film was shot, with which type of
camera etc. Her following answer was quite confusing. Although the Loch Ness literature in its majority mentions that Beckjord
was at Loch Ness in 1983, Mrs. Squire denied that date (e-mail from August 12,
2016):
1. Not as early as 1983. 86 to fall 88. I say fall
88 instead of early spring 99 because of time Erik liked to go, August to September.
And was probably 87 to 88 fall. I remember equipment shows in a couple of
photos. Seem to remember he said can get finer details in black and white. I
remember Nessie like object being in grainy black and white in enlargement.
Will try to find photo.He kept journals by trip and date. They were turned over
to the repository. Film is there also.
If the whole Nessie literature says that
Beckjord was at the Loch in 1983, why does Dr.
Squire says that this date is not true? However, the actual date is a minor
problem. It might be that the many years since Beckjord’s Nessie adventure
blurred her memories (No offence here, of course! Memories fading away is
something that happens to all of us sooner or later). But the most important
fact is that we now know what happened to one of the most legendary films in
the history of LNM research.
I live here in Germany. I have no opportunity to
travel to California
and to verify if the information Dr. Squire gave me are true. So I cannot check
the validity of her claims. But I would be glad if some of your U.S. based readers could go to the Willow Creek
– China Flat
Museum, 38949
CA-299, Willow Creek, CA 95573
and look if Beckjord’s whole cryptozoological legacy is there. I wrote to the
museum’s staff, but unfortunately, they didn’t reply. Maybe some other
researcher has more luck than I had in contacting the museum’s staff.
I’m working on a scientific
article that deals with my investigation of this film’s fate and hope to get it
published soon. When I’ve finished that, I’ll send you the article (but sadly, it
will be in German, so you’ve been warned ;-) ).
Anyway, I hope I could make
my contribution to solving this long-standing mystery.
The author can be contacted at lochnesskelpie@gmail.com