Loch Ness in Scotland has kept something mysterious in its waters for centuries.
In the Middle Ages, people said that a kelpie (evil spirit) or a water horse lived in it. The Kelpie loved to turn into a horse and lure people into the water, where he drowned them and stole their soul.
In later centuries, when people learned about dinosaurs, eyewitnesses began to compare the Loch Ness monster with an extinct lizard.
And on the banks of Loch Ness, there is still a house in which the British black magician Aleister Crowley lived at the beginning of the 20th century. The house is called Boleskin House. True, now on the site of this house there are only burnt walls, in 2015 there was a big fire there.
But before the fire, employees of the house repeatedly noticed various anomalous phenomena. They talked about mysterious vibes, strange shadows and other creepy things that they personally saw more than once inside the house.
And the researcher of the monster Nessie, cryptozoologist Ted Holiday, once talked about what he met in 1973 on the shore of the lake next to the house of the "man in black." His clothes appeared to be made of leather or plastic, with black glasses over his eyes. The strange man stood motionless on the grass, and then there was a short whistling sound and the man instantly disappeared somewhere.
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And in 2007, a local resident named Maxine saw another mysterious object next to Loch Ness - an alien owl almost as tall as a man!
Maxine is the most ordinary Scottish woman, previously she was not fond of the lake monster and other anomalies, but lived her own life. One day she was walking with her dog on the overgrown hills near the lake, and suddenly she saw ahead of what she first took for the figure of a child.
When she came closer, she froze, because it was definitely not a child and was not even a person. It was something completely alien, and later, when Maxine began to describe this creation to journalists, it became clear that she saw someone who matched the appearance of a typical "gray" alien.
That is, it had a thin humanoid body, a large hairless head and large dark eyes. Maxine could get a good look at this creature, as she came very close to him.
For several seconds, the alien and the woman stared at each other without saying a word, and then the alien stretched out his arms and instantly turned into a giant owl, almost the size of a man. Flapping its wings, the owl rose into the sky and flew to Loch Ness.
Astonished Maxine watched him go until the creature flew over the lake and disappeared into the thicket of trees on the other side.
Subsequently, Maxine was asked more than once by British ufologists, including whether she had a feeling of “time wasted,” that is, from one to several hours that had fallen out of her memory. This often happens with UFO eyewitnesses. But Maxine denied any influence of this creature on her.
The woman also denied that she could have been abducted and taken to a spaceship and that she also did not see any UFOs nearby. She insisted that she saw only how some short humanoid creature, right before her eyes, turned into a large owl and flew across the lake.
It is curious that then Maxine developed her theory about the connection between Loch Ness, owls and aliens. According to her, the aliens can transform into different living objects (an owl or a water monster) and in this form it may be easier for them to "spy" on Earth.
In the UK, strange animals are often observed, especially large black cats, as well as large black dogs (the famous Black Shak). Maybe these are also creatures in which aliens turn around.
Curious in this context is the long-standing phenomenon of an incomprehensible connection between gray aliens and owls. Even when ufologists had just begun to study the first eyewitness accounts of the abductions, they often heard that the aliens tried to replace the memories of the abduction with other images, especially the image of a large owl looking out the bedroom window.