Tuesday 22 February 2022

Review of Lochend - Monster Hunting on the Run

 


Joe Zarzynski, seasoned hunter of the monsters of Lake Champlain and Loch Ness has published his autobiography and I review it here. I pre-ordered this in mid-December when it was announced, but it took until a couple of weeks ago before it finally arrived. As the title suggests, it is a biography that spans two worlds, running and hunting. The running refers to Joe's love for marathons and the other was his second love of cryptid hunting.

To be more specific, Joe crafts his story around an ultra-marathon run he did from Fort Augustus to Lochend in 1984. An ultra-marathon is running a distance beyond the 26 miles of the classic marathon. Before that, Joe tells us how he got into the two pursuits around the same time and how they grew together as he ran marathons into the 1980s with his interest in cryptozoology beginning in the mid 1970s and developed into expeditions at Loch Ness and his more local Lake Champlain for at least another ten years.

Joe got to Loch Ness in 1975 and thus began a series of trips as he tells us about the various characters we have got to know about through other books, videos and so on. The list includes Gregory Brussey, Alex Campbell, Tim Dinsdale, Robert Rines, Roy Mackal, Adrian Shine, Winifred Cary (whom I mentioned in my last article) and others.

We are regaled with tales of Joe working with these people and their projects and some helping him at Lake Champlain. Add to this his trips to other lochs reputed to have monsters and we have an enjoyable mosaic of tales to read. Indeed, the chapters recounting the monster and people landmarks along his marathon run of 1984 are also informative and entertaining. Indeed, Joe may be the only person to have seen both Nessie and Champ!

Joe eventually moved into marine archaeology but never lost his belief in cryptids or the taste for the hunt. His later interest in underwater wrecks was preceded by his sonar and scuba searches which gives us interesting insights into the sunken Wellington bomber of Loch Ness, Marty Klein's stone artifacts and the Loch Ness Monster prop lost in the loch around 1969.

Now I am no fan of marathon running or athletics in general. I only ever really took an interest in the 100m and 200m sprints and watching the likes of Alan Wells, Carl Lewis and Usain Bolt. One thing that did chime was Joe's 1984 Loch Ness run and his encounter with the cars and lorries racing down the road. Joe tells how he had to dodge these vehicles as he ran.

I can totally concur as I once had to walk from a parking layby to a spot of interest a couple of miles down the A82 and just opposite Foyers. That was not an easy trip as I had to keep a keen eye out for approaching vehicles and moving quickly to the safest spot. That may have been jumping over a wall into the bush and grass or just stepping into the ditch as there was nothing resembling a path. The things you do in the name of research.

So runs the story of Joe Zarzynski, marathon running and Loch Ness. Joe speculated that he may have been the first person to run a marathon along Loch Ness. He may well have been, it was not something I would know of, but I thought I would check the newspaper archives for any predecessors. Admittedly, most long distance athletes were of the aquatic variety as various people have swam the length of the loch. There was even a diver who walked along Loch Ness underwater!

However, there may have been at least one person who ran the length of Loch Ness back in February 1960. At that time, the owner of the Butlin holiday resorts had put up a £5,000 prize for a national walk from John O' Groats to Lands End. The News Chronicle for 29th February gives an update on the competition:

Late last night Robinson and John Grundy, from Wakefield, Yorks, were both at Fort Augustus. 19 miles farther along the loch. about 150 miles from the start Robinson arrived at 8:50. after covering the last 42 miles in 11 hours 40 minutes; Grundy, a marathon runner. who runs all the way, arrived at 8:12 after taking 8 hours. 20 minutes for the same stretch. Robinson. who lives at Maidenhead, Berks, was a member of the Oxford University cross-country team in 1953. 

So it appears a John Grundy ran 42 miles from Dingwall to Fort Augustus 24 years before Joe, though it surprised me he was allowed to run and not walk. Well, you could argue it wasn't a marathon along Loch Ness, I will leave others to define what constitutes a marathon run.

The book is accurate and balanced throughout, the only error of note that I saw was that he placed the fake Marmaduke Wetherell hippo prints at Dores, when it was actually further south near Foyers. It is apparent Joe still believes in the likelihood of large creatures in Loch Ness and Lake Champlain and I would like to have read more about what he classes as the best sightings, photos, etc from his perspective as a seasoned monster hunter. I guess that includes such items as the Mansi photograph.

All in all, a book I recommend to Nessie and Champ lovers.


Comments can also be made at the Loch Ness Mystery Blog Facebook group.

The author can be contacted at lochnesskelpie@gmail.com






37 comments:

  1. My book still hasn't arrived!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Would Nessie and Champ be the same type of creature then?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That is a question for someone who has expertise in both creatures.

      Delete
    2. @ JF Nobody knows exactly what a Nessie or a Champ is, so the question is a moot one.

      Delete
    3. Champ is an interesting case, as there have been sound recordings made, and they seem to be in the whale family!

      Delete
    4. Would these be the famous water breathing whales?

      Delete
    5. Just saying that the clicking sound recorded to them sounded like what a Beluga whale or a dolphin would sound like!

      Delete
    6. Has any ‘clicking’ ever been recorded from under the waters of Loch Ness ?

      Delete
    7. Some unusual noises were recorded with the hydrophone experiments of the LNIB in 1970. Where these are now is a matter of conjecture.

      Delete
    8. No the 144 khz champ echolocation was close to a killer whale but wasent the same. Liz von muggenthaler fauna acoustics laboratory on rense
      Dennis jay hall on rense says champ is a tanystropheus a marine reptile
      .smells like a snake

      Delete
  3. The Zachary Quinto fronted "In Search Of..." did a 2 part special on our beastie. They theorised that it is entirely possible that Champ & Nessie are the same species. Based on the sightings at least. They even had their own run in (which was confirmed by the divers facebook page) with Nessie, unfortunately the camera just caught a fleeting glimpse of something, the divers said it was big though and was feeding on the salmon at the point they come into the loch.

    Something sceptics forget is that there is still so much of the planet unexplored, especially at the depths of the oceans etc. Who knows what could be out there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Saw that, as right at end seemed like saw something large with a tail scoot by them!

      Delete
  4. When I had to move from the NYC/Long Island area, I took a couple trips up to Plattsburg, New York, along Lake Champlain. Unfortunately upstate NY, comprising mostly of old industrial era remnants and farms, consists mostly of rather rundown homes (at least in my budget range). Would've loved to spend the rest of my days monster hunting in situ.

    Wound up in florida though, cuz that's where my siblings are, and having become an old geezer, and as much as I hate florida, best be near family.
    Saving grace was being able to afford a brand new home, with a wetland/woods in the back, which wouldn't have been possible in NY.
    What sucks is that I hate flat landscapes, warm/hot weather, and sunshine. My operating temp is between 25-70 degrees fahrenheit, along with mostly grey drizzly type days. I think maybe I used to live somewhere in the UK in a previous life, lol.

    Jon

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Look on the bright side Jon. You can keep your eyes peeled for the skunk ape!

      Delete
    2. Well it does tend to stink around here nights sometimes and it ain't because of Skunk Ape. Although, I had looked up bigfoot sightings and there apparently was one near me back in 2012. Florida ranks #2 state in ufo sightings so there is that, but I haven't seen one. Did have some wild pigs tearing up my lawn a few summers ago that forced me to have a fence put up, lol.

      Delete
  5. Some people said this was taken at Lake Champlain (not Loch Ness) but the actual location seems unsure. Some say it was an Elephant seal - is that what a seal looks like in the water? Neck and head sticks out briefly. Looks monster-like!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yiwIcsPBTQ

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My first impression is Alaska, and seal. Good-sized one, too. If only we could get such clarity of video at LN or LC.

      Delete
    2. If that was a large seal, did look a lot like how many have described Nessie!

      Delete
    3. Yeah, looks nothing like upstate NY or Champlain. Looks like ocean beyond as well. Definitely seal.
      Jon

      Delete
    4. Could either Nessie or Champ be a large unknown seal version?

      Delete
    5. Unlikely, seals would be easily seen in Loch Ness.

      Delete
    6. The giant long neck seal is a myth. Seals being seals, giant seals would be seen in abundance just as ordinary seals are. Why are there no photos of giant seals as there are of regular seals? Simple, there is no such animal. Toss that theory out the window along with giant catfish, salamander, turtle, giant this or that etc, etc. Giant animals of the regular kind only exist in tacky, cheesy 1950s SF movies "Attack of the Giant Seal" Nah, don't think so.

      Delete
    7. Attack of the Giant Eel! :)

      Delete
    8. LOL Read "The Loch", a novel by Steve Alten about the LNM as a giant, vicious mutant eel terrorizing Loch Ness.

      Delete
    9. I think giant eel's exist.

      Delete
    10. I think that would be one of the best answers to what Nessie might be, as does not require an unknown animal to be the explanation!

      Delete
  6. Saw Adrian
    Shine last night on Mythical Beasts...he seems to have u-turned on his Sturgeon theory and now advocates the Giant Eel theory that I mentioned to him 15 years ago...also, he is personally responsible for all the DNA testing the last few years...shameless charlatan.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Have they not found really big eels in the loch, or in dams and in rivers around area?

      Delete
    2. I suggest you go back to your previous comments asking the same questions.

      Delete
    3. Seems that we are running out of likely animals that Nessie could be, as needs to be able to survive cold and deep loch, rarely surface, and not be well known to the locals!

      Delete
    4. So. JesusFan, you have asked the same questions about a hundred times, what are your final conclusions?

      Delete
    5. Still think that the best answer is that there are more then one type of creature being seen as a nessie over the years, and seems that Unknown amphibian, giant eel, and maybe unknown seal covers it

      Delete
    6. @ jesusFan And you are not running out of the same questions. LOL

      Delete
    7. Are we there yet? LOL

      Delete
    8. You Nessie fans want to see a real spooky Cryptid, please check out the Mi Dog man reports!

      Delete