He created two lengthy videos to chronicle a four-day, 62-mile paddling expedition that raised 15,000 pounds (about $20,560) for the Alzheimer’s Society charity and posted them to his YouTube channel, Richard Outdoors. The video image taken last month of a long, thin form just beneath the water’s surface was so fleeting that Mavor, 54, didn’t notice it when he posted it Sept. But watching this I think yeah, there’s something a bit strange here.” “The last thing I want to do is make a Nessie claim,” Richard Mavor told The Post. Loch Ness Monster sleuth claims he ‘won the lottery’ with recent footageĪ British outdoorsman paddling through Scotland’s Loch Ness for a long-distance charity canoe trip may have inadvertently captured drone footage of the fabled Loch Ness Monster. ‘Clearest evidence’ yet of Loch Ness monster captured by stunned onlooker Massive Loch Ness Monster sighting ‘made me jump out of my skin,’ shocked tourist says Loch Ness Monster DNA revealed? Mysterious ‘blob monster’ origins detailed in study