Occasionally as I research the subject of the Loch Ness Monster, the  odd shiny piece turns up in the dross. I was in the National Library of Scotland recently and was perusing some old Scottish publications  in search of new Nessie information.
Amongst other items, I reserved  some copies of the 
Scots Magazine from 1990 for the reason that a land  sighting of Nessie from 1932 had been featured in the June issue by a  Colonel Fordyce. That particular sighting is already known to  cryptozoologists but another one turned up in a later issue.  My  reasoning for this action being that when the Fordyce article was  published it may have elicited a response in the "
Letters to the Editor"  page at a later date.
And so it was that a letter appeared subsequently  in the August issue from the Reverend G. Mackenzie of West Chiltington,  West Sussex. He was not the witness to this event, but he recounts how  he was an Oxford Undergraduate between 1928 and 1931 and had been  invited by his tutor with some other Scots to an evening with  the Right Reverend Sir David Hunter Blair.  The  significance to us is that Sir David (pictured below) was once the Abbot of Fort  Augustus Abbey on the shores of Loch Ness. At some point in the  conversation, he was asked if he had seen the Loch Ness Monster. His  answer was "
no" but he said that one of his monks had seen it emerge  from the woods and enter the waters of the loch. The Reverend Mackenzie  adds no further details other than the description offered by Colonel  Fordyce sounded very much the same as what he was told the monk saw.  So ends our brief but interesting story.

What can we make of it?  Firstly,  my list of land sightings adds up to thirty three and this one was not  in it. I am not aware of it being in the Loch Ness literature and so it  looks like a new story and swells the ranks to thirty four alleged land  encounters with Nessie. Rev Mackenzie's address was given in the letter  but given the information in it, he would be aged about 100 years now  and I suspect he is no longer with us.
Secondly,  his letter implies that they were talking about the creature between  1928 and 1931. However, the monster did not become international news  until 1933. One might presume an error was made in the date of the  meeting, but since this blog believes that the Loch Ness Water Horse was  known to locals (and monks) prior to 1933, we have no problem with  this. It transpires that David Hunter Blair was abbot of the Abbey  between 1912 and 1917 which suggests the event may have happened between those years. However, one cannot be certain of this.
Thirdly, a monk was claimed as the witness. Now this is the type of witness beloved of Nessie books. Someone regarded as honest, upright and not as likely to fabricate an account.  For this reason, reports by clergy, policemen and other respected vocations are often held up above other sighting reports. This is  quite reasonable as such people have more to lose if caught lying  (though this does not preclude the idea that they misidentified an  object as Nessie). So we quite like the fact that a monk was the stated  witness (and told by another cleric - Sir David Hunter Blair).
Fourthly,  we have the brief account itself. The story itself is not unique in its  tenor, we have several accounts of large beasts with long necks and  bulky bodies waddling/lumbering out of bushes in front of witnesses and  then proceeding to disappear into the deep waters of Loch Ness. Where it  may differ is in how Rev. Mackenzie says the description sounded "
very  much the same" as the Fordyce episode which describes an animal with a  long neck, small head, humped back but with hair and hooved feet. Which parts of this strange Nessie description tallies  with the monk's encounter we cannot tell. They may only agree in the  long neck, small head and humped back of general Nessie lore but then  again the hairy hide and hooves may have a part. So therein lies a  mystery within a mystery.
Looking at a map of the area around Fort Augustus Abbey suggests a likely place for the encounter. The Abbey is at the mouth of the River Tarff (which was discussed in a previous 
blog). At this point there is a wooded area across the river from the Abbey and this looks the likely spot from which the creature emerged from the trees. Speculating, "x" would mark a possible place of the witness and the circled area is the forest where the creature may have emerged from in his view. Curiously, this proposed place of encounter cannot be more than a few hundred yards north of the land sighting of the beast reported by Margaret Munro in 1936.

But did our astonished monk rather misidentify what he saw? Could he have  merely seen a deer or otter enter the water? Now I may be going out on a  limb here, but I would have thought that a resident of the shores of  Loch Ness would not have a problem knowing a deer or an otter when they saw  one. Yet we are asked to believe that witnesses to such events do indeed  fail to recognise known animals for something quite frankly astonishingly different. Methinks this is special pleading but then again such people  would retort that suggesting the monk saw an extraordinary creature is  also special pleading.
Pick your conclusion according to your prejudices, I say.
We  would also note that this monk may have seen his creature prior to the  media frenzy of 1933. Skeptics of Nessie have this theory that once a  person enters the environs of Loch Ness they undergo a temporary metamorphosis which warps their perception of reality and they begin to see monsters where there are none. Once they are somewhere near  Inverness, their brains are handed back to them and normal service is  resumed.  But  as for local residents such as monks, had they undergone a permanent disabling of their mental faculties? I would not think so and their testimonies need to be given due weight.
 Interestingly, Sir Hunter Blair wrote an article for the Catholic newspaper "Universe" in January 1934 which hints from its title that  the monk's experience was not forgotten:
THE  ELUSIVE  MONSTER  OF LOCH NESS - WHY  IT  MAY  BE CAPABLE  OF  LIVING  ON  LAND OR  IN  WATER
  Let   me  say  at  once  that  by  the above  heading  I  do  not  intend   for  a moment  to  imply  that  I  entertain  the slightest  doubt  as   to  the  real  and  objective   existence  of  a  strange  and  unknown  beast  in  the  profundity  of   the great loch which  I  have  known  intimately  for  more  than  half   a  century.  Elusive  he  is  and  must  be,  as  long as  it  remains   unpredictable  when  or where  he  will  make  his  appearance  in the   length  and  breadth  of  the  vast sheet  of  water  which  is  his   habitat. But  during  the  autumn  weeks which  I  spent  at  Fort   Augustus,  and still  more  as  a  result  of  correspondence  since,  I   became  and  remain  absolutely  convinced,  on  the  testimony of  a   veritable  cloud  of  credible  eyewitnesses,  which  it  would  be   absurd us  well  as  unreasonable  to  flout  or  to ignore,  that  this   weird  and  mysterious creature  does  really  and  truly  haunt these   deep  waters,  not  as  a  casual visitor,  but  as  a  resident  —  of   how longstanding  who  can  say.
Since  the  Editor  of  the   'Universe' asked  me  to  write  this  short    paper,  I have  thought  it  well  to  confirm  -the impression,  or   rather  conviction, which  I  formed  a  few  months  ago   by communicating  with  a  member  of  the Fort  Augustus  community,   who  enjoys  a  high  and  just  repute  as  one intimately  acquainted   with  the  habits, language,  and  folklore  of  the  West Highlands,   and  also  as  an  antiquarian and  archaeologist  of  high   attainments.
I  asked  for  a  concise  answer  to several  questions,   the  first  being,  has the monster  been  actually  seen  by any   members  of  the  Benedictine  Community?  ''Yes,"   he  replies, "by  four  or  five (whom  he  names)  independently   and on  different  occasions;  also  by  several of  the  employees  and   workmen  attached  to  the  Abbey.  Two  of  the  elder  boys  of  the   Abbey  School,  and also  a  clerical  student,  had  likewise seen   it".  Two  of  the  most,  remarkable  witnesses  are  first,  an   ex-engineer  captain  of  the  Royal  Navy  resident  at Fort  Augustus,   a  man  of  high  ability, training,  and  experience,  who  himself saw   the  animal  and  who  has  been  for months  past  collecting  and   sifting  all the  evidence  on  the  subject;  and, secondly,  the  owner   of  Invergarry (the  old  home  of  the  Macdonnels), who  was  suddenly   converted  from  entire  scepticism  by  watching  (with  his daughter)   the  creature's revolutions and  gyrations  in  the loch for  a   continuous  period  of  40  minutes.
It  is  perfectly  obvious,  from   the  letters  of  my  learned  correspondent at Fort  Augustus,  that  he  brushes  aside as  puerile  and  untenable   the  absurd theories  which  has  been  put  forward as  to  this   mysterious  visitor  to,  or rather  resident  in, Loch Ness being either   a  grampus,  a  lizard,  a  conger eel,  a  sea  serpent,  an  upturned   boat, an  inflated  rubber  bag,  or  a  lump  of seaweed!
All  of   which  he  being  a sensible  man,  dismisses  (to  use  Disraeli's   memorable  phrase)  as  merely 'the  hare-brained  chatterings  of   irresponsible  frivolity.'  What  my  friend  maintains,  after carefully   weighing  all  the  available evidence,  and  giving  much  thought  to the   subject,  is,  briefly,  that  this strange  amphibian  belongs  to   the far-back,  but  post-glacial  period, when  the  great  chain   of  lakes, Loch Ness, Loch Lochy,  and Loch Oich  of Scotland,  were   still  connected  with the  sea. These  denizens  of  the  deep   waters have  in  the  course  of  ages  become fresh  water,  not  salt   water,  amphibians.  This  particular  specimen, having  been   (according  to  the  generally  accepted  theory)  disturbed  by the   recent  extensive  blastings  in connection  with  the  road   making around Loch Ness,  found  its  way  to the  surface,  and  in  the   continuous sunshine  of  the  past  summer,  took  a fancy  to  the   upper  world,  which  it  apparently  still  retains,  though   the summer  is  long  over.
My  correspondent  believes  the  animal,  on   all  the  evidence,  to  approximate  to  the  type  of  the   Plesiosaurus. Let  me  record  my  own  belief  that  it  is a  true   amphibian,  capable  of living either  on  land  or  in  water,  furnished with  lungs  as  well   as  gills,  with  four rudimentary  legs  or  paddles,  an   extraordinarily  flexible  neck,  broad  shoulders,  and  a  strong,   broad,  flat  tail, capable  of  violently  churning  up  the water   round,  it. I  hazard  the  conjecture  that  it  belongs  to  no   existing  species,  but  to  the Devonian  period,  oldest  but  one   in the  history  of  the  world,  and  dating back  some  hundreds  of   millions  of years.
I have little doubt that Hunter Blair's contact at the Abbey was Father Cyril Dieckhoff - enthusiastic researcher of Nessie. The retired Royal navy captain was possibly Captain Donald Munro who also was a monster hunter.
But Mr Hunter Blair believed the creature to be amphibious and quite capable of being at home in water or land. Hence there is no surprise that this mysterious creature was seen lumbering out of a wooded area.
Our final enquiry would be why the Loch Ness Monster is drawn to venture into forest before returning to its aquatic home? Does it seek food on land? There are not many reasons why a brute beast would take to land apart from food, shelter and reproduction. One can speculate endlessly as to which one (or any) may be relevant to this creature.
One may even add the musings of the aforementioned Colonel Fordyce at the top of this article who suggested the monster could even be a land creature hidden in the Moidart Mountains to the east of Loch Ness, which spends its time between hill and loch in uncertain proportions!
Curiouser and curiouser ....