Skip to main content

Godshilla makes a run for it and blocks Isle of Wight road

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&amp;set=a.421420157906548.97881.100001157027006&amp;type=3&amp;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.

Related Content

  • Parking bays too small for comfort
    February 18, 2015
    A UK local authority council has been criticised for what one resident has said is knowingly creating undersized parking bays. The parking area -- smaller than recommended -- makes it harder for motorists to make sure all their vehicle is within the legally allotted area. The council has been fining motorists for not having their cars completely parked within the parking bay, and that’s not fair, said the resident of Newbury town, just outside London. He reportedly went around measuring the parking bay, acc
  • Eurasphalt & Eurobitume Congress 2016 in Prague calls for papers and speakers
    October 8, 2014
    The 6th Eurasphalt & Eurobitume Congress, which is being organised by EAPA & Eurobitume in Prague in the Czech Republic on June 1 to 3 2016, has put out a call for papers. Speakers and authors should submit their abstracts online say the Eurasphalt & Eurobitume Congress 2016 organisers and all papers submitted will receive DOI (Digital Object Identifier) indexation. The organisers say that they “recognise the trend towards online availability of publications and it is the intention to index the proceeding
  • Volvo CE’s earthmovers on film for promotion campaign
    October 25, 2018
    For its new publicity campaign, Volvo Construction Equipment has teamed up with film star hardman Dolph Lundgren to showcase its excavators’ endurance in a stunt-filled mini-movie entitled Pump It Up. In the tongue-in-cheek mini-movie Lundgren, whose credits include Rocky IV, Universal Soldier and The Expendables, plays an all-action drill instructor in an excavator boot camp determined to test the diggers to their limits. Excavators ranging from 1.5t to 95t are ordered to do press-ups, pull-ups, flip
  • 3M funds scholarships through Visibly Safer Work Zones Project
    April 28, 2015
    3M, a maker of workzone safety products, has again donated US$20,000 to the 3M Visibly Safer Work Zones Project. Now in its fourth year, the project supports programmes of the American Traffic Safety Services Foundation (ATSSF) and the American Road and Transportation Builders Association Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) that provide scholarships for children of roadway construction workers killed or permanently disabled on the job. To date, the project has donated $50,000 to the ATSSF’s