Thursday, November 21, 2024
Weird Stuff

Moose makes mess of Iditarod race [News of the Weird] – Reading Eagle

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TRENDING:
The 2024 Iditarod race in Alaska got off to a messy start, Sporting News reported on March 7. On the first day, musher Jesse Holmes went mano-a-mano with a moose that became aggressive toward his dogs on the trail. Holmes punched the moose in the nose and went on his way. Soon after, Dallas Seavey and his dogs came upon a moose — it’s not clear whether it was the same one — that was “threatening and belligerent.” When the moose got entangled with his dogs, Seavey dispensed with the heroics and shot it. As per the Iditarod’s rules, Seavey then stopped for about 10 minutes to field-dress the moose, but he was later assessed a two-hour penalty at the next checkpoint because “the animal was not sufficiently gutted by the musher.” A third musher, Wally Robinson, ran across the moose carcass in the dark, on a trail curving through woods. Race Marshal Warren Palfrey confirmed that “we are making sure that every attempt is made to utilize and salvage the moose meat.” So there’s that.
Looking for something light and airy to do at the end of April? Set your GPS for Pittsburgh and the Crafton Ingram Lanes, where Balls Out Bowling will return on April 28, according to WTRF-TV. The Pittsburgh Area Naturalists are hosting the event, which requires nudity (except women are allowed to wear bottoms). Participants must be 18 or older, and sexual activity is not permitted; harassment will result in being ejected from the bowling alley. And leave your cellphone at home; no photos or videos allowed. You won’t have anywhere to carry it anyway!
As the last remaining Hooters restaurant in West Virginia prepared for demolition, residents of Kanawha City gathered on Feb. 23 for a candlelight vigil, WCHS-TV reported. The event, which started as a joke, got international attention, and hundreds of people showed up.
“It’s a lot of memories going down with that building,” said Noah Collins of Rand, W.Va.
Tearful former Hooters employees reunited for one last time.
“I started out coming in to get a job and it became so much more because I met so many lifelong friends and my co-workers,” Danielle Hughart said.
“This building right here was a legitimate iconic figure to the Kanawha Valley,” declared co-organizer Leo Browning.
The corporate office sent a box of calendars to distribute to those who attended the vigil.
Dr. Krisztina Ilko, 33, a junior research fellow and director of studies at the University of Cambridge Queens’ College in England, lives in a medieval tower, the Independent reported. But on Feb. 29, Ilko became trapped in her bathroom for seven hours after the wooden door locked behind her and wouldn’t budge. She couldn’t signal or yell for help because the tower walls are thick, and there are no windows in the bathroom. However, she kept her cool and McGyvered the door open using an eyeliner (to push down the door’s latch) and a cotton swab (to pull the locking mechanism away from the door frame).
“When … the door opened, it was exhilarating because I didn’t think it would work,” Ilko said.
Since the incident, she’s had the lock removed.
Send your weird news items with subject line WEIRD NEWS to WeirdNewsTips@amuniversal.com.
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