This list was compiled by the co-editor of the Fortean Times, a Journal of Strange Phenomena, a monthly British magazine.
1. Bees who pay their respects
Margaret Bell, who kept bees in Leintwardine, about 7 miles from her home in Ludlow, Shropshire (England), died in June 1994. Soon after her funeral, mourners were amazed to see hundreds of bees settle on the corner of the street opposite the house where she had lived for 26 years. The bees stayed for an hour before buzzing off over the rooftops. The local press ran a photograph of the bees hanging on the wall in a cluster.
2. Phantom Car Crash
On December 11, 2002, two motorists called police to report seeing a car veering off the A3 trunk road with headlights blazing at Burpham in Surrey. A thorough search uncovered a car concealed in dense undergrowth and the long-dead driver nearby. It turned out that the crash had actually happened five months earlier when the driver, Christopher Chandler, had been reported missing by his brother.
3. Enigmatic Earth Divot
Am irregular shaped hole, about 10ft by 7ft with 2ft vertical sides, was found on a remote farm near Grand Coulee, Washington State, in October 1984. It had not been there a month earlier. ‘Dribblings’ of earth and stones led to a three-ton grass-covered earth divot 75 ft away. It was almost as if the divot had been removed with a gigantic cookie cutter, except that roots dangled intact from the vertical side of both hold and slab. There were no clues such as vehicle tracks and an earthquake was thought very unlikely.
4. Balloon Buddies
Laura Buxton released a helium filled balloon during celebrations for her grandparents’ gold wedding anniversary in Blurton, Staffordshire, in June 2001. Attached to the balloon was her name and address and a note asking the finder to write back. Ten days later she received a reply. The balloon had been found by another Laura Buxton in the garden hedge of her home in Pewsey, Wiltshire, 140 miles away. Both Lauras were ages 10 and both had three year old black Labradors, a guinea pig, and a rabbit.
5. Hum Misty for Me
A noise a bit like amplifier feedback had been heard for three years coming from the right ear of a Welsh pony called Misty, according to the Vetinary Record (April 1995). It varied in intensity but stayed at a constant pitch of 7 kHz. Hearing a buzzing in one’s ears is called Subjective Tinnitus; much rarer is when others can also hear the noise. This is called Objective Tinnitus and the cause is still largely a matter of debate.
6. Whirlwind Children
A nine-year old Chinese girl was playing in Songjian near Shanghai, in July 1992 when she was carried off by a whirlwind and deposited unhurt in a treetop almost two miles away. According to a wire report from May 1986, a freak wind lifted up 13 children in the oasis of Hami in Western China and deposited them unharmed in sand dunes and scrub 12 miles away.
7. Riverside Mystery
Gloria Ramirez, 31, died of Kidney failure at Riverside General Hospital, California, in February 1994, after being rushed there with chest pains. Emergency room staff were felled by ‘fumes’ when a blood sample was taken. A strange oily sheen on the woman’s skin and unexplained white crystals in her blood were reported. A doctor suffered liver and lung damage, and bone necrosis. At least 23 other people were affected. One hypothesis was that Ramirez, who had had cervical cancer, had taken a cocktail of medicines that combined to make an insecticide (organophospate) but tests yielded no clue.
8. Boulders in Trees
In April 1997, a turkey hunter in Yellowwood State Forest, Indiana, came upon a huge sandstone boulder wedged between three branches of an oak tree about 35 feet from the ground. The arrow shaped rock was estimated to weight 500lb. Subsequently, four more large boulders were found wedged high up in trees elsewhere in the forest. All were in remote areas. None of the trees were damaged and there were no signs of heavy equipment begin used or of tornado damage and no one recalled any mishaps involving dynamite anywhere nearby.
9. Helpful Voices
While on holiday a woman, referred to by the British Medical Journal (1997) as AB, heard two voices in her head telling her to return home immediately. Back in London the voices gave her an address that turned out to be a hospital’s brain scan department. The voices told her to ask for a scan as she had a brain tumour and her brain stem was inflamed. Though she had no symptoms, a scan was eventually arranged and she did indeed have a tumour. After an operation, AB heard the voices again: ‘We are pleased to have helped you,’ they said ‘Good-bye.’ AB made a full recovery.
10. La Mancha Negro
A Hazard unique to Venezuelan highways is a slippery goo called La Mancha Negra (the black stain), although it is more of a sludge with the consistency of chewing gum. Although the government has spent millions of dollars in research, no one knows what the goo is and where it comes from, or how to get rid of it. It first appeared in 1987 on the road from Caracas to the airport, covering 50 yards, and spread inexorably every year. By 1992 it was a major road hazard all around the capital and it was claimed 1,800 motorists had died after losing control. The problem remains to this day.
11. Postcard Farewell
When Jim Wilson’s father died in Natal, South Africa, in April 1967, both Jim, living in England, and his sister Muriel, living in Holland, were informed. Muriel contacted her husband who was on business in Portugal, and he flew to South Africa right away. Changing planes at Las Palmas airport in the Canary Islands, he bought a postcard showing holidaymakers on Margate Beach, Natal, and sent it to Muriel. It was she who noticed that the photograph showed her father walking up the beach.
12. Notecase from the Sky
In October 1975 Mrs Lynn Connolly was hanging washing in her garden in the Quadrant, Hull, when she felt a sharp tap on the top of her head. It was caused by a small silver notecase, 63mm by 36.5mm, hinged, containing a used notepad with 13 sheets left. It was marked with the initials ‘SE’, ‘C8′, ‘TB’ (or ‘JB’) and ‘Klaipea’, a Lithuanian seaport. No one claimed it at the police station, so it was returned to Mrs Connolly. It seems likely it fell only a short distance but from where? If it had dropped from a plane, it would have given her more than a tap.
13. Fiery Persecution
The village of Canneto di Caronia on Sicily’s north coast has been plagued by mysterious fires. The trouble began on January 20, 2004, when a TV caught fire. Then things in neighbourhood houses began to burn, including washing machines, mobile phones, mattresses, chairs and even the insulation on water pipes. The electricity company cut off all power, as did the railway company, but the fires continued. Experts of all kinds carried out tests, but no explanation was found. The village was evacuated in February, but when people returned in March the fires resumed. Police ruled out a pyromaniac after they saw wires bursting into flames.
14. Bovine Enigma
On June 28, 2002, in the middle of a spate of unexplained cattle mutilations in Argentina, something macabre was found in a field near suco, west of Rio Cuarto in San Luis province. Nineteen cows were stuffed into a sheet metal water tank, closed with a conical cap. Nine were drowned, the rest barely alive, having endured freezing temperatures, not to mention the shock of their lives.
15. Boy Turns into a Yam
Three pupils of the Evangelist Primary School in the northern Nigerian town of Maiduguri rushed into the headmistresses office in March 2000 and said that a fellow pupil had been transformed into a yam after accepting a sweet from a stranger. The headmistress found the root tuber and took it to the police station for safe-keeping. Following local radio reports, hundreds of people flocked to see the yam and police were hunting for the sweet-giver. What happened next failed to reach the media.
Source: The Fortean Times












I remember the Riverside one too. It happened at Riverside General Hospital in Riverside Ca. And it didn’t just happen once. A similar incident happened again several weeks later at the same hospital, if I remember correctly. The Riverside Coroner’s Office had a special quarantine area set up to autopsy the bodies. Coincidently enough, the building for the coroner’s office was closed and condemned pretty soon after all the hoopla died down.
Probably the greatest read I have read…
You are completely correct with this one!
Ludlow isn’t in Wales!!!!!!
It’s in Shropshire, England. Not in Wales!
NOT IN WALES!!!
There is also a Ludlow in Southampton, Hampshire, England.
Isn’t Wales a part of England?
Isn't Wales apart from England?
- Yes it is.
No it's not. It's part of Britain, not England.
***** off no it isnt
???????????????????????????
SRSLY?
No, Wales is very much NOT a part of England. It’s a seperate country within the UK.
No, you moron.
Okay guys – calm down! I have amended the text and apologise for the error. Ludlow is, in fact, in England, not Wales, in Shropshire.
Oh – and just to clear up any confusion, the United Kingdom (officially called The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) is made up of four different countries (kind of like its own little European Union but much older). The countries (which have their own sub-parliaments, except Scotland which has a regular parliament as of 2007) Wales, Scotland, England, and Northern Ireland (this is NOT to be confused with The Republic of Ireland which has no connection to the UK at all and has a green white and orange flag). Northern Ireland and Ireland are two different countries.
And finally – I am not even from the UK, so if I made a mistake in the above, be kind.
Sounds like semantics to me. The UK is one country and would be part of the German Empire had the US not got involved in WW2
'had the US not got involved in WW2' EVENTUALLY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
What the ***** does that have to do with anything? This is the reason people hate americans, you say arrogant ***** like that. For NO REASON WHATSOEVER you say the United States saved the UK, which is not one country you idiot.
That’s what happens when you’re the big dick. You shove it up the world’s pussy.
no its because of hateful people…like you
Haha, I love it when people say “if something else happened, the outcome would have been different.” It makes me seem so clever. And while the effort made by the US should by no means be undervalued, the tendency is the other way around. Stop pulling the “you’d all be talking German” crap already.
We can’t help it; it’s what they teach us in school. Nobody in the United States says, “You know, if we’d got into that war earlier, millions of lives would have been saved.” Nobody says, “If it weren’t for the fierce resistance of the English, the United States would be a German colony.”
That happened to a friend of mine. (which one you ask?) Except it wasn’t a brain scan. It was a rectum scan and he had a bicycle up in there. It was in the news.
Well god damn guys…. my only complaint was that there were only 7 instead of 15. You guys always get testy around the fourth of july. Why is that?
Wait… wtf…. nevermind. I’m a dumbass american.
read the damn number on the top of the previous post.
True stories? That was the first lie. Most of the stories could be believed, except the last two; but please everbody remember about lists like this, what you were taught in school: TRUST BUT VERIFY. Without verifiable sources all the above is so much crapola.
I turned into a yam once…I got better
You turned into a ham?
You turned into Spam?
You turned into Jam?
you turned into lamb?
this is a whole lotta spam.
chicka bam bam
I call my grandma Gam Gam!
That reminded me of Monty Python & the Holy Grail
“Well she turned me into a newt!”
“A newt, you say?”
“…I got better”
Oh wow, that’s like so totally awesome, I like totally turned into a yam too. I yam what I yam.
So what happened next, what failed to reach the media, it doesn’t say.
As I am not a native english speaker I have to ask:
What is a yam?
a yam my good friend is a sweet potatoe
Hi Pavel, a yam is a tuberous vegetable which is used very much like potato. It has an article on wikipedia which you can read here.
What happened next?
A big stick of butter, some allspice and salt. Mmmmmmmmm…… Yams…..
A yam is a sort of sweet potato.
yam (ym)
n.
1. Any of numerous chiefly tropical vines of the genus Dioscorea, many of which have edible tuberous roots.
2. The starchy root of any of these plants, used in the tropics as food.
3. Chiefly Southern U.S. See sweet potato. See Regional Note at goober.
[Portuguese inhame or obsolete Spanish igname, iñame, both from Portuguese and English Creole nyam, to eat, of West African origin; Wolof ñam, food, to eat, or Bambara ñambu, manioc.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun 1. yam – edible tuber of any of several yams
yam plant, yam – any of a number of tropical vines of the genus Dioscorea many having edible tuberous roots
tuber – a fleshy underground stem or root serving for reproductive and food storage
2. yam – any of a number of tropical vines of the genus Dioscorea many having edible tuberous roots
yam plant
Dioscorea, genus Dioscorea – yams
yam – edible tuber of any of several yams
Dioscorea alata, water yam, white yam – grown in Australasia and Polynesia for its large root with fine edible white flesh
Chinese yam, cinnamon vine, Dioscorea batata – hardy Chinese vine naturalized in United States and cultivated as an ornamental climber for its glossy heart-shaped cinnamon-scented leaves and in the tropics for its edible tubers
air potato, Dioscorea bulbifera – yam of tropical Africa and Asia cultivated for it large tubers
cush-cush, Dioscorea trifida – tropical American yam with small yellow-skinned edible tubers
vine – weak-stemmed plant that derives support from climbing, twining, or creeping along a surface
3. yamyam – sweet potato with deep orange flesh that remains moist when baked
sweet potato – edible tuberous root of the sweet potato vine grown widely in warm regions of the United States
4. yam – edible tuberous root of various yam plants of the genus Dioscorea grown in the tropics world-wide for food
root vegetable – any of various fleshy edible underground roots or tubers
Leveragemonster,
overkill: what you just did, sweet potato would have sufficed.
awesome stories, i belive most of them, as i’m a trusting person, although the voices one is dubious, she could just be bull*****ting.
the boulder one was most interesting in my opinion, i’d of liked to have seen that, and i may try and see La Mancha Negro at some point in my life if it still exists.
jake – I tried to find out more on la Mancha Negra but the only thing resembling it was a site in a language I don’t recognise and google’s translation was abysmal to say the least!
I found a private account that was a bit helpful at least, I’ll paste the link at the bottom of this comment. While they’re still debating, the prominent hypothesis involves poor road work. Either a substance seeping out of the asphalt itself, or some underlying problem (sewage was mentioned, but it seems less credible to me). I have seen something similar in Norway. It doesn’t get hot enough where I live to get the substance slippery, and I find it much closer to the chewing gum type. Based on texture and general qualities, I’d say that some kind of tar/petrochemical goo is very likely.
Link http://paulbuckley14059.wordpress.com/2008/11/15/la-mancha-negra/
FrancisFurter: nice to see someone mentioning allspice
It is one of my favourite spices though I seldom have a chance to use it.
…a yam is ‘may’be a potato backwards. Oh and Ludlow was in Wales but the darned English stole it off us
I googled La Mancha Negro too. No results relating to the story above, which makes me start to believe they are all just BS? Nes pas?
I yam not a yam, but I used to play the tuber.
Why not citations? I tried googling several of these to no avail. Bizarre true stories have paper trails.
That first one is a little dumb. What was interpreted as bees ‘paying their respects’ is simply the way bees establish new hives.
Once in a while a queen mother will create one or more new queens and these take a portion of the hive to establish a new one. While searching for a new place to start building a hive, the swarm rests with intervals while scouts check the area. The queen is always to be found somewhere near the center of the temporarily homeless swarm, attracting the bees by emitting pheromones.
-or else bees are compassionate creatures with supernatural skills of perception… you decide..
Actually, England doesn’t have a sub-parliament.
We’re not special enough to have a devolved government and have to make do with the Uber one all the time
Hey, Google “LA MANCHA NEGRA”, that’s how it goes, several stories DO confirm the stated above
I can confirm the Riverside story. I live here and it was huge news. I have some friends that work there and No-one ever found out why. Every one was fine until they took the sample.
Hey, I am the yam kid, even though I made a full recovery, it was a very traumatic period of my life. Don’t make fun of me please.
Everyone’s a comedian!
Just ‘stumbled’ this site… very cool. Random props from across the net.
Thanks, Todd
Welcome!
Knowing a touch of neuroscience, I can explain number five! First of all, every ear creates noises. The problem is, environmental sounds usually make them impossible to hear. If you are in an extremely silent area and make a sudden sound, like a click, near someone’s ear, the tiny cilia (little hairs) inside their cochlea will twitch reflexively. This effectively triggers ‘backwards hearing’, because that twitch makes the cochlea reverberate, which passes through the oval window, through the ossicles, and finally your ear drum vibrates, creating an ‘echo’. When one has “Objective tinnitus”, this process occurs constantly – something is wrong with your cilia, and they continue to initiate this process. Interestingly enough, ‘subjective tinnitus’ is more annoying for the sufferer than the objective kind, because if your ear is ACTUALLY making noise, your brain can learn to ignore it (though people around you may still hear it if they try). The subjective kind is actually a deeper problem with your perception of sound, so you can’t just ‘tune it out’, if you will.
Guillaume: thanks for that info – very interesting.
Number 13 is not a mystery … it is the power utility in Sicily doing a CYA.
My wife lived through similar problems in Kenai Alaska during the 1960′s … intermittent failures at the local oil-fired powerplant caused line voltages to triple for maybe five minutes at a time at random.
People’s appliances would do the same thing … my mother-in-law had a washing machine immolate itself.
However, in Kenai, there were people about who had the presence of mind to leave a volt meter on their house lines and catch the power company red handed.
I had the same problem. With no citations its hard to believe any of its true
/quote/referred to by the British Medical Journal (1997)/quote/
The Helpful Voices one does appear to be somewhat cited. That is an interesting one. Be good if someone could find the link to the actual case in the Journal.
I think the main point is entertainment – whether we believe them or not is not as important – what is important is that some people experienced or believed they experienced these events and claim them to be true – that makes them interesting reading.
Do I need to hand out grains of salt?
I have heard the one about the A3 a few times from different real-world sources. I will check the local papers sometime if I remember. The A3 starts about 10 miles from my home and runs up to London.
Entertaining? Definitely. More entertaining? The Comments!
Collin: You are right about the comments
its *****in amazing wot ppl will argue bout collin is quite right
After all those ‘true facts’ the biggest one people have a problem with is about the voices? WHAT ABOUT THE FREAKIN’ YAM? That’s the most unbelievable on the list. A few come close, but transmogrifying into an vegetable? Come on.
Some stranger probably just offered the boy candy, had the other boys close their eyes, put a yam in his seat and then kidnapped him.
Helpful voices? I can believe. Weird coincidences involving balloons? Sure.
KIDS TURNING INTO YAMS? Not so much.
Nicely put Vrai
Yams are nasty.
If some kid turned into a yam at my house he would just get thrown away.
I wouldn’t wait around to see if he changed back. I’d be afraid that someone would cook it and try to make me ‘just have one little bite’.
Gross.
Having read ‘Harry Potter’ I am convinced that was a bad wizard who changed the boy into a yam. All the yam has to do is kiss a frog and it will turn back into a boy again. (cough)
However, on the Riverside story, I attest to that one; it had good news coverage at the time and it stuck in my mind. It was a weird one but well documented.
I have seen the Rocks in the Tree. ” A fellow Indianaite” I lot of the locals think it was hippies back in the day or people who put them there, because in the woods are strange old pits and old structures where things were near the sightings. You never know though
Maybe the boulders were the result of a flash flood? As for the metal that fell from the sky… it could have bounced first lol. The yam one is simply science, an allergic reaction to chocolate can result in one turning into a yam lol.
hmm: They do say that there was no sign of damage to the trees though – which would seem to make a flood unlikely.
Heres an amazing story:
A man in Germany was writing a book. After completing the rough draft he put his pages in his car to give it to his publisher. On his way he was car-jacked and mugged. The next morning the man called his publisher to tell him he had been robbed but before he could say anything the man’s publisher said, “Why did you throw your draft into my backyard?”. It turns out the burglar wasn’t interested in the book so he threw it out the window.
The Riverside Mystery was a big thing that happened. I remember all the chaos that occured. The hospital had alot of problems and was VERY old. They more then likely covered up a problem they were having by saying this came from her. The ambulance workers didnt have any problems and they set up IV’s while in route. At anyrate they finally closed the hospital down in 98′ and turned into the Riverside County Hospital. The site is now a Lowe’s. It’s a crazy story.
Mat: How amazing is that?! That makes me think about doing a top 10 bizarre coincidences article.
Olivia: thanks for the inside knowledge (so to speak) – it is very odd that the ambulance people were unaffected when the hospital was (supposedly) so badly hit.
Heather – HAHAHA I love Monty Python references… you made me smile.
Hi, I am from Argentina. The story about the cows is truth, people use to think that the mutilations were caused by a sort of superantural criature called Chupacabras. Later the SENASA (an national entity “Servicio Nacional de Sanidad y Calidad Agroalimentaria”) concluded that this mutilations were caused by a kind of rodent (Hocicudo rojizo) and foxes. Now, the thing with the tank I have no idea.
La Mancha Negra in Venezuela is not so bizarre at all, its a consequence of pollution and the problem was eliminated.
Sorry about my english, I can read it but barely write it.
I found the following article about human mutilations: http://usuarios.uninet.com.br/~mfpporto/CAUTIOUS%…
The mutilation patterns are similar to those of cattle mutilations. Do you know anything about this or have any thoughts on it?
Marina: thanks for that information – it is appreciated
jrafter: here’s some coincidences.
http://www.oddee.com/item_82923.aspx