While crossing the Thames cable car last month, someone witnessed something that could either be very magical or just a little lost. They were able to record a brief glimpse of something with two grey bumps before it retreated underwater.
In order for the Loch Ness Monster to move to London, it would have to swim northeast to the top of Loch Ness, 12 miles through the relatively small River Ness, through the Beauly and Moray Firths, into the North Sea, down the length of Great Britain, and many miles along the Thames. The trip—almost 600 miles by land, and considerably longer by sea—would move the Loch Ness Monster between freshwater and saltwater bodies, a dangerous environmental change that would also likely see the Loch Ness Monster run aground in some shallow inlets.
Also, the Loch Ness Monster would have to be real.
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