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Newport Dragon Demands Shade for Carnival Crowds and Questers

Professor Follies

NEWPORT, ISLE OF WIGHT | ISLAND NEWS. A real Island story concerning carnival season and heatwave has acquired a distinctly mythical complication after Professor Follies opened an investigation in Newport. The inquiry began with the perfectly reasonable intention of checking local facts and ended, as these inquiries generally do, with a statement from the Dragon and a form returned with claw marks, damp edges or both.

The published 2026 Island carnival programme includes summer processions and illuminated events across Sandown, Newport, Shanklin, Ventnor, East Cowes, St Helens and Ryde. Organisers note that timings can change, making current event information, sensible travel planning and preparation for warm weather important.

The reported incident prompted the Federation of Legendary Law Investigation and Evidence Specialists to visit the creature's last known area. Professor Follies stressed that the ordinary news event is genuine, while the alleged mythical intervention is presented as an Island News field report. This distinction was added after a previous witness attempted to claim a household insurance excess for 'griffin-adjacent weather'.

The working allegation was straightforward: a Newport town-centre piece ahead of carnival season, advising water, hats and sensible walking. Professor Follies located the Dragon after following local directions, two unhelpful rumours and a trail of evidence that would later prove to be either significant or somebody's lunch.

Asked for an official response, the Dragon said: "Carnival crowds deserve shade. Treasure hunters deserve water. I deserve neither comments nor balloons near my tail." The answer was delivered with the confidence of a public authority and the evidential discipline of a creature that had not read the question. Professor Follies requested clarification, whereupon the interview moved rapidly into a discussion of local habits, visitor behaviour and why humans frequently require a warning before doing something they already know is unwise.

Behind the comedy sits a useful local message. People visiting Newport should plan for the actual conditions, respect residents and wildlife, carry what they need and avoid assuming that somebody else will repair the consequences. In warm or dry weather that means water, suitable timing and shade. Around animals it means observation and care. At events or on narrow village routes it means patience, safe speed and leaving access clear.

The image accompanying this report is an imaginative reconstruction set within the recognisable landscape of Newport. It is not offered as documentary proof of the creature, although Professor Follies has stamped it 'sufficiently suspicious'. Readers should treat the mythical scene as part of the Follies story and the linked reporting as the source for the real-world information.

Local exploration remains encouraged, but not at the expense of common sense. Follow the Newport Dragon trail and collect the passport password fragments. The relevant Follies route turns the area into a guided story walk, allowing visitors to notice local details, collect the associated clue and investigate the creature's reputed territory without demanding that it pose for a photograph or validate parking.

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Imaginative reconstruction of the Dragon in the recognisable Newport landscape; fictional evidence, not a documentary photograph.

references:

Primary real-world source: https://rydecarnival.com/all-island-carnivals-dates/ Supporting source: https://www.islandecho.co.uk/39-3c-recorded-on-the-isle-of-wight-during-intense-wednesday-heatwave/

REPORT YOUR STORIES AND SIGHTINGS ON THE ISLE OF WIGHT 

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