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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Andrew Forgrave & Remy Greasley

'Freaked out' mum watches as beach 'monster' waves at her son during family holiday

A mum from Liverpool was "baffled" when she and her family re-watched footage of a recent family holiday.

Debbie Clintworth, from Liverpool, and her family were watching videos of a recent family holiday at a beach in North Wales in August, when they spotted an unidentifiable creature emerging from the sand as their son, Joseph, 5, ran past. The family had visited the beach during their stay at the Haven Greenacres Holiday Park in Morfa Bychan.

The creature, nicknamed the "Morfa monster," seemed to wave, or wiggle, at the boy and though it is distinctly visible, it appeared for only a brief second in the video. Not even an expert was able to identify the creature, reports North Wales Online.

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Next to the holiday park lies Black Rock Sands beach, which is bisected by a stream running through the village to the sea. Little Joseph was splashing around in the stream when his mum grabbed her mobile phone to film a short clip.

It was only later that she realised something odd had happened. “I never even noticed it on the day,” she said. “I posted the clip on my Instagram account and it was only when watching it back later that I saw it.

“From the video, it looks like the thing turned its head when my little boy made a splash in the stream. I reposted it and some friends messaged me saying they’d also seen it but hadn’t liked to say anything!” The "creature" appears briefly right at the end of the clip.

Debbie and Stephen Clintworth enjoyed their time on Black Rock Sands with their five-year-old son Joseph (Debbie Clintworth)

Debbie doesn’t think anyone else would have seen it on the day (August 26). The family was near the dunes and, it being late afternoon and at low tide, the water’s edge was some distance away. The beach has recently been the subject of much discussion about overnight camping by motorhomes and others.

“There weren’t many people on the beach as it wasn’t that warm - there were just a few people walking by the sea,” she said. “Some people have suggested it might have been litter blowing in the wind. But the weather was calm and there wasn’t much wind at all.

“It’s really baffled me. I mean, there are always lots of wormholes in the sand but it was nothing like that. I wanted to find out what it was, which is why I shared the clip on the Abersoch Facebook page in case any fishermen or boat owners had any ideas.”

The feedback was mostly of astonishment. “Oh my goodness!!!” said one woman. “What the actual...,” said another. “I‘ve never seen anything like that, moves a bit like a fish head.”

One man suggested it might be a mole. Another, tongue firmly in cheek, reckoned it might be a four-inch version of the creature from the film Tremors.

Given the unenviable task of providing some kind of lucid explanation was Frankie Hobro, owner and director of Anglesey Sea Zoo. She has plenty of experience of dealing with marine oddities, having established a research programme to explore different coloured lobsters being found around the UK coast.

Asked to examine the grainy footage, she said it was “impossible” to provide definitive answers without seeing more images. But she said it was an interesting clip and she welcomed Debbie’s interest in the marine life of west Wales.

As Joseph runs past the mysterious creature, it appears to move it's 'head' (Debbie Clintworth)

Having viewed the footage, Frankie has one or two theories. “One possibility is that it shows a seabird looking away. But that’s unlikely given its size,” she said.

“Another is that it is a lugworm cast, which tend to appear at low tide near rockpools or streams where the sand is wetter. The casts tend to be conical in shape and are darker in colour because of the wet sand.

“Within the cast, a crab might be half buried and its movements might cause the cast to shift. Alternatively, there might be litter on the cast which is disturbed by changes in air pressure below the sand, caused perhaps by a lugworm, crab or even the boy running past.

“It’s hard to know exactly what it might be without more evidence – it’s a bit of a puzzle. But there will be a rational and mundane explanation. Whatever it is, it’s good to see people taking an interest in coastal marine life.”

The coiled casts of lugworms – otherwise known as sandworms – are a familiar sights on UK beaches at low tide. The animal itself is rarely seen. Measuring up to five inches (13cm), they live in a U-shaped burrows.

Debbie will probably never know exactly what Joseph encountered on the beach that day. Other explanations given by her friends range from a crab to a jellyfish. “None of them seem quite right,” she sighed.

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