Weird in the Wild

Say youโ€™re trekking through the Namib Desert in Namibia and you get a little thirsty. No problem! According to Oddity Central, about a 20-minute drive from the main road crossing the desert is an unexpected oasis: a pink solar-powered refrigerator full of cold drinks and a little table with two chairs. Drinks are provided free of charge, and the fridge is restocked several times a day. The governmentโ€™s tourist board installed the fridge in the spirit of hospitality, the website reported on June 16. So friendly. [Oddity Central, 6/16/2025]

Irony

At Difficult Campground in White River National Forest near Aspen, Colorado, camping is taking on a new look: The U.S. Forest Service has banned camping in tents or other soft-sided structures, The Aspen Times reported. Blame it on a black bear. During the night of June 9, a โ€œcuriousโ€ bear pawed at a tent with two children under age 12 inside, puncturing the material but failing to get inside. The children didnโ€™t tell their parents, who were sleeping in a tent next to them, until the next morning. โ€œThe kids were totally fine,โ€ a campground host reported. โ€œThey were not traumatized.โ€ Campers using tents were relocated to other campgrounds. The order was to remain in place for two months. [Aspen Times, 6/12/2025]

Questionable Judgment

The York Catholic District School Board in Vaughan, Ontario, has relieved a bus driver of their duties after inappropriate behavior, CP24-TV reported on June 17. It all started with a video posted to social media of a parent confronting the driver, who had placed a sign in the busโ€™ front window that said โ€œLolitaโ€™s Line.โ€ โ€œWhy do you call your bus โ€˜The Lolita Lineโ€™?โ€ the parent asked the driver, who was dressed in a schoolgirlโ€™s uniform. (Lolita is a 1955 novel about a professor who kidnaps a 12-year-old girl.) The bus driver responds that they โ€œdo this every week. And I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s any problem.โ€ The school board, however, did perceive a problem and brought the incident to the bus companyโ€™s attention, assuring parents that โ€œthe driver will no longer provide busing to and from the school.โ€ [CP24, 6/17/2025]

That Rule Doesnโ€™t Apply to Me

A 42-year-old man sustained a gunshot wound in his back on June 15 as he and friends rode bikes through the Central Catchment Nature Reserve in Singapore, AsiaOne reported. Nobody was hunting him; he was riding in an area restricted to the public and reserved for the Singapore Armed Forces live-firing activities. Several large signs read โ€œDo Not Go Beyond This Point โ€” Living Firing Area โ€” Keep Clear!โ€ and โ€œDanger,โ€ illustrated with a skull and crossbones. At the time of the shooting, the SAF was conducting an authorized live-firing activity. The man underwent surgery to remove the slug and is in stable condition. [AsiaOne, 6/16/2025]

Wait, What?

The South China Morning Post reported on June 25 that a 64-year-old man underwent surgery in Anhui province to remove a toothbrush that he had swallowed when he was 12 years old. Mr. Yang had begun to feel a strange sensation in his stomach, so he sought medical help; he told doctors he had been too afraid to tell his parents at the time of the incident. He also thought the toothbrush would dissolve on its own. But 52 years later, the nearly 7-inch-long brush was lodged in his small intestine, and doctors worked for 80 minutes to remove it. Dr. Zhou said the brush was stuck in a crook of the intestine and hadnโ€™t moved for decades. [South China Morning Post, 6/25/2025]

Whatโ€™s in a Name?

Police in Portland, Oregon, finally caught up with a man who had fired gunshots at them and led them on a high-speed chase on June 20, KATU-TV reported. The Milwaukie Police Department said they took Loony John Franklin Toon, 42, into custody on June 23 and charged him with first-degree attempted murder, first-degree assault, and fleeing from the police. Thatโ€™s all, folks! [KATU, 6/23/2025]

NEWS OF THE WEIRD
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