Scottish Aye
LOCH NESS DRAINING PROJECT, ROUND 2 BEGINS TODAY.
“Bigger pipes, bigger tanks, bigger chaos… and this time, hopefully fewer teeth marks.”
Exactly one year ago, Scotland watched in disbelief as engineers, scientists, and one very rich but very mysterious investor attempted the impossible, draining Loch Ness in a final effort to find, study, and somehow clone the Loch Ness Monster.
Their plan famously failed when they discovered the loch was “a wee bit deeper than expected”… by roughly 212 metres, which feels like something they maybe should’ve checked beforehand.
But that wasn’t the only issue.
Halfway through the operation, crews were forced to shut everything down after discovering enormous bite marks taken out of several of the main siphon pipes, perfectly circular, suspiciously tooth shaped, and definitely not caused by “an underwater shopping trolley,” despite the official statement at the time.
The pipes had been sabotaged, and everyone in Scotland knew exactly who the prime suspect was.
But now, one year later, they're back for Round 2, And this time?
They’ve come back angrier, louder, and armed with industrial plumbing that would make Mario and Luigi greet them with a respectful nod.
New upgrades include,
48% bigger pipes, officially described as “loch-sized,” unofficially described as “daft.”

Monster proof reinforced pipework, lined with tooth resistant alloy, pressure sealed, rumoured to have been tested by letting a Highland Midge chew on a sample.
Over 6,000 new mega tanks being anchored off the coast to hold the loch water.
And a dedicated tugboat named “The Sooker.”
Along with a fresh promise from the anonymous investor that they are “97% certain Nessie is in there somewhere this time.”
Their renewed scientific goal,
Find Nessie. Study Nessie. Clone Nessie.
Scientists remain unsure where a full herd of cloned Nessies would actually live, that’s apparently a “Phase 4 problem.”
The operation kicked off at 5:42am this morning
Crews lowered the first of the new monster proof siphon pipes into the loch, and locals immediately reported unusual rumbling noises. Engineers insist this is “completely normal and not because big Rab had a kebab at 3am.”
So the question on everyone’s mind is the same as last year, Will they finally manage to drain Loch Ness…or will Scotland witness another multi million-pound disaster involving burst pipes, overflowing tanks, and Nessie casually popping her head up like, “Whit are ye daein’ noo?”