I once met a guy at the busstop. I pressume he was homeless and we started to have a conversation. After a while the bus to Scotland arrived and I could see him feeling in his pockets after what I pressumed was some change. I asked: "Can I help you with anything?". And he answered:"I need about tree fiddy". And thats when I realised I was speaking to a god damn pleasiosaur.
Im severely dissapointed, ireland deserves her own geographical name, seperate from britain entirely, Fuairfaidh gach Éireann a saoirse. Tá brón orm, leabhraim gáeilge go dona
Why would anyone want to prove Bigfoot is real?? Can you imagine what would happen? The thing would be hunted to extinction. Dried Bigfoot penis is a cure for impotence. “Impotence” means your wiener doesn’t work for you people who are about to type it into your google search.
As a Scottish child I used to always go to the Loch Ness and swim in the middle of it while shouting “nessy where are you” my grandma (who thought the Loch Ness monster was real) would scream at me to get back out the water. Good old days
We also now know that Loch Ness is *FULL of eels.* Like, an insane number of eels. & the first story about the blob monster kinda sounds like a bunch of seals flopping across the road in a close group.
At the end of The Lost World from 1925 you see the Brontosaurus leaving London and swimming back to his home. The imagery must've been the inspiration for the surgeon photo (which looks almost identical) even more so than the scene from King Kong (though that movie did more to popularize the idea of giant monsters).
I'm glad you brought up the strange reality of spotting animals in poor conditions. I was driving home, one night and saw what looked like an amorphous blob, undulating across the street. Once my headlights were upon the "creature," I saw it was a scampering group of groundhogs, all running towards some shrubs. the truth is stranger than fiction. ^^
Da, you fine dandies so proud, so cock-sure! Dancin' about with yer head full o' eyeballs! Come 'n get me I say. I'll be waitin' on ya with a whiff of the ol' brimstone! *I'm a grim bloody fable with an unhappy bloody end!*
Trey you scared the shit out of me I was dosing of to your nice peaceful video when all of a sudden the ear piercing sound of static destroyed my ear but still can't wait for part 2
Me too! Not cool, Trey! What, you were doing an episode where the monster couldn't be attributed to barn owls so you just had to force a scare in there? Not cool, man!
The Loch Ness Monster is a true legend! Definition of legend : a popular story handed down trough many generations and popularly accepted as real, but with no actual evidence to give it any authenticity , in other words a myth. The Loch Ness Monster in a nutshell.
Yeah that annoyed me a tiny little bit (I'm half English, half Scottish), it's the freaking British Isles! First time I've never heard our islands be called the English Isles actually.
Oisín Smith Not really. Since the collection of islands are offically known as the British Isles. And British is a term which includes English, Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish (formerly also being used to refer to all people living in the British Empire), along with the citizens of Overseas Territories. Calling them the Scottish, Welsh or Irish Isles would be as stupid as calling them the English Isles.
15:48 Interestingly enough there is actually a plesiosaur in the original 1933 movie too. The snake like creature that comes out of the dark pools in Kong's lair and tries to choke Anne Darrow was a plesiosaur, it's a bit easy to mistake it for a snake since it is depicted to behave like a boa constrictor but it had a body and flippers that are visible when Kong fights it and pulls it out of the water. Pop culture of that time really did perceive plesiosaurs to be sea serpents that could stick their heads out of the water to attack.
I'm Croatian, me and my dad get pisset when ppl say the English isles instead of Scotland, Ireland and Wales, it's not that fucking hard to list them all out...
harry potter version of nessie is a shapeshifting magical animal that took a random appearance to scare off people away but then started liking the attention and chose to use the most popular form. i just thought its kinda neat
More like a cocaine transporter. I don't think Colombia is a big producer of cocaine, but they definitely won the geography lottery when it comes to transportation.
Nope, not something to be proud of, but Colombia is one of the big cocaine producers countries in the world. The main transporter is México since they are next to U.S.A, the principal cocaine and drug consumer in the world.
There was a book I read on Nessie way back when I was like... 10. My memory is a little faulty, but I remember there was a story some kid claimed back in the 1700 - 1800's that on his way to school, he saw a long necked creature swimming closely to the shore. He gave the creature an apple, and it swam off sinking back under the water. No one ever talks about that "sighting."
I feel like the best term is to say that it's basically a meme of pop culture, a specific concept (a monster around the area) that changed and evolved as different people saw it as different things until it finally found a shape that worked best and cemented itself into the public consciousness, growing and thriving in that form as more and more people submitted themselves to the specific idea of it.
One theory is the sightings may be large eels coming through the River Ness from the North Sea or the Atlantic Ocean into Lock Ness following salmon also coming in the same way from the North Sea. Salmon fishing season on the loch is January to October. I'm looking at site listing sightings and interestingly the majority are during the salmon season. There were a few in November and December but the bulk were from January to October. Couple that with the large amount of eel DNA found in the loch during a recent study and one could say that maybe most of the sightings are eels.
what about mokele mbembe? is it just a mistaken giraffe? because there was a documentary showing a group of tribespeople pointing to a brontosaurus instead of a giraffe when asked to point to the creature.
Dalibor Jovanovic As much as I wish that wasn't true, and that a sauropod had somehow survived into the present day, it's reality and I have to accept it.
On the other hand, it's a place that has been exploited for almost a century and has experienced war for another half a century. Any living sauropod then won't survive now.
I have visited Loch Ness and while I didn't see any monsters I did see a lot of Scottish people earning money on tourists and selling Nessie merchandise. The area around Inverness were dirt poor back in 1933 and the influx of tourists have made their life far better and tourists get to visit a very beautiful landscape (no, I didn't visit it for the monster, me and some friends were hiking around Scotland) so as I see it everybody wins. The locals needed a tourist magnet and they invented one that was far cheaper then to build a huge amusement park. Scots are not stupid but the highland economy were totally screwed up after Culloden until 1933. And there is a lot to see in the area and great hiking trails, I recommend it but don't expect any monsters and bring something that keeps mosquitoes away. Today I think whiskey tourists are at least as common as people looking for Nessie though but that wasn't really a thing until the 80s.
Ah yes, the Poptropica loch ness monster. Have you ever seen The Water Horse? It's my favorite depiction of the monster. Wonderful film, albeit geared towards children.
A lifelong believer in Nessie, I lost my belief a few years ago after seeing a documentary which provided enough evidence that all the photos and films I knew were misinterpretations of natural and artificial phenomena. And of course the surgeons photo was identified as an outright hoax. I'm looking forward to viewing both this vid and the followup.
I found out this week a guy i work with had never heard of the loc ness monster. I had to play him the beginning of your video. Now I'm rewatching yet again.
Maybe Nessie is an alien blob?....trying to adapt its form to suit its new environment?....What?...Hell, makes as much sense as all these other cryptids
Hey Trey, I was wondering if I could make a suggestion for a possible future video. Back in 2002, the Discovery Channel had this miniseries called "The Future is Wild", which theorized what life on Earth could be like millions of years after the disappearance of humanity. I thought it was pretty interesting back then, but looking back, I'm wondering exactly how scientifically plausible some of their proposed situations are. I was curious if you'd be interested in making a video about it? Of course, it's all up to you. I just thought I'd share an idea I had.
Watching this again I'm reminded of the sketches that were made during the Son of Sam killings in New York. Many of the descriptions of the killer varied to the point people started to have serious doubts that the killer operated alone. Nevertheless, there was never serious evidence against anyone else involved other than the killer who was convicted of the crimes.
I think (if they arent normal animals) the camel one was a rouge llama or something while the otter, seal, and blob ones were the same creature just the blob was someone who was like rlly frightened and couldnt make out what it was, the otter could've been a baby or juvenile one (which would imply theres multiple monsters, which would make sense considering all the sightings cant just be one monster), and the seal one (the one we all know) is the adult one (hence why we never saw more of the baby one, cuz it grew up into the adult one). Or maybe the blob was the female one when she was rlly pregnant (which would explain the consequential existence of the baby one. also this theory I think about the blob one makes more sense for the Loch Ness family theory so ignore the more probable frightened people theory). But this is all assuming that the Loch Ness Monster does exist, which I dont think it does
Although this is not proof of anything in the British Isle region including Scotland and Ireland there have been legendary tales of a creature called a Kelpie. The stories of this creature are just as outlandish as these sightings but they do hint of something that could have lived in the Loch before reliable (or unreliable if you prefer) eyewitness accounts have occurred. So Columba's tale isn't the only one that has been passed down from generation to generation; not proof mind you but something that suggests the creature has been sighted far longer than before the 1930s.
@@schizoidboy I'm pretty sure kelpies were associated with rivers and spent most of their time on land, until someone dumb enough to try and ride a creepy black horse in the middle of the woods, until it would dive into the water and drown them, the idiotic rider unable to get off. Kelpies definitely don't support loch Ness monster sightings
00:18 What exactly are the English Isles, and why do leprechaun's come from there and not Ireland? Could it conceivably be that the most famous Scottish export (apart from being ginger and shit at sport) could in fact be....English?
The moment you said 1933 I thought ' same year as King Kong I doubt he'll mention it, as how would it be relevant ' and then it turned out to be relevant after all. Saw Wallace before the video ended, so he strikes again!
There's no Loc Ness monster by deductive reasoning (and scientific water dna testing). The monster is a reptile-like creature so it needs to take in air directly (even dolphins and whale do it). The longest recorded whale holding breath while diving is 222 min. I love cryptids and monsters so I really want Nessie to exist and give Nessie a max of 6 hrs of holding his/her breath. and let's say there's only Nessie by him/herself all these year as Nessie is the last of it's kind so no mate, no offspring popping out of the water to breath air. In a day there's 24 hrs that would mean Nessie by herself would have to come up to breath air 4 times every day. And if she does it that often, she would be seen so much more than reported. Whales come up to breath, and tourists and scientiest were able to catch glimpse of them....why not nessie w/ the Ness see so calm and tranquil unlike the ocean. Not to mention, someone did dna water testing and found a evidence of some kinda eels...so most likely, they may be few eels that grow to big enough size that were mistaken for monster..
I was drawing while watching this in headphones, and that static at the end startled me, damn! great video btw, can't wait for part 2, it would be interesting if nessy was more infact a Tanystropheus, as some sightings state he walks on land as well.
I'm a big fan of cryptids and mostly nessy, i can't wait to see your conclusion on the case! The mothman one was amazing as well, I caught a glimpse of one of those big arctic owls that somehow managed to get south (north carolina to be more specific) as well!.
the article you show at around 9:00 mentions Loch Ness as “being known” for being home for a creature known as the “Water Kelpie(?)”. when was that article written? its shown when youre talking about the first 1933 “sighting”. id like more clarification
Nessie was my grandma's nickname for me. I loved diving down to the bottom in the lake so much as a kid, bobbing up and down, likely scaring the shit out of grandma.
@@King-wg2ou sadly no 😔 i feel like im never gonna figure it out unless i actually message TREY on twitter or something and ask him about the music he used in a video he made years ago LOL
I feel like if a lot of the early sightings were true, they just misidentified known animals, like possibly an escaped farm llama. If something unknown lives in the lake, it is impossible for it to be a plesiosaur for too many reasons to name, and would probably be some kind of aquatic bird, if you want something with a long neck sticking out of the water, or a mammal, and would probably be a herbivore due to a lack of prey animals in the lake. The first blob sighting is interesting though, since it doesn't seem to look like anything known. If they really saw something, I'd want to know what it was. And I'm sorry, but I don't really see how a heard of deer can look like the blob thing. I've lived around deer and seen them day and night. Maybe consider a tarp or large cloth of some sort being blown by the wind?
I dont know why you said that all early encounters differs from one to another. Every single of those encounters except one report the same thing, a long neck (or limb)
There is no monster in that lake. There is no way that such a creature could hide itself from the eyes of humanity for such a long time. We have more than enough technology to detect such a huge creature.
For April Fools 2017, make a parody Cryptid Profile disproving the existence of real animal.
RebelBeamMaster X84 that is a funny idea trey do it pls
RebelBeamMaster X84 he should do it with an animal that is not well known so a lot of people would think the video is doing a real criptid
Fucking seeagulls
How could the blob fish exist? It's so derpy and useless!
y e s
"it resembled a large otter..." *Pulls out drawing of a goblin combined with a lizard*
Hmm yes otter
GOD DAM GAWBLINS!!!!
indominus rex I DON’T LIKE EM!!
The Goblizard is real!
I've done seen it! Right before it shim-shamed off in the lake!
It made off with a homeless man in it's jaws!
Bhhahaha
I once met a guy at the busstop. I pressume he was homeless and we started to have a conversation. After a while the bus to Scotland arrived and I could see him feeling in his pockets after what I pressumed was some change.
I asked: "Can I help you with anything?". And he answered:"I need about tree fiddy".
And thats when I realised I was speaking to a god damn pleasiosaur.
I checked the comment section just to see tree fiddy reference. Was not disappointed!
That was epic thank you sir
Ahhahaa about three Fiddy
Lmao you sob. You had me wondering about where your story was going until the tree fiddy.
south park will never die
"English Isles"
Everyone in Scotland immediately exits the video.
Not in Scotland, but seriously considering exiting the video after 20 seconds nevertheless. Mo chreach 's a thàinig.
*laughs in english*
ngl the "st columbia"s annoyed me more
even worse than 'British Isles'
Im severely dissapointed, ireland deserves her own geographical name, seperate from britain entirely, Fuairfaidh gach Éireann a saoirse.
Tá brón orm, leabhraim gáeilge go dona
I love how he mentioned Bigfoot in this episode but three years later STILL HAVENT DONE A BIGFOOT CRYPTID PROFILE CMON TREY
Bigfoot is real. He plays saxophone and has TH-cam channel.
@Shakur Alladin facts
Why would anyone want to prove Bigfoot is real?? Can you imagine what would happen? The thing would be hunted to extinction. Dried Bigfoot penis is a cure for impotence. “Impotence” means your wiener doesn’t work for you people who are about to type it into your google search.
4 years
@Shakur Alladin I think Russia beat you to it. Look up Nikolai Valuev.
Sadly they discontinued the St Columba stories before the issue where he battles the Hulk could appear.
Or Chuck Norris.
St. Columbia vs Saitama
He finally met his end against the Green Ranger.
Two reoccurring enemies for the hulk are Wendigo and Sasquatch.
@@johnnymoonactually I heard it was the whoologin and bigfoodwithinternet
"The English Isles" oh my, you just made a lot of very ginger enemies.
Daleksaresupreme1 im not even Scottish (I’m English) and I just cringed
The Vast majority of the Scottish people aren’t ginger and thus have souls.
@@classiestdig3782 Hey, red haired people deserve rights too! No being insulting! And no whooshing!
@@jeffreygao3956/r/woooosh/...I am so sorry I hate reddit.
What are they gonna do? Drink themselves to death?
"If you haven't heard of the Loch Ness Monster, well . . . you should get out more."
More sound advice from Trey the Explainer.
Dr.Bright
🤣😂👍🏼
That ain't gonna work in 2020...
🤷🏻♂️
Everyone in 2020: no
Outdated information
You should get out more lockdown or not..staying inside will weaken your immune system and make you more suceptable to the Corona virus and others.
@@MrWiLDAPEMAN I would like to see some peer reviewed research about that before taking such advice.
5:33
Chapter XXVII.
"Wild Boar DESTROYED with FAITH and PRAYERS"
They just misspelled verbal harassment
CatholicBait
[STORYTIME] [NOT CLICKBAIT]
@@psychronic8327 What the FUCK!?
Columba was, let's face it, a pretty boring superhero.
19:51 Holy crap: Jumpscare!
I nearly shat myself 😂
way too loud
I was almost falling asleep at that part! Jesus...
@@zachkitty5416 LMFAO 🤣💀
I got an ad
dude that jumpscare at the end was not cool :'(
that wasn't a jump scare, that was pure ear rape, short but highly invasive ear rape, I was wearing headphones and now my ears are bleeding
Im watching at 5 am and I had a heart attack
Thank you for the warning
Thanks for the warning.
Fie thank god I found this before the end lol the toast popping out of the oven scares the crap out of me even though I know it’s coming
As a Scottish child I used to always go to the Loch Ness and swim in the middle of it while shouting “nessy where are you” my grandma (who thought the Loch Ness monster was real) would scream at me to get back out the water. Good old days
Lies
Cant believe plesiosaurs can use TH-cam now
Leprechauns are clever. They sit at the end of rainbows with a pot of gold.
The average person swallows 8 lobsters in their sleep each year.
K
Evan Cabral Silva I hate it when that happens
I love to swallow
Joldsaway Your profile pic agrees with you
Actually, they swallow 8 barn owl each month.
In the 1930s a little boy in Scotland accidentally killed both of his parents with explosives in failed attempt to kill the Loch Ness monster.
Colfax the Grim is this true?
I don’t know if that’s true but like anyway
S oupish0367 yeqh
For the confused people its a Team Fortress 2 reference.
Leonardo The Useless thank you for enlightening me
We also now know that Loch Ness is *FULL of eels.* Like, an insane number of eels. & the first story about the blob monster kinda sounds like a bunch of seals flopping across the road in a close group.
there's actually not even any water its just a big pit of eels
A relative of mine.
How so?
their name -_-
Big Dickinson no shit
Loch NES Monster
Loch SNES Monster
Loch WII Monster
Loch GAMECUBE Monster
Loch Fuck Monster
eluxsus0195684 don't forget the loch switch monster.
"This flute has been passed down for thousands of years"😂😂😂 bruh it was a piece of stainless steel
Austin Correia I believe it is a scaffolding coupling the be precise.
It’s a joke lol
Was he really putting on a show?
From his great grandpa
@@biglazyhunt
It is. I used to work in construction. We used those on pipe scaffolds xD
At the end of The Lost World from 1925 you see the Brontosaurus leaving London and swimming back to his home. The imagery must've been the inspiration for the surgeon photo (which looks almost identical) even more so than the scene from King Kong (though that movie did more to popularize the idea of giant monsters).
Brontosaurus isn't real
@@kbee8918 It wasn't long ago at all that it was reestabilished as a real dinosaur after all alongside Apatosaurus. :)
Brontosaurus swiming? A fricking long necked giant dinosaur swiming... the past was beautifull...
@@CristianoRC nearly all dinosaurs could swim🗿
We've seen em do it!
I'm glad you brought up the strange reality of spotting animals in poor conditions. I was driving home, one night and saw what looked like an amorphous blob, undulating across the street. Once my headlights were upon the "creature," I saw it was a scampering group of groundhogs, all running towards some shrubs. the truth is stranger than fiction. ^^
Can we get one of the Chupacabra? It's part of my heritage so it would be awesome to get further insight into this one.
"It seemed like popular opinion shaped the monster, not the actual appearance"
-Me on people that still believe in the Jurassic Park dinosaurs.
- Me on people that believe in popular Liberal science and not in true freedom of scientific opinion.
@@omegavladosovich6757 lol what?
I mean all the jurassic park inacuracies are explained in the book as mutations of their genetics they arent supposed to be real dinosaur
well here's a solution make a movie just as amazing as j.p with accurate dinosaurs
Uhh, are you trying to say dinos never existed? Cuz i got some shockingly huge bones to show you if so.
Saw the monster myself once, he came ashore and asked, "You got three fitty?" (Also, "Columbia" is a country. Columba is a saint!!!)
Actually, "Colombia" is the country. Not Columbia.
Columbia is a district
Columbia was the chick in the Rocky Horror Picture Show
Columbia and Colombia are equivalents
Robert Corbell this joke deserves more
isn't it "British Isles" and not "English Isles"?
RMS Titanic 1912-2017 no it's just Scotland
R.I.P..
No
“I’m a black Scottish Cyclops. They got more feckin sea monsters in the Great Lakes of lockness than they got the likes of me!” Demo man-2007
Da, you fine dandies so proud, so cock-sure! Dancin' about with yer head full o' eyeballs! Come 'n get me I say. I'll be waitin' on ya with a whiff of the ol' brimstone! *I'm a grim bloody fable with an unhappy bloody end!*
@@SirBeekers thank you sire
Thank you for mentioning Champ, it warms my heart as a Vermonter.
Trey you scared the shit out of me I was dosing of to your nice peaceful video when all of a sudden the ear piercing sound of static destroyed my ear but still can't wait for part 2
I was listening to this in the background, was not ready for the ear blast lmao
*off 🙄
Same
Jesus fucking christ that was loud
Me too! Not cool, Trey! What, you were doing an episode where the monster couldn't be attributed to barn owls so you just had to force a scare in there? Not cool, man!
The Loch Ness Monster is a true legend! Definition of legend : a popular story handed down trough many generations and popularly accepted as real, but with no actual evidence to give it any authenticity , in other words a myth. The Loch Ness Monster in a nutshell.
"From the English isles"
Oh shit. You'd better hope you don't have any Scottish subs.
Well he has at least one Irish sub
Yeah that annoyed me a tiny little bit (I'm half English, half Scottish), it's the freaking British Isles!
First time I've never heard our islands be called the English Isles actually.
Grumpydrawer Let's just hope it was a joke playing on stereotypes.
Grumpydrawer British Isles is just as annoying
Oisín Smith
Not really. Since the collection of islands are offically known as the British Isles. And British is a term which includes English, Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish (formerly also being used to refer to all people living in the British Empire), along with the citizens of Overseas Territories.
Calling them the Scottish, Welsh or Irish Isles would be as stupid as calling them the English Isles.
15:48 Interestingly enough there is actually a plesiosaur in the original 1933 movie too. The snake like creature that comes out of the dark pools in Kong's lair and tries to choke Anne Darrow was a plesiosaur, it's a bit easy to mistake it for a snake since it is depicted to behave like a boa constrictor but it had a body and flippers that are visible when Kong fights it and pulls it out of the water. Pop culture of that time really did perceive plesiosaurs to be sea serpents that could stick their heads out of the water to attack.
19:52 had headphones at almost max volume, scared the shit out of me.
Same
Me too
Next time you use that static thing at the end of a video could you tone it down a bit? I'm wearing headphones and it scared the fuck out of me.
Mojo Robo Damn it! I read your comment right when that part happened. So I didn't have any time to prepare.
I don't see what the problem is, it was mildly annoying at best.
Bunkhead Mostly just because it really comes out of nowhere. It's also way louder than you'd expect it to be.
By saying "at best" you defeat the point you're trying to make
my bad I promise I will fix my audio issues
19:51 ARE YOU TRYING TO KILL ME?
XD sorry
lol
It's a basking owl
Tony Flamingo tony flamingo sighting.
Totally an owl.
Or it’s cousin... the barn shark
without King Kong we wouldn’t have the Loch Ness monster
See molar animals are seen in
Ireland
Swede
Norway
RussianLaie Baikal
China. Tibet
US Lake Champlain
Canada LakebOgopogo
Argentina Lake??
>English Isles
Every Scot and Irishman and woman:I beg yer f*cking pardon?
Don’t forget the Welsh!
They always forget the Welsh...
Even the Welsh forget the Welsh
I'm Croatian, me and my dad get pisset when ppl say the English isles instead of Scotland, Ireland and Wales, it's not that fucking hard to list them all out...
We own it all biiiiiiitch
Um Trey, it's British isles not English isles
my mistake
Don't worry about it, lots of people get it wrong
Dmitri Kozlowsky well technically if you are talking about Scotch, it's spelt Whisky
Dmitri Kozlowsky no one cares about what the states think, if it's Scottish Whisky, us Scots spell it without an E
As an outsider I can bring a rather objective point of vue : Germans and French use the Scottish spelling without an "e" ;)
I wonder if someone out there were to combine all of the depictions of Nessie into one.
that abomination would still be more believable than all the contradictions
I will gladly do so
harry potter version of nessie is a shapeshifting magical animal that took a random appearance to scare off people away but then started liking the attention and chose to use the most popular form. i just thought its kinda neat
"The King Kong Craze of 1933" Is the greatest string of words I've ever heard.
Love you but cringed at "English isles." Scotland wants a word with you and Ireland is just pissed.
*low key triggered*
"A cryptid from the English Isles".. Oh, the Scottish are gonna just love you!
*British Isles, not English Isles
*St Columba, not St Columbia
*Arthur Grant, not Author(!) Grant
*wreak havoc, not wreck havoc
Oh man so many mistakes on my part!
England being in charge of the UK doesn't make it the English isles hence why that is not what they are called.
Everyone stay calm dude isn’t the history channel it’s a vid about a fictional monster. Chiwllll!
@@tomg5187 i guess to some extent it is a history channel, juwt prehistory 🤔
@@tomg5187 if someone is going to portray themselves as an expert they are going to b held to higher standards than the average person.
Saint Columb*a*. Not Colomb_i_a. He was Irish, not a cocaine farmer.
Werrf1 who knows XD
You mean he was a cocaine consumer not a cocaine producer ***
More like a cocaine transporter. I don't think Colombia is a big producer of cocaine, but they definitely won the geography lottery when it comes to transportation.
Nope, not something to be proud of, but Colombia is one of the big cocaine producers countries in the world. The main transporter is México since they are next to U.S.A, the principal cocaine and drug consumer in the world.
Cocaine farmer
It's obviously a reflector owl
We thought that you were dead.
lol
no it was a leprechaun, I know it sounds crazy but it is true
There was a book I read on Nessie way back when I was like... 10. My memory is a little faulty, but I remember there was a story some kid claimed back in the 1700 - 1800's that on his way to school, he saw a long necked creature swimming closely to the shore. He gave the creature an apple, and it swam off sinking back under the water.
No one ever talks about that "sighting."
I never knew the LNM was first "discovered" so close to the release of King Kong. It makes so much sense now yeah.
I feel like the best term is to say that it's basically a meme of pop culture, a specific concept (a monster around the area) that changed and evolved as different people saw it as different things until it finally found a shape that worked best and cemented itself into the public consciousness, growing and thriving in that form as more and more people submitted themselves to the specific idea of it.
It's interesting to see how the descriptions of the monsters "evolved" over time, like another evolution.
Trey! Please Make a Paleo Profile on Troodon!!!
MastaPlayzRoblox Cats And More! Agreed
MastaPlayzRoblox Cats And More! Or rugops
One theory is the sightings may be large eels coming through the River Ness from the North Sea or the Atlantic Ocean into Lock Ness following salmon also coming in the same way from the North Sea. Salmon fishing season on the loch is January to October. I'm looking at site listing sightings and interestingly the majority are during the salmon season. There were a few in November and December but the bulk were from January to October. Couple that with the large amount of eel DNA found in the loch during a recent study and one could say that maybe most of the sightings are eels.
rip to anyone else waring headphones and heard the static at the end, holy balls, I don't like it when my ears bleed man.
My bets on a Basking Shark!
Tomsk Bromley no
Tomsk Bromley Shawn is right it's probably just another one of those crafty Owl
Tomsk Bromley no, the rare English Water Owl XD
Tomsk Bromley lochness is a lake not an ocean
AttaCat 65 language kids could be looking in the comment section
The saint's name is Saint COLUMBA, not Saint Columbia
saint conman
@@autopartsmonkey7992 saint convict
@@hambasri1053 lol...that would seem to apply to most of the saints and prophets ...
@@autopartsmonkey7992 I mean, whatever, but saint Columbia was also a guy. Saint columba was just a different person.
@Boom Diggaty Peter Falk walkin up and down the lake edge, lookin for clues, smokin his cigars.
what about mokele mbembe? is it just a mistaken giraffe? because there was a documentary showing a group of tribespeople pointing to a brontosaurus instead of a giraffe when asked to point to the creature.
Redlazer7 I heard they just paid them to pretend to recognize the images of the sauropod.
Barnacle Films oh, probably.
It`s mainly a fairly tale made by sensasionalist white explorers based around some vauge monsters stories created by the natives of the Congo.
Dalibor Jovanovic As much as I wish that wasn't true, and that a sauropod had somehow survived into the present day, it's reality and I have to accept it.
On the other hand, it's a place that has been exploited for almost a century and has experienced war for another half a century. Any living sauropod then won't survive now.
Did he just say the “English” Isles?
I have visited Loch Ness and while I didn't see any monsters I did see a lot of Scottish people earning money on tourists and selling Nessie merchandise. The area around Inverness were dirt poor back in 1933 and the influx of tourists have made their life far better and tourists get to visit a very beautiful landscape (no, I didn't visit it for the monster, me and some friends were hiking around Scotland) so as I see it everybody wins.
The locals needed a tourist magnet and they invented one that was far cheaper then to build a huge amusement park. Scots are not stupid but the highland economy were totally screwed up after Culloden until 1933. And there is a lot to see in the area and great hiking trails, I recommend it but don't expect any monsters and bring something that keeps mosquitoes away.
Today I think whiskey tourists are at least as common as people looking for Nessie though but that wasn't really a thing until the 80s.
Hearing _In the Hall of the Mountain King_ in the background was the best part of this video.
Ah yes, the Poptropica loch ness monster.
Have you ever seen The Water Horse? It's my favorite depiction of the monster. Wonderful film, albeit geared towards children.
FINALLY
another water horse enthusiast
I NEVER THOUGHT I'D SEE THE DAY
hey I love the movie, it's my target demographic (children if you're wondering), and its a fun movie
It's actually an owl
Josh Korte A basking Owl
0:45 an African guy, having an ancient flute from thousands of years ago, from his ancestors which were Irish... Seems legit.
He could have irish ancestors, dark colours are dominant in human genetica
And I feel like you'd have more than just (what was it he said? Great great grandfather?) four generations over thousands of years so you know...
When the Irish came to America they often lived with blacks in the poorer areas. It is plausible that they intermarried to some extent.
Just another example of blatant cultural appropriation, and blacks playing European roles.
@@Jose-xh5qb nah... There's no possibility of that man. They didn't f*ck around like that, and they sure as shit didn't marry.
And the surgeon’s photograph is a confirmed hoax.
St Columba - not Colombia.
Mate, the saint's name is Co-lum-ba (Columba) not Co-lumb-ia. There is no i
Like in teamwork
Do one on bigfoot. or jeb bush.
What's the difference?
HCTOTM _RBLX hahaha
HCTOTM _RBLX fucking amazing.
At least Bigfoot has a much greater chance to be real than Nessie.
Ichigo1423jfk I know but I believe both
A lifelong believer in Nessie, I lost my belief a few years ago after seeing a documentary which provided enough evidence that all the photos and films I knew were misinterpretations of natural and artificial phenomena. And of course the surgeons photo was identified as an outright hoax. I'm looking forward to viewing both this vid and the followup.
I found out this week a guy i work with had never heard of the loc ness monster. I had to play him the beginning of your video. Now I'm rewatching yet again.
Maybe Nessie is an alien blob?....trying to adapt its form to suit its new environment?....What?...Hell, makes as much sense as all these other cryptids
The Loch Ness Monster, the myth, the legend, the hoax, the wake, the log, the monster.
KaijuPrince1968 The Owl.
Millie Chen the mom's spaghetti
KaijuPrince1968 it could bereal
Toby Bliss there are no basking sharks in loch ness
You can't even find sharks in Scotland
Hey Trey, I was wondering if I could make a suggestion for a possible future video. Back in 2002, the Discovery Channel had this miniseries called "The Future is Wild", which theorized what life on Earth could be like millions of years after the disappearance of humanity. I thought it was pretty interesting back then, but looking back, I'm wondering exactly how scientifically plausible some of their proposed situations are. I was curious if you'd be interested in making a video about it?
Of course, it's all up to you. I just thought I'd share an idea I had.
And he did...
@@kenbee1957 most timely
Watching this again I'm reminded of the sketches that were made during the Son of Sam killings in New York. Many of the descriptions of the killer varied to the point people started to have serious doubts that the killer operated alone. Nevertheless, there was never serious evidence against anyone else involved other than the killer who was convicted of the crimes.
7:49, Why did the Loch Ness Monster cross the road? To get to the other tide.
Thay all look so different because there are to many monsters there
please make a video about the inacuraccies and acuraccies of Far Cry Primal
All of it.
*facepalm*he make things about legends,not games
@@AndreiRO-yg8me You're obviously new here.
NoeLPZC I think he might be new to the world besides being a foetus
I haven't watched it yet, and I have come to the conclusion that Nessy is an owl or decaying whale/shark.
Beenjamin it is a basking shark with a snorkel
Beenjamin this is a lake not an ocean
If it was a Barnsking-Owlshark it could've flew...
+Kevin But they are non migrary... Unless ot was an europeam barnssking owlshark
Misogynist well this is in scotland
I think (if they arent normal animals) the camel one was a rouge llama or something while the otter, seal, and blob ones were the same creature just the blob was someone who was like rlly frightened and couldnt make out what it was, the otter could've been a baby or juvenile one (which would imply theres multiple monsters, which would make sense considering all the sightings cant just be one monster), and the seal one (the one we all know) is the adult one (hence why we never saw more of the baby one, cuz it grew up into the adult one). Or maybe the blob was the female one when she was rlly pregnant (which would explain the consequential existence of the baby one. also this theory I think about the blob one makes more sense for the Loch Ness family theory so ignore the more probable frightened people theory). But this is all assuming that the Loch Ness Monster does exist, which I dont think it does
This comment section:
25% “British isles not English isles”
25% “Columba not Columbia”
25% “the surgeons photo was fake”
25% normal comments
I personally believe its a basking shark.
Of course it's a barn owl.... A barn owl with access to decomposing logs and toy boats, but a barn owl nonetheless!
dracocrusher no, Aliens.
Mollof Emil A.
Are barn owls aliens?
idiot it was clearly the chosen one E.L. wallace.
hahha fak u
What hell trey that static gave me a heart attack Jesus man!
XD sorry
trey I ask you I beg you plz plz plz make a troodon paleo profiles after the nessy series thing. By the way love your vids, even the corny joke.
RaptorGod12 I will :) and thanks man!
np
I pretty much agree with each point made. There's no way one monster can live long enough to be witnessed in 565 and vanish until 1933.
Although this is not proof of anything in the British Isle region including Scotland and Ireland there have been legendary tales of a creature called a Kelpie. The stories of this creature are just as outlandish as these sightings but they do hint of something that could have lived in the Loch before reliable (or unreliable if you prefer) eyewitness accounts have occurred. So Columba's tale isn't the only one that has been passed down from generation to generation; not proof mind you but something that suggests the creature has been sighted far longer than before the 1930s.
@@schizoidboy I'm pretty sure kelpies were associated with rivers and spent most of their time on land, until someone dumb enough to try and ride a creepy black horse in the middle of the woods, until it would dive into the water and drown them, the idiotic rider unable to get off. Kelpies definitely don't support loch Ness monster sightings
It's many different monsters man, duh. If there are so many why don't we see them more often? Their really sneaky....but kept being seen anyways.
00:18 What exactly are the English Isles, and why do leprechaun's come from there and not Ireland? Could it conceivably be that the most famous Scottish export (apart from being ginger and shit at sport) could in fact be....English?
The "English Isles" aren't a thing. He was referring to the British Isles, which are Great Britain, Ireland, and numerous smaller islands.
@@skyem5250 I don't recall writing this comment, but it was entirely feasible that I was being sarcastic, being as I am English.
@@darthmong7196 makes sense.
Trey really researches his topics and I really appreciate that. He probably won't read this, but I thought I would just throw this out into the ether.
please do a paleo profile on tiktaalik
I can definitely make a video talking about that fish ;)
fish or fishpod?
ITS OUR FREAKING ANCESTORS TREY i heard you say that in a future vid
Oh hell yeah, a new video!
sonikku956 so pumped
The moment you said 1933 I thought ' same year as King Kong I doubt he'll mention it, as how would it be relevant ' and then it turned out to be relevant after all.
Saw Wallace before the video ended, so he strikes again!
XD that's great
and XD
There's no Loc Ness monster by deductive reasoning (and scientific water dna testing). The monster is a reptile-like creature so it needs to take in air directly (even dolphins and whale do it). The longest recorded whale holding breath while diving is 222 min.
I love cryptids and monsters so I really want Nessie to exist and give Nessie a max of 6 hrs of holding his/her breath. and let's say there's only Nessie by him/herself all these year as Nessie is the last of it's kind so no mate, no offspring popping out of the water to breath air.
In a day there's 24 hrs that would mean Nessie by herself would have to come up to breath air 4 times every day. And if she does it that often, she would be seen so much more than reported. Whales come up to breath, and tourists and scientiest were able to catch glimpse of them....why not nessie w/ the Ness see so calm and tranquil unlike the ocean.
Not to mention, someone did dna water testing and found a evidence of some kinda eels...so most likely, they may be few eels that grow to big enough size that were mistaken for monster..
I was drifting calmly into sleep when the loud static nearly sent me in a state of panic.
Haven't even watched it yet, still left a like cause I know it's gonna be amazing
hope you enjoy it when you do ;)
TREY the Explainer yes I was so pumped. nessie is a commie submarine isn't it?
Robin Gilliver commie sub is my explanation and is the most likely.
i liked before the ad was over xP
Robin Gilliver Sure...
Treeey, it's been a while! I can't wait to watch this video!!
Awesome! Hope you enjoy ;)
TREY the Explainer When I saw you made a new video I screamed like a little girl
Feetsies Toes XD thanks man
^^
TREY the Explainer please try to do a video on the mosasaur family
I was drawing while watching this in headphones, and that static at the end startled me, damn!
great video btw, can't wait for part 2, it would be interesting if nessy was more infact a Tanystropheus, as some sightings state he walks on land as well.
My bad XD
thank you so much!
I'm a big fan of cryptids and mostly nessy, i can't wait to see your conclusion on the case! The mothman one was amazing as well, I caught a glimpse of one of those big arctic owls that somehow managed to get south (north carolina to be more specific) as well!.
Gojira Gigantis Thanks man! Hope you enjoy the next ones!
the article you show at around 9:00 mentions Loch Ness as “being known” for being home for a creature known as the “Water Kelpie(?)”. when was that article written? its shown when youre talking about the first 1933 “sighting”. id like more clarification
what is the name of the song that started playing at 9:32 , i have herd it in other videos of yours and i cant find it anywhere but this Chanel.
I have the same damned question. I'm gonna go ask r/tipofmytongue
i’ve been trying to figure out what song that is since this video came out, i really hope someone figures it out
@@lordcuddlebuttz3336 OK, so, i found it. th-cam.com/video/JMUJF3GwYAE/w-d-xo.html, it only took me a year.
@@ethanwesterfield6478 OK, so, i found it. th-cam.com/video/JMUJF3GwYAE/w-d-xo.html, it only took me a year.
@@continuetoenquire.8772 YOOOOO KING
16:53 "a huddled herd of deer" mistaken for the lochness monster? that's pretty weak...
Nessie was my grandma's nickname for me. I loved diving down to the bottom in the lake so much as a kid, bobbing up and down, likely scaring the shit out of grandma.
What is the music at 9:33
someone pls
Bump, seriously i’ve been trying to figure what song that is for a long time now, just about ready to message TREY myself and ask lol
@@lordcuddlebuttz3336 found it?
@@King-wg2ou sadly no 😔 i feel like im never gonna figure it out unless i actually message TREY on twitter or something and ask him about the music he used in a video he made years ago LOL
Now there are lots of monsters living in and around Loch Ness. Plesiosaurs are just some of them.
Has everyone pointed out that there is no I in Columba. His name is Columba, not Columbia. He wasn't in the RHPS.
"oh yeah it wasn't a deer" it was an o w l
I saw the Lock Ness Monster. He asked me for tree fitty. I said "Goddammit Lock Ness Monster! I ain't givin you no tree fitty."
I feel like if a lot of the early sightings were true, they just misidentified known animals, like possibly an escaped farm llama. If something unknown lives in the lake, it is impossible for it to be a plesiosaur for too many reasons to name, and would probably be some kind of aquatic bird, if you want something with a long neck sticking out of the water, or a mammal, and would probably be a herbivore due to a lack of prey animals in the lake. The first blob sighting is interesting though, since it doesn't seem to look like anything known. If they really saw something, I'd want to know what it was. And I'm sorry, but I don't really see how a heard of deer can look like the blob thing. I've lived around deer and seen them day and night. Maybe consider a tarp or large cloth of some sort being blown by the wind?
I dont know why you said that all early encounters differs from one to another. Every single of those encounters except one report the same thing, a long neck (or limb)
There is no monster in that lake. There is no way that such a creature could hide itself from the eyes of humanity for such a long time. We have more than enough technology to detect such a huge creature.