It was a heart-stopping moment late one night as a car approached an 8m tall animal that was blocking the road.
Most people, seeing what should have been an extinct dinosaur – a triceratops – in their path would have turned and run in the opposite direction.
But for people in the English village of Godsill, on the Isle of Wight, the dinosaur was a well-known resident, albeit not a living animal.
Chris Hollingshead snapped the photo and put it on his Facebook, which can be seen by clicking here.
      
  
           
                          
                February 23, 2016
              
            
                          
                Read time: 2 mins
              
                    
                It was a heart-stopping moment late one night as a car approached an 8m tall animal that was blocking the road.
 
Most people, seeing what should have been an extinct dinosaur – a triceratops – in their path would have turned and run in the opposite direction.
 
But for people in the English village of Godsill, on the Isle of Wight, the dinosaur was a well-known resident, albeit not a living animal.
 
Chris Hollingshead snapped the photo and put it on his Facebook, which can be seen by %$Linker:2   External   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />   0   0   0   oLinkExternal   clicking here   Visit facebook page    false   https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=904716539576905&set=a.421420157906548.97881.100001157027006&type=3&theater   false   false %>.
 
It was a priceless moment, he told local media. But he knew that animal, called Godshilla, was a statue prop for a nearby retailer.
 
Martin Simpson, who owns Island Gems, a shop that sells gems and fossils, told local media that his Godshilla was stolen as a prank from outside his shop and it probably took five people to move the creature onto the road.
 
To prevent the dinosaur going walk-about again, he said Godshilla will be painted soon, and put into a fenced-in garden.
 
      
    Most people, seeing what should have been an extinct dinosaur – a triceratops – in their path would have turned and run in the opposite direction.
But for people in the English village of Godsill, on the Isle of Wight, the dinosaur was a well-known resident, albeit not a living animal.
Chris Hollingshead snapped the photo and put it on his Facebook, which can be seen by %$Linker:
It was a priceless moment, he told local media. But he knew that animal, called Godshilla, was a statue prop for a nearby retailer.
Martin Simpson, who owns Island Gems, a shop that sells gems and fossils, told local media that his Godshilla was stolen as a prank from outside his shop and it probably took five people to move the creature onto the road.
To prevent the dinosaur going walk-about again, he said Godshilla will be painted soon, and put into a fenced-in garden.
 
     
         
        


